12/31/12

A bullish view

Bloomberg - The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index will probably surpass its record high in 2013 as bears capitulate and the lure of a four-year bull market pulls “everyone in the pool,” according to Laszlo Birinyi.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/30/12

Thought of the day

Government spending does not create jobs. Businesses do.

Ok, but what about government owned enterprises.

It is a fact they create corruption and political feuds.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/29/12

Thought of the day

What about the shenanigan going on in Washington?

I believe the markets know. They know we have to pay the piper. We have to pay for all the grandiose projects we have put in place in the past 60 years by going into debt in a big way. The process is called, in financial jargon, “deleveraging”. Slowly and steadily much of the needed things we liked, but we cannot afford, will be taken away from us.

Those with the right connections in Washington will keep more “goodies” than others. The sad ending is that income differential will continue to increase. I have seen this process in Europe. And the depressing part of the story is that the little guys are going to pay. Exactly those people the social safety network was supposed to help. Why? Because this is how the game has always been played since day one.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/28/12

Observations

When we went to Genoa, Italy to visit my grandparents, my father and his father challenged each other to sing the most popular arias. It was a great, unforgettable contest. Opera is part of Italian life.

After I married Kathi, I made a serious effort to understand classical music. She guided me patiently. As an amateur listener, I am intrigued by how much music has changed throughout the centuries.

Our local PBS station, unfortunately, seems to like only one type of music: baroque. When they play Debussy and Ravel they are really pushing it. Besides, they have four hours of news from 3:00 pm to 7:00 pm. It is a very unique programming, which I definitely abhor. Most people must like it, however, because it is the only station playing “classical” music in our area. Other composers exist besides Mozart!

What to do? Internet! I book-marked radio stations from Italy, Switzerland, BBC, etc. I connected a wireless transmitter to the audio port of the computer. I put the wireless receiver (they come together) connected to two speakers in another room. You can connect many transmitters-receivers by using a $2.75 audio splice.

Now I am happy. I can hear all the music I want, music I never heard before, very contemporary, with commentaries in several languages. Free!

This is the power of the global market and the global economy. The local PBS station, like all of us, will eventually be by-passed by the amazing delivery of products and services offered by the rest of the world. Sellers beware! The world is at your doors.

Listening to these European stations raises another issue. Is our market driven approach forcing us to a lower level of culture/education? Our market sensitive stations would never play this music. Baroque music is much easier to accept as “elevator music”. Are we left behind?

These European stations are subsidized by the government. Their audience, however, has the opportunity to keep abreast of new classical composers, musical trends, and authors. Culture and education do not come free. Some “seed money” is necessary.

(This Observations appeared in the 4-11-05 issue of The Peter Dag Portfolio ).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/27/12

Infrastructures

I checked how long would it take to go from Akron to Washington by train. Then rent a car and go to my boat in Annapolis. (The train actually stops in Alliance, OH at 2:00 am).

It takes me 5 hours and 45 minutes to get there by car - about 400 miles.

By train it would take me about 10 hours and 33 minutes to cover 400 miles. It should take 4 hours!

Now, how can the wealthiest and most powerful nation in the world live with this kind of inefficiency? Instead we spend money on freeways and cars.

PS. China’s infrastructure development hit another milestone on Wednesday with the full opening of the world’s longest high speed rail line (see above picture)(Source: FT).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

To my readers .... a reminder

I was watching the business channels and news is flashing about “the fiscal cliff”. From the President to the Senate to the House.

Are they or aren't they going to do something about it?

Some perspective, please. The western world (US and Europe) is strangled by debt. This debt has increased because politicians bought votes by making people believe you can buy happiness by just printing money.

We forgot to create the wealth to repay the debt. We were too busy creating “safety nets” we could not afford. Now the time has come to pay the piper.

It does not matter what is going to happen in Washington in the next few days. We have to pay the piper and we forgot to build the resources (education, productivity, investment) to create the required wealth to do it.

We will have to pay the piper. We all have to give up something and tighten our belts because the markets are going to force us to do so. There is no alternative. They want to be paid.

We will have to lose something. Directly or indirectly. The most immediate outcome is that the economy will keep growing very slowly. Translation: our combined wealth will be under pressure. Independently from what is happening in the next few days.

12/26/12

Managing volatility

The S&P 500 rose only 0.8% since March and 15.8% since the beginning of the year. In other words, most of the gain for the year took place in the first 3 months.

This is the reason I believe timing is essential because market volatility can wipe out your gains in a very short time.

I also believe asset allocation is a must tool to manage risk. More on my videos on this blog.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/25/12

Thought of the day

From The Telegraph, quoting a study by The Boston Consulting Group.

The larger the part the Government plays in the economy, the lower the levels of growth

I have been saying this for a long long time. This is the main reason most global economies, including China and India are growing very slowly.

12/20/12

Who is in charge?

Bloomberg --U.S. stock-index futures tumbled after House Republican leaders canceled a planned vote on Speaker John Boehner’s plan to raise rates for taxpayers making more than $1 million, as time runs down in budget talks.

Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) futures sank 1.6 percent to 1,418 as of 12:24 p.m. in Tokyo, after slumping as much as 3.4 percent today. The benchmark for U.S. equity closed at 1,443.69 yesterday. The gauge has risen 15 percent this year, poised for its biggest annual gain since 2009.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

News of the day

The ratio of coincident-to-lagging indicators is an important and reliable leading indicator of the economy.

This gauge keeps heading lower.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

To my subscribers.

Our proprietary financial risk indicators keep plunging. You know what it means. This issue was discussed in my previous Market Update.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/19/12

THE BUSINESS CYCLE: OTHER EXPERIMENTAL INDICATORS

In the spring of 1989 two economists, James S. Stock and Mark W. Watson, published a paper entitled, “Indexes of Coincident and Leading Indicators” in the NBER Reporter. In this paper the two economists proposed a different approach in computing economic indicators. They selected them solely on the basis of their reliability. The experimental coincident index is a weighted average of broad monthly measures of U.S. economic activity. These measures are:

1. Industrial production
2. Total personal income, less transfer payments adjusted for inflation
3. Total manufacturing and trade sales adjusted for inflation
4. Total employee hours in non-agricultural establishments

These measures, as we discussed above, represent what is happening in the economy at any particular point in time, and reflect the strengths and weaknesses of the overall economy. The weighted average to compute the Experimental Coincident Index is computed using current and recent values of the growth rates of these four series. This weighted average in growth rates is then cumulated to create an index in levels. This index was constructed so that it equaled 100 in July 1967. The average monthly rate of growth in the experimental coincident index is 3% at an annual rate. Thus, the experimental coincident index has approximately the same trend growth rate as real GDP, which grew at an average rate of 3.1% from 1960 to 1988. The experimental coincident index is approximately 1 to 1-1/2 times more volatile than real GDP.

The experimental leading index proposed by Stock and Watson is a forecast of the growth of the experimental coincident index over the next six months (that is, for the six months subsequent to the month for which the data are available). The forecast is stated in percentage terms on an annual basis. Thus, for example, the experimental leading index for April represents a forecast of the percent growth in the experimental coincident index between April and October at annual rates.

The experimental leading index is a weighted average of seven leading indicators:

1. Building permits for new private housing
2. Manufacturers and field orders in the durable goods industry, adjusted for inflation
3. Trade weighted index of nominal exchange rates between the U.S. and the U.K., Germany, France, Italy, and Japan
4. Number of people working part-time in non-agricultural industries because of slack work
5. The yield on a ten-year U.S. Treasury bond
6. The difference between the interest rates on 3-month commercial paper and the interest rates on 3-month U.S. Treasury Bills
7. The difference between the yield on a 10-year U.S. Treasury bond and the yield on 1-year U.S. Treasury bond

Stock and Watson developed another indicator called the experimental recession index. The experimental recession index is an estimate of the probability that the economy will be in a recession six months from the date of the index. For example, the experimental recession index for April gives the probability that the economy will be in a recession in October. The experimental recession index is computed using four monthly series in the experimental coincident index and the seven monthly series in the experimental leading index.

The experimental recession index represents a probability. For example, if the experimental recession index is 25%, then the probability of the economy being in a recession in six months is 25%. The lowest possible value of the experimental recession index is 0% and the highest is 100%.

Since the experimental leading index was too dependent on financial information, Stock and Watson developed an alternative experimental recession index. This index is an alternative experimental recession index based on seven leading indicators that exclude interest rates and interest rate spreads. The method used to construct the alternative experimental recession index is the same as the experimental recession index. The difference between the two is the underlying series to construct the two indices. The seven series used in the alternative experimental recession index are:

1. Building permits for new private housing
2. Manufacturers and field orders for durable goods industries, adjusted for inflation
3. Trade weighted index of nominal exchange rates between the U.S. and the U.K., Germany, France, Italy and Japan
4. Index of help-wanted advertising in the newspapers
5. Average weekly hours of production workers for durable goods industries
6. Percent of companies reporting slower deliveries, as determined by the National Association of Purchasing Manager
7. Capacity utilization rate in manufacturing

The two economists publish the latest information on these indicators on their website (HTTP://www.KSGHOME.Harvard.edu) For more detail and discussion on how these indicators are computed and how they are used, the reader is referred to their original paper published in the spring of 1989 in the NBER Reporter.

Although not used in either The Conference Board or the Stock-Watson indicators, the ratio between BAA bond yields and 10-year Treasury bond yields is also an excellent leading indicator. This ratio is very closely correlated with the growth in the money supply and stock prices. Because of this cyclical timing, it has an important strategic value when used in conjunction with other business cycle indicators.

(From Chapter 4 of my book Profiting in Bull or Bear Markets. Published also in Mandarin and on sale in China. The book is available at Amazon.com).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/17/12

SOME IDEAS ON HOW TO MANAGE RISK

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/16/12

Thought of the day

We are thinking of China as we used to think of the USSR in the 1970's. A powerful force.

Evetually reality took over in the USSR. And the bubble burst. This is what is going to happen to China. Their political system and concentration of power is not conducive to economic growth. China is doomed to much slower growth. Exactly like Europe.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/14/12

THE BUSINESS CYCLE: THE COMPOSITE INDEX OF LAGGING INDICATORS

The composite index of lagging indicators is constructed by averaging individual components that historically followed the turning point of the coincident index. This gauge is probably the most important of the three indicators because it provides information about the degree of excesses that there are in the economic system. The growth of the index of lagging indicators has the property of increasing when the economy is growing rapidly, usually above its long-term average growth rate of 2.5 - 3.0%.

The indicators used in the computation of the Index of Lagging Indicators are:

1. Average duration of unemployment
This series measures the average duration in weeks that individuals counted as unemployed have been out of work. Because this series tends to be higher during recessions and lower during expansion, it is inverted in the computation of the index. In other words, the signs of the month-to-month changes are reversed. Decreases in the average duration of unemployment invariably occur after an expansion gains strength, and the sharpest increases tend to occur after a recession has begun. Therefore, sharp decreases in average duration of unemployment suggest the economy is overheating and investors have to begin to be cautious. On the other hand, a sharp increase in the average duration of unemployment is a sign that the economy has been slowing down quite sharply, and therefore, the excesses of the previous cycles are being corrected.

2. Inventories-to-sales ratio, manufacturing and trade inventories to sales
The ratio of inventories-to-sales is a popular gauge of business conditions for individual firms, entire industries, and the whole economy. This series is calculated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis using inventory and sales data for manufacturing, wholesale, and retail business. The data are used in an inflation-adjusted form, and they are based on information collected by the Bureau of the Census. Because inventories tend to increase when the economy slows down and sales fail to meet projections, the ratio typically reaches its cyclical peaks in the middle of a recession. It also tends to decline in the beginning of an expansion as firms meet their sales demand from excess inventories.

3. Change in labor costs per unit of output in manufacturing
This series measures the rate of change in an index that rises when labor costs for manufacturing firms rise faster than their productivity, and vice versa. The index is constructed by The Conference Board from various components, including seasonally-adjusted data on employee compensation in manufacturing, which includes wages and salaries plus any supplements. These data are available from the Bureau of Economic Analysis and are seasonally-adjusted data on industrial production in manufacturing from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve system. The data are seasonally-adjusted to eliminate distortion due to seasonality in the series. Because the monthly rate of change in this series is extremely erratic, percent in change in labor costs is calculated over a six-month span. Cyclical peaks in the six-month rate of change typically occur during a recession, as output declines faster than labor costs, despite layoffs of production workers.

Troughs in the series are much more difficult to determine and to characterize. The typical behavior of this series is that as the economy slows down and employment declines, and growth in wages and labor costs tends to decline. Therefore, this series declines following a decline in economic conditions or a decline in the growth of the index of coincident indicators. On the other hand, protracted growth in the coincident indicators is followed after one to two years by an increase in the growth of labor costs, due to the low availability of labor.

4. Average prime rate charged by banks
Although the prime rate is considered the benchmark the banks use to establish their interest rates for different types of loans, changes tend to lag behind the movements of general economic activity. The monthly data are compiled by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve system. There is no doubt that interest rates are one of the most important components of the index of lagging indicators because they measure the cost of credit. Although in the index of lagging indicators the prime rate is used, in later chapters we will discuss other interest rates that respond much quicker to changes in market conditions, such as the rate on 13-week Treasury bills or interest rates tied to Treasury bond yields.

5. Commercial and industrial loans outstanding
This series measures the volume of business loans held by banks and commercial paper issued by non-financial companies. Commercial paper is high grade unsecured notes sold through dealers by major corporations. They basically represent IOUs of major corporations. The underlying data are compiled by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve system. The Conference Board makes price level adjustments using inflation information based on personal consumption expenditures, which are the same that are used to deflate the money supply data in the leading index. This series tends to peak after an expansion peaks because declining profits usually place downward pressure on the demand for loans. Troughs are typically seen more than a year after the recession ends.

6. Consumer installment credit outstanding to personal income ratio
This series measures the relationship between consumer debt and income. Consumer installment credit outstanding is compiled by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve system and personal income data are from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Because consumers tend to hold off personal borrowing until months after a recession ends, this ratio typically shows a trough after personal income has risen for a year or longer. The peak in this ratio follows a peak in the general economy.

7. Consumer price index for services
This series is compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and measures the rate of change in the services component of the consumer price index. Inflation declines following a prolonged period of slower growth in the overall economy and in the index of coincident indicators, and it rises about two years after an increase in the growth of the economy and in the index of coincident indicators.

There is little doubt that the index of lagging indicators is the most misunderstood index and the press and investors pay little attention to its trend. After all, why pay attention to an indicator that rises after the economy is already in full swing? Or declines following a peak in overall economic conditions? Why should anyone pay attention to an indicator that is the result of what has happened? However, the index of lagging indicators and all of its components are the most important information available to investors. They are the most important gauges to assess the health of the economy and of the financial markets. Their trends represent a valuable tool available to investors to assess the risks induced by the business cycle on the financial markets. We are going to explore the main reasons why they have these important features.

As we said above, the index of lagging indicators lags trends in business activity. Let’s see why. Let's take, for instance, interest rates. Interest rates tend to decline after the economy slows down quite dramatically and they rise following a period of strong economic growth. The main reason is that as the economy grows rapidly so does the need to borrow in order to invest in an expanding capacity and to hire people. This increased borrowing activity eventually places upward pressure on interest rates. This is why the rise in interest rates lags trends in business activity. The main reason is that aggressive borrowing is done after business recognizes that the economic expansion has staying power. The same can be said when the economy weakens. Once business recognizes economic activity is deteriorating, they start borrowing less and interest rates decline.

Another component of the index of lagging indicators is unit labor costs - that is the cost of labor adjusted for productivity. This gauge also rises after the economy is well underway and strong. At the beginning, when the business cycle goes from a slow period to a strong period, there is a lot of labor available to be hired, productivity is high and wages are low, therefore, labor costs decline and remain stable. But as the labor supply decreases because more and more people have been hired, there is an increasing upward pressure on wages. These are also times when capacity utilization is high and productivity declines as a result of lower margin of productivity capacity available. Productivity is a measure of economic efficiency, which shows how effectively economic inputs are converted into output. The most commonly used measure of productivity is output per hour of all persons. If productivity grows, for instance, at 4% and wages are growing at 5%, labor costs adjusted for productivity is just 1%. As a result, lower growth in productivity has a negative impact on labor costs. Lower growth in productivity and higher wages place upward pressure in unit labor costs, which rise well after the business cycle is growing rapidly.

These simple examples show that the lagging indicators reflect excesses in the economy and lag economic conditions at peaks and troughs in business activity. If the economy expands too strongly and there are some imbalances created by the way the economy is growing, then the index of lagging indicators starts rising. If, on the other hand, the economy slows down and slack is built into the system, then the lagging indicators eventually decline.

The index of lagging indicators is very important because is rises when the economy is beginning to operate at such high levels that is producing strains on costs. A rise in the index of lagging indicators suggests that the economy is very strong and that there are strong cost pressures in the system. Rising cost pressures have two major impacts. The first one is to have a negative impact on the profitability of corporations. The second impact is that as business sees costs rising, they will try to pass these cost increases to consumers. The outcome of this is increased inflation at the consumer level and downward pressure on real income and consumer purchasing power. An increase in the index of lagging indicators is, therefore, a sign that there are major changes taking place in business; changes that have a negative impact for business and consumers.

Later in the chapter we will explore the strategic use of these indicators to determine the conditions of the business cycle.

(From Chapter 4 of my book Profiting in Bull or Bear Markets. Published also in Mandarin and on sale in China. The book is available at Amazon.com).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/10/12

Observations

Flying back. Leaving the gorgeous Colorado mountains behind with those challenging single and double black diamond runs. The glorious bowls of Vail and Copper. A lot of fun.

Seeing Peter and Audrey, our friends in Silverthorne, was a unique treat, as usual. Peter was a business acquaintance, then a client, now a dear friend. His effervescent and outgoing personality keeps you charmed as he takes you through his captivating stories.

Peter introduced us to a lady who needed my advice. She lost her husband, suddenly. He was a healthy, successful professional with an above average income. Problem: They did not plan for the sudden departure of the husband. The savings were not excessive and needed to be managed carefully. She is, after all, a healthy, pleasant, and dynamic woman. Many years ahead of her.

She chose investment managers whose approach is what I call “recipe management”. This is a way to manage money leaving the “choice” of the performance of the portfolio to the client. If the portfolio does not perform to expectations, oh well, the client has chosen the wrong recipe. It is time to select a new one. Grotesque!

This is how it works. They have a big book full of statistics. Each page shows the performance over 30-60 years of an investment style: income, value, international blend, growth and income, etc, etc. The money is put in mutual funds to reflect the allocation suggested by the recipe. The money is left in the funds, unmanaged. Peter’s friend chose a conservative recipe. Unfortunately she is not young enough to wait for the average results promised by the recipe.

Bonds and stock markets began acting poorly and the portfolio is not performing according to expectations. And it is not growing as promised by the “recipe” and by the numerous spreadsheets prepared by the financial consultants. Time to change recipe, it was suggested.

My advice? Beware of easy formulas. Money management is very hard work, 24 hours a day. Hands off approaches such as indexing, formulas, and recipes are bound to fail. Managing risk cannot be avoided.

(This Observations appeared in the 3-28-05 issue of The Peter Dag Portfolio ).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/9/12

Sectors and asset classes doing well in a weak economy

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

About investment strategies to minimize risk

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/7/12

Late night thoughts

When strategists do not know what to say they bring up China. China here. China there. China is the cause of our problems. They are the solution of our predicament. Buying our bonds. Forcing copper to rise.

Quite frankly I believe this is all nonsense. China GDP per capita is almost $9000. Our GDP per capita is 5 times bigger. How do they become as rich as we are? How can they grow their economy to become a wealthy country?

I do not believe they can and will not. Why? Let’s look at history. Just tell me which country has been prosperous in the history of mankind which was controlled and dominated by a small power group. China's slowdown is not a temporary one. Their economy cannot grow faster with the kind of institutions and political system they have. Do not bet on China to bail us out, to save the world.

The USSR? Egypt? The Middle East? North Korea? Most African countries? Latin America? The failure of these countries is that they are controlled by a powerful minority. This minority creates the rules of the game designed specifically to protect their wealth and their power. They do not care about growth, creative destruction, or wellbeing of the populace.

Why is our economy growing so slowly? It is quite possible because our society is creating strong vested interests. They would rather sink with the ship than save it. Just think of what is going on right now in Washington.

Try to read Why Nations Fail. It is full of historical and detailed examples.

12/5/12

Stocks you may want to avoid when the economy is weak.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/3/12

Interesting technical patterns at 2:03 pm

The market is weakening.
Bonds (LQD) have been strengthening (to be espected when the market weakens).
Commodities (DBC) are firm (this is strange because bond prices are rising and the market is weak - commodities have been moving with the market since 2002).
Junk bonds (JNK) are firm in spite of a weakening market (this is strange because junk bonds tend to move in the same direction of the market).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

12/1/12

My latest video on investing your money using a disciplined approach.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/30/12

A bearish view

Source: CNBC - You can sense almost an air of desperation from David Kostin, Goldman Sachs chief U.S. equity strategist, in his latest note to clients as he pleads with them to take money out of stocks before they fall off the fiscal cliff.

In the note, Kostin vehemently defends his year-end S&P target of 1250 despite the benchmark’s recent rise to above 1400. The strategist still sees a 12 percent drop ahead, believing that Congress will fail to address the fiscal cliff before the election, and maybe even before the end of the year.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/29/12

What drives commodity prices.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

How the Fed impacts the trend of commodity prices.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

Is long-term investing a viable investment strategy?

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/28/12

The real reason of the European crisis. The impossible solution.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/26/12

Technical patterns

The market is weak. Commodities are weak. Bonds are strong.

What caught my attention was the utility average. Very strong. Is the seasonality for this sector kicking in? See the above chart for details (click on the chart to enlarge it). Time will tell.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

An important not-so-popular leading indicator

The above graph shows the coincident-to-lagging indicator (click on the chart to enlarge it) (source: Zerohedge). I discussed this guage in my book Profiting in Bull or Bear Markets. It is an important leading indicator of the economy. And right now it is pointing south.

If this ratio is right we should see weak commodities and lower yields.

Let's see. Time will tell.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/23/12

THE BUSINESS CYCLE: THE COMPOSITE INDEX OF COINCIDENT INDICATORS

The composite index of coincident indicators provides information on what is happening now in the economic system, and is computed using four measures that reflect the current strengths and weaknesses of the economy.

The index of coincident indicators represents what is happening to the economy at the present moment, and its growth is a close approximation of the growth of business. Its trend reflects what is happening now to business activity The measures included in the computation of the index of coincident indicators are the following:

1. Employees on non-agricultural payrolls.
This indicator includes full-time and part-time workers and does not distinguish between permanent and temporary employees. Because the changes in this series reflect the actual hiring and firing of all but agricultural establishments, government agencies, and the smallest businesses in the nation, it is one of the most closely watched series for gauging the health of the economy.

2. Personal income less transfer of payments.
This indicator measures the real salaries and other earnings of all persons in inflation-adjusted dollars. This series excludes government transfers, such as social security payments, and includes an adjustment for wage accruals less disbursements. Income levels are important because they determine both aggregate spending and the general health of the economy.

3. Index of industrial production.
This index measures the physical output of all stages of production in the manufacturing, mining, and gas and electric utility industries. This index has historically captured a majority of the fluctuations in total output.

4. Manufacturing and trade sales.
Sales at the manufacturing, wholesale, and retail levels reflect trends in the economy and represent real total spending. That is, spending adjusted for inflation.

The economy is strong if employment, production, income, and sales are all growing rapidly. The business cycle is slowing down if the components of the coincident indicators are slowing down too.

Since the leading indicators have been chosen because they lead the economy, changes in the growth of the leading indicators also lead changes in the growth of the coincident indicators.

Investors should expect the economy to accelerate following a strong performance of several months in the index of leading indicators. On the other hand, the economy will slow down following a slowdown of several months in the index of leading indicators.

The relationship between the composite index of leading and coincident indicators is that a decline in the growth in the index of leading indicators is followed after several months in a decline in the growth of the coincident index. On the other hand, an increase in the growth of the leading index is followed after a few months by an increase in the growth of the coincident index.

(From Chapter 4 of my book Profiting in Bull or Bear Markets. Published also in Mandarin and on sale in China. The book is available at Amazon.com).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/20/12

11/19/12

Observations

Jim Schmidt is the superb editor of Timer Digest. His publication ranks market timers of stocks, bonds, and gold and is penned in Greenwich, CT. He called me a few days ago. He told me, to my surprise, that he used to race his day sailer on the same lake I had my boat here in Akron.

But he did not call to tell me that. The real reason was to tell me that my buy/sell signals were not clear. He could tell that I was bullish in the near term, but my long-term outlook was not so obvious. He was right (he usually is). I did not spell it out as I should have. The reason is that I do not think in terms of buy/sell. When I talk about long-term outlook I focus on the trend of the risk imbedded in the market.

Anyway, after the call, I started thinking about the meaning and use of the two signals from an investor’s viewpoint. How do you use the fact that I am a long-term bear? What do you do when I say I am a short-term bull? Is there a practical application of this information?

My conclusion is “no.” Let me explain how I see it.

There are two main drivers in money management: risk (or the probability of making money) and the relative strength of asset classes and stock sectors.

Stock market risk increases as short-term interest rates rise. Market risk is high right now - and rising. In market timing parlance I am bearish over the long term. As risk rises, fewer and fewer sectors are attractive. Investors can only profit from being in these unique sectors.

Now, what does it mean to be a long-term bear when the market tells us to be selective and we can still make money in the few sectors that are strong?

My point is that changes in risk and the attractiveness of asset classes move continuously and gradually. The task of professional investors is to adjust their position to reflect these changes in the various markets as driven by economic and financial forces.

(This Observations appeared in the 3-7-05 issue of The Peter Dag Portfolio ).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

What caught my attention today

Stocks and commodities were very strong. Usually strong commodity and stock markets are accompanied by lower bond prices.

Instead today bond were strong. Are bonds trying to tell us something about risk?

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/17/12

What is it all about?

The whole issue of "fiscal cliff" is about a simple truth. The time has come to pay the piper.

We bought stuff. We enjoyed every minute of it. We borrowed from banks - always ready to gives us the money.

Now we have to pay. Now we are realizing we did not save enough to pay for our medical needs. We did not save enough for our retirement.

Now we are realizing the markets want us to pay and we do not have the money. So, we have to pay with lower quality services, a more mundane health care, and less retirement income.

Our wealth was inflated by debt. Now that we have to pay, we are realizing the sad truth. And it is unpleasant, to say the least.

Inflation? I do not know. But it seems difficult to see how 300 million people can generate enough demand to cause prices to rise when they are forced to tighten their belts.

Will then bond prices continue rising?

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

Thought of the day

The value of all stocks lost 7% of nominal GDP - or $1.135T - since September 12th.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/14/12

Technical patterns

Interesting day, to say the least.

The pattern is alive and well. Stocks sharply down. Corporate bonds up.

Commodities flat. Copper down. Gold flat. Gold seems to be acting more and more like a commodity.

My subscribers were warned about market weakness. I repeated my warning in the latest Dag's Exclusive Market Alert. They know what to do.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

The end of a failed experiment?

From BusinessWeek: "Spanish workers staged a second general strike this year as unions across Europe prepared the biggest coordinated protests yet against budget cuts that policy makers say are needed to end the region’s debt crisis. In Spain, unions said most auto and metal workers joined the strike, even as power demand was just 13 percent below usual. One of Portugal’s two biggest labor groups also called a strike, partial walkouts are planned in Greece and Italy, and French unions are urging workers to join protest marches."

The Euro cannot survive. It is creating too much pain! Why are they insisting in punishing so many millions of people? The continent is being ravaged by misery and recession.

Why? Because they are afraid of Germany. They want neutralize its power by making her part of a "whole". But Southern Europe cannot become like Germany.

Will Germany become like Southern Europe?

11/13/12

About investment strategy and likely returns if you are a buy-and-hold investor.

A very interesting article.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

About earnings and the economy

From The Washington Post.

Analysts had forecast a 3.1 percent decline in earnings when the quarter ended, yet so far it has dropped by only 0.1 percent.

.... only 40 percent of the companies that have reported beat analyst forecasts on their revenues.

.... profit margins staying at historically elevated levels in the July-through-September quarter.

.... 62 companies have issued negative guidance about their expected profits,...

.... employers still feel no real pressure to sweeten their wages to get good workers.

.... the economy isn’t growing fast enough to make sales rise in any meaningful way.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

Technical patterns

The futures point to a weak market in opening.
Commodities broadly weak - oil, gold, copper, ...
Bond yields down - prices up.

It looks like the market correction is not over. Will it end when Congress reaches an agreement on the fiscal cliff?

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/12/12

Interesting comparison

Click on the chart to enlarge it.

11/11/12

Take your time...read this article...with an open mind...

You may not agree with everything they say in this in-depth article. But sometimes it is useful to listen to a friend and listen to what he says, he thinks about you, about your health. Things you do not have the time to think about.

Take your time. It is a long essay.

Just click Notes on the Decline of a Great Nation

11/9/12

Observations

The markets are always right. It is difficult to accept this concept, even for the major players on Wall Street.

Take the idea that yields have to rise because the administration is following inflationary policies. Major bond investors have gone aggressively public with this view for a few years. And they have been dead wrong. Yields are still at the levels of early 2003, at 4.2% to be exact. Eventually they will be right. Eventually.

The other big idea, discussed in the press for the past several years and recently in Davos at the World Economic Forum, is that China has to revalue the renminbi. At that meeting, Vice-Premier Huang Ju has provided the vision that the per capita income will rise from the current US$ 1000 to US$ 3000 by 2020. In other words, China, in spite of all the hype, is still a deeply underdeveloped country.

I always believed that a strong country has a strong currency. A currency is an asset for that country. It reflects the strong productivity of most of its industries. It reflects widespread innovation and a visible competitive advantage vs. its trading partners.

Investors in strong currency countries can go around the world and buy productive assets at a discount. This is what the US did after WWII in Europe until the late 1960s. Everybody was respecting us then. If China does not want to float its currency, it is because they believe the renminbi would devalue, not revalue. They are smart. A strong renminbi would give them a tremendous advantage in procuring resources to grow. A devaluation is too costly. Why risk?

They do not let their currency float because if it devalues relative to the US$, the cost of acquiring badly needed US technology would be greater and would hinder their development programs.

They still have enormous problems in the banking system, infrastructures, and the little publicized outrageous income differential between the fast growing regions and the farmland. We cannot blame an underdeveloped country for our problems.

(This Observations appeared in the 2-7-05 issue of The Peter Dag Portfolio ).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/7/12

The technical pattern is alive and well

Stocks are sagging as of this writing. High-grade corporate bond prices very strong.

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?

11/6/12

THE BUSINESS CYCLE: THE COMPOSITE INDEX OF LEADING INDICATORS

The composite index of leading indicators is a summary statistic for the U.S. economy. This index is constructed by averaging its individual components in order to smooth out a good part of the volatility of the individual series. The purpose of this index is to provide indication on the future trend of the U.S. economy. As a result, a slower growth in this index foretells that the growth of the economy is likely to decline in the future. On the other hand, an increase in the growth of this index is an indication that the growth of the economy will rise in the near future. The composite index of leading indicators is computed using ten measures that have the property of leading the business cycle at peaks and at troughs. The typical lead-time is about 12 months at peaks and a few months at troughs.

The indicators used to compute the composite Index of Leading Indicators are the following:
1. Average weekly hours in manufacturing. The average hours worked per week by production workers in manufacturing industries tend to lead the business cycle because employers usually adjust work hours before increasing or decreasing their work force.
2. Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance. The number of new claims filed for unemployment insurance is typically more sensitive than either total employment or unemployment to overall business conditions. This series tends to lead the business cycle and is inverted when included in the leading index.
3. Manufacturers' new orders, consumer goods and materials. These goods are primarily used by consumers. The inflation-adjusted value of new orders leads actual production because new orders directly affect the level of both unfilled orders and inventories that firms monitor when making production decisions.
4. Vendor performance, slower deliveries diffusion index. This index measures the relative speed at which industrial companies receive deliveries from their suppliers. Slowdowns in deliveries increase this series and are most often associated with increases in demand for manufacturing suppliers, and therefore, tend to lead the business cycle. The National Association of Purchasing Managers provides this information which represents the number of managers experiencing slower deliveries. An increase in this index suggests that the economy will improve.
5. Manufacturers' new orders, non-defense capital goods. This series represents new orders received by manufacturers in non-defense capital goods industries. As explained for the series on new orders, new orders for non-defense capital goods lead the business cycle.
6. Building permits, new private housing units. This series represents the number of residential building permits issued. This is an important indicator of construction activity, which typically leads most other types of economic production trends.
7. Stock prices, 500 common stocks. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index reflects the price movements of a broad selection of common stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Increases and decreases in stock prices, which reflect increases and decreases in overall financial liquidity, is another good indicator of future economic activity.
8. Money supply, M2. The money supply M2 is expressed in inflation-adjusted dollars. M2 includes currency, demand deposits, other checkable deposits, travelers’ checks, savings deposits, small denomination timed deposits, and balances in money market mutual funds.
9. Interest rate spread, 10-year Treasury bonds less Federal funds. This series is constructed using the ten-year Treasury bond rate and the Federal Funds rate, an overnight inter-bank borrowing rate. Changes in this spread lead important turning points in economic activity.
10. Index of consumer expectations. This index reflects changes in consumer attitudes concerning future economic conditions and is the only indicator in the leading index that is completely expectations based.

The use of rate of change over 12 months is recommended when using business cycle indicators. The main reason is that asset prices in trends in the financial markets are particularly sensitive to changes in the growth rate of economic indicators. Furthermore, the use of rate of change helps to compare the growth rate of one indicator versus other indicators.

The main reason the index of leading indicators leads turning points of the business cycle is that many of the components used to compute the index reflect decisions or commitments to change output, such as new orders and building permits or measures of financial liquidity, such as money supply and stock prices. Stock prices respond immediately to increases in liquidity injected in the banking system by the Federal Reserve, as discussed in detail later in this book. The term liquidity is representative of how fast the money supply is growing. Rising growth in the money supply means that the Federal Reserve is increasing liquidity in the system, while a decrease in the growth of the money supply implies the Fed is taking liquidity off the banking system. How this is done will be discussed in the chapter concerning the operations of a Central Bank. All these measures affect economic growth with a lead of several months. For instance, the growth of the money supply leads changes in the growth of the economy by about two years.

Orders are a leading indicator, because they reflect the decision of business firms to buy new machines and expand existing capacity. However, it takes time to convert orders into machines or plants. Therefore, such orders tend to precede changes in the production of goods or machinery.

Another important component of the index of leading indicators is building permits. Let's assume that building permits start rising, reflecting a commitment to build more housing due to, for instance, declining interest rates. Rising building permits will eventually be reflected in increased construction activity, in the completion of buildings, in the production of materials that are needed to build houses, and eventually to their final sales.

It is reasonable to expect that some time will elapse from the time the building permit is granted, to the time the production of the equipment needed to build the buildings is completed, and finally for the buildings to be sold. For this reason, changes in the growth of building permits tend to anticipate - that is lead - the growth in overall business activity.

Another important leading indicator is the Index of Stock Prices, as represented by the S&P 500 common stocks index. The stock market is an important leading indicator of economic activity because changes in stock prices tend to lead changes in business activity by several months, and its action is available daily. The reason the stock market is a leading indicator of economic growth is because it reflects, like the money supply, the growth of liquidity in the economic system. For instance, the growth of the money supply and the change in stock prices measured on a year-over-year basis started to increase quite sharply in 1995. Economic growth resumed quite strongly towards the end of 1997 and early 1998.

Since financial liquidity reflects an expansion of credit, the more liquidity is made available, the more money is eventually used in business to build houses, to manufacture goods, to buy other companies, or to invest. A decline in the growth of stock prices signals that liquidity in the economic system is growing more slowly. The outcome is that consumers have less money to spend, investors have less money to invest in new ventures, and overall business activity is likely to slow down.

Another important leading indicator is the growth of the money supply, which measures credit expansion. We will deal in detail with this type of indicator when we talk about the Federal Reserve, which is the central bank of the United States, in Chapter 6. We will also see how the central bank impacts the growth of the money supply, and as a result, the growth of the economy. For the time being, it is enough to say that the money supply is also a measure of liquidity is the economic system and is closely controlled by the Federal Reserve.

When more liquidity is made available through the banks, there is more money to borrow. Consumers and businesses will then borrow and use the money to invest, thus, impacting the growth of the economy. If the liquidity in the banking system slows down, there is less money to borrow, and business activity will slow down because there is less money available to spend and to invest.

The composite index of leading indicators provides an overview of the future trends of the economy. It simplifies the analysis because it summarizes trends of ten indicators that in the past have proven to be reliable leading indicators of economic activity. Although all measures are important, the reader will find that changes in the growth of the money supply provide the most reliable indication of future trends because of its long lead time in predicting changes in economic activity.

(From Chapter 4 of my book Profiting in Bull or Bear Markets. Published also in Mandarin and on sale in China. The book is available at Amazon.com).

George Dagnino, PhD Editor,
The Peter Dag Portfolio.
Since 1977
2009 Market Timer of the Year by Timer Digest
Portfolio manager

Disclaimer.The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Actions you undertake as a consequence of any analysis, opinion or advertisement on this site are your sole responsibility.

Shouldn't you too subscribe to The Peter Dag Portfolio?