Author Archives: Scalper1
Don’t Overlook 4 Top Tech Stocks Near Buy Point
Sifting through stock lists for a trend is always a sound strategy. Otherwise, you could miss a stock or group of stocks that are making a move. If you look at the industry group rankings for some of the software makers, for instance, you might be quick to dismiss them. The financial software group ranked No. 108 in Thursday’s list, down from No. 45 six weeks ago. Design software came in at No. 133 vs. No. 111 six weeks back, with enterprise software just behind at No. 134 vs. No. 112. One group improved: specialty enterprise software, at No. 120, up from No. 143. But drilling down to look deeper at which stocks make this week’s Tech Leaders, you might uncover a few gems that are near buy points. Citrix Systems ( CTXS ) is back in buy range from an 80 handle buy point initially cleared in April. More importantly, shares are finding support at the 10-week moving average, providing a secondary buy area. The stock spiked as much as 12% on April 22 before settling for a 4% gain, after the business software maker reported Q1 earnings that beat views and raised its full-year outlook. Florida-based Citrix belongs to the specialty enterprise software group. Paycom Software ( PAYC ) provides a cloud-based employment management platform with a software-as-a-service business model. Shares, near the top of a buy zone from a 38.28 cup-with-handle entry, have been rising past resistance around the 40 level, a positive sign. The base was a much steeper than normal 51%, which increases risk. But the stock’s relative strength line is near highs. Paycom hails from the enterprise software group, as does Ultimate Software ( ULTI ). Ultimate, which designs payroll and workforce management software, has posted quarterly double-digit profit and sales gains for at least the past four years. Analysts expect that streak to continue the next two quarters. The stock is shaping a handle with a 209.81 entry. Cadence Design Software ( CDNS ) is holding just above a 23.40 buy point first cleared in late March. It’s finding support at its 50-day line. The stock has the top Composite Rating, 95, in the design software group.
Why Low Interest Rates Do Not Imply Perpetual Increases In Stock Prices
Some investors have come to believe that ultra-low interest rates alone have made traditional valuations obsolete. The irony of the error in judgment? Experts and analysts made similar claims prior to the NASDAQ collapse in 2000. (Only then, it was the dot-com “New Economy” that made old school valuations irrelevant.) The benchmark still trades below its nominal highs (and far below its inflation-adjusted highs) from 16 years ago. Without question, exceptionally low borrowing costs helped drive current stock valuations to extraordinary heights. In fact, favorable borrowing terms played a beneficial role in each of the stock bull markets over the last 40-plus years, ever since the post-Volcker Federal Reserve began relying on the expansion of credit to grow the economy. Indeed, we can even take the discussion one step further. Ultra-low interest rates had super-sized impacts on the last two bull markets in assets like stocks and real estate. Bullishness from 2002-2007 occurred alongside household debt soaring beyond real disposable income ; excessive borrowing at the household level set the stage for 40%-50% depreciation in stocks and real estate during the October 2007-March 2009 bear. Bullishness from 2009-2015 occurred alongside a doubling of corporate debt – obligations that moved away from capital expenditures toward non-productive buybacks and acquisitions. Would it be sensible to ignore the near-sighted nature of how corporations have been spending their borrowed dollars? Click to enlarge It is one thing to recognize that ultra-low borrowing costs helped to make riskier assets more attractive. It is quite another to determine that valuations have been rendered irrelevant altogether. For one thing, the U.S. had a low rate environment for nearly 20 years (i.e., 1935-1954) that is very similar to the current low rate borrowing environment. The price “P” that the investment community was willing to pay for earnings “E” or revenue (sales) still plummeted in four bearish retreats. In other words, low rates did not stop bear markets from occurring in 1937-1938 (-49.1%), 1938-1939 (-23.3%), 1939-1942 (-40.4%), or 1946-1947 (-23.2%). Click to enlarge Economic growth was far more robust between 1936 and 1955 than it is in the present. What’s more, during those 20 years, valuations were about HALF of what they are today. If low rates alone weren’t enough to DOUBLE the “P” relative to the “E” back then, why would one assume that low rates alone right now are enough to justify exorbitant valuations in 2016? When top-line sales and bottom-line earnings are contracting? When economies around the globe are struggling? Equally important, the inverse relationship between exorbitant valuations and longer-term future returns since 1870 has taken place when rates were low or high on an absolute level; the relationship has transpired whether rates were falling or rates were climbing. It follows that central bank attempts to aggressively stimulate economic activity and revive risk asset appetite did not prevent 50% S&P 500 losses and 75% NASDAQ losses in 2000-2002, nor did aggressive moves to lower borrowing costs prevent the financial collapse in 2008-2009. Clearly, valuations still matter for longer-term outcomes. In all probability, in fact, fundamentals began to matter 18 months ago. Take a look at the performance of the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) versus the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ) over the 18 month period. Even with borrowing costs falling over the past year and a half – even with lower rates providing a boost to corporations, households and governments – “risk on” stocks have underperformed “risk off” treasuries. It gets more interesting. The prices on riskier assets like small caps in the i Shares Russell 2000 ETF (NYSEARCA: IWM ), foreign stocks in the Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US ETF (NYSEARCA: VEU ) and high yield bonds via the SPDR Barclays Capital High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: JNK ) have fallen even further than SPY. In complete contrast, the price of other risk-off assets – the CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: FXY ), the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TLT ), the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ) have surged even higher than IEF. By the way, 18 months is not arbitrary. That is the period of time since the Federal Reserve last purchased an asset (12/18/2014) as part of its balance sheet expansion known as “QE3.” Since the end of quantitative easing, then, indiscriminate risk taking has fallen by the wayside. Larger U.S. companies may have held up, though the prospect for reward has been dim. Smaller stocks, foreign stocks and higher-yielding assets have not held up particularly well; their valuations may be on their way toward mean reversion. In the big picture, then, are you really going to get sucked in to the idea that low rates justify perpetual increases in stock prices? The evidence suggests that, until valuations become far more reasonable, upside gains will be limited. Additionally, until and unless the Federal Reserve provides more shocking and more awe-inspiring QE-like balance sheet expansion a la “QE4,” where the 10-year yield is manipulated down from the 2% level to the 1% level, low rate justification for excessive risk-taking would be misplaced. What could the catalyst be for indiscriminate risk taking? What could spark a genuinely strong bull market uptrend? Reasonable valuations that are likely to result from a bearish cycle. Fed policy reversal might then force the 10-year yield to 1% or even 0.5%, and we could then discuss how they “justify” still higher valuations than exist in 2016. Nevertheless, unless the Fed has found methods for eliminating recessions outright and permanently inspiring credit expansion, bear markets will still ravage portfolios of the unprepared investor. Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.