Author Archives: Scalper1

Do You Need To Buy At Market Bottoms To Get Profitable Results?

By Ronald Delegge Legendary speculator Bernard Baruch once quipped: “Don’t try to buy at the bottom and sell at the top. It can’t be done except by liars.” Baruch was on to something. And since reams have been written and said about tops and bottoms in both individual securities along with broader markets, we can’t help but ask: Does a person need to buy at the absolute bottom to turn a profit? Hit the rewind button to July 15, 2015, when via ETFguide’s Weekly Picks we wrote the following timestamped ETF trade alert to premium members: Mining stocks are in puke territory and trading 15% below their 50 and 200-day moving average. The Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSEARCA: GDX ) is oversold and market sentiment is presently overly bearish. We’re buying GDX at current prices near $16.50. Buying depressed out-of-favor assets takes guts, but with enough patience and time, the results can be rewarding. Since our GDX trade alert on Jul. 15, GDX has been dead money and it wasn’t until Jan. 19, 2016 when GDX hit a rock bottom closing price at $12.47. The rest of the global gold mining sector too, went straight into the toilet. And now comes the fun part. Click to enlarge Since GDX’s closing bottom on Jan. 19, the fund has soared +46.05% compared to just a +2.87% gain for the S&P 500. But wait, there’s more. Our GDX position – which we did not buy at the market bottom – is now ahead by a respectable +18.11% (see chart above) and it’s still an open trade. Only a greedy slob would be unhappy with that kind of return in this kind of market. It also explicitly proves that you don’t have to buy at market bottoms to turn a profit. I would argue that having stamina, stomach, and patience (SSP) are far more important than buying stocks or whatever else at the bottom. Why? Because even a trader or investor that buys at the bottom but lacks SSP, will inevitably self-destruct. And besides that, nobody but “liars” consistently buys at market bottoms – nobody . Another real life example – and one of the most extreme cases I’ve ever seen – that buying at market bottoms isn’t a prerequisite to achieving great profits is a Portfolio Report Card I did on my Index Investing Show podcast for a 72-year old man with a $26.9 million portfolio. What did he own? This particular guy invested in biotech stocks right before the 1987 stock market crash. Bad timing. He also bought Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ) a few years later in 1991 which again was really bad timing. It was such bad timing that ten years later, he was down 25% on his original investment in Apple! Instead of bailing, his SSP (stamina, stomach, and patience) kept him in the game and legendary results followed. Even though he missed several market bottoms in Apple, he was still able to turn an $84,000 investment into over $8 million. In summary, if you want profitable investment results, stop focusing on tops and bottoms and start cultivating SSP. Disclosure: No positions Link to the original post on ETFguide.com

Vipshop Forecast Soft, Raising Concerns About Slowing China Economy

China e-commerce company Vipshop Holdings ( VIPS ) reported strong fourth-quarter earnings but shares fell as first-quarter guidance fell short. The Q1 shortfall reflects economic uncertainties in China and elsewhere as well as competitive pressures from Alibaba ( BABA ) and JD.com ( JD ),  China e-commerce companies. Late Wednesday, Vipshop reported revenue of $2.15 billion, up 65% in local currency year over year. Vipshop posted a 58% increase in the number of active users to 19.8 million and a 67% increase in total orders of 65 million. Earnings per share minus items of 18 cents rose 66% in local currency, beating the consensus estimate of 16 cents. Vipshop stock was down nearly 12%, near 11, in early afternoon trading in the stock market today . JD stock was down 3.5%, near 24.75. Alibaba was down 1.6%, near 66.17. Vipshop expects Q1 revenue to rise 37% to 43%, but analysts expected 44% growth. Last year’s Q1 revenue doubled from the year-earlier quarter. It did not provide an earnings forecast. “Longer term, we remain optimistic on the discount retailing market and continue to believe in Vipshop’s strategic value in the space, which is mainly driven by the company’s merchandising capability and large scale,” wrote Summit Research analyst Henry Guo in a research note. China online gaming company NetEase ( NTES ) reported Q4 earnings late Wednesday that topped forecasts, but its profit margin disappointed and NetEase stock was down 16%, near 134. China Economy An Issue For Vipshop, Others The decline in China Internet stocks come as worries grow about a slowing economy and concerns of Chinese government restrictions on trading. The Shanghai composite, China’s benchmark index, fell 6.4% Thursday. The Shenzen composite, roughly equivalent to the Nasdaq, fell 7.3%. China search leader Baidu ( BIDU ) is set to report earnings after the close Thursday, with analysts looking for guidance on China’s ad market amid an economic slowdown. Baidu stock was down nearly 4%, near 157, Thursday afternoon. Baidu this month announced that it had received a nonbinding proposal from two Baidu executives to acquire the company’s fast-growing Qiyi video unit for $2.8 billion. JD is slated to report Q4 earnings before the market open on Tuesday. The focus is expected to be on JD’s push into online-to-offline (O2O) retailing and other new businesses. JD is banking on its O2O business to help it compete in China’s burgeoning e-commerce arena vs. China e-commerce leader Alibaba and others. Tencent Holdings ( TCEHY ), China’s leader in messaging and gaming, is set to report earnings before the market open March 17. It’s traded in the U.S. over the counter. Tencent, Alibaba, JD and Baidu are the four largest Internet companies in China. On Jan. 28, Alibaba reported earnings for its fiscal third quarter ended Dec. 31 that topped Wall Street expectations. Vipshop is an online discount retailer that sells branded apparel, accessories, home goods and other lifestyle products. It specializes in so-called flash sales, in which a set number of goods are sold over a limited time. “As we diversify our product offering and further enhance the customer experience, we are confident in our ability to drive further growth and value for investors,” Vipshop CEO Eric Shen said in the company’s Q4 earnings release . Vipshop spotlighted its strength in mobile, which accounted for 82% of the total value of goods sold on its website, up from 66% in Q4 2014. It said orders for Vipshop’s core flash sales business jumped 126%. Strong growth in customers and orders in the quarter “implies strong brand awareness among consumers, despite increasing competition in flash sales category from Alibaba and JD.com,” wrote Guo.

Investors’ Biggest Mistake: Home Bias

By Tim Maverick Everybody loves to cheer for their home team when it comes to sports. But, it turns out that investors around the world do the same with their money. Let me give you an example. Brazil is suffering through its worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. Its currency, the real, is near record lows. And its stock market is down by 40% over the past five years. Add in other factors such as the Zika virus – and it’s bad times, to say the least. But what are Brazilian investors doing? They’re liquidating their overseas holdings and buying Brazilian stocks. Are they nuts? Nope, it’s just human nature. In investing, it’s called “home bias.” And U.S. investors are among the most guilty. It’s Not 1950 In my years giving advice to clients, I found a very strong aversion among investors to investing overseas. People confuse familiarity with safety. I once had a client who stormed out of the office saying he would never invest a penny of his money outside the United States. Now, that was an extreme circumstance. But people do invest as if it’s still 1950, and the U.S. is the dominant economic power. Back then, the U.S. made up a huge part of the world’s market capitalization. Today, that’s down to about 50%. Yet, people invest as if nothing’s changed. A study by the mutual fund company Henderson Global Investors found that Americans were the second-most guilty of home bias globally, trailing only Canadians. This is backed up by an analysis done last summer by robo-advisor SigFig. It found that the median individual investor had a mere 6.6% of their portfolio in international equities. The study also found that bigger, and presumably more sophisticated, portfolios had less home bias. This makes sense. I can guarantee people like George Soros don’t have most of their portfolios in the U.S. The World Is Waiting The U.S. economy produced only 22.5% of the world’s GDP in 2014. That’s quite a change from just after World War II when the U.S. accounted for half of global GDP. Overall, developed economies now make up less than half of global GDP. Developing economies now account for just over half. Let’s just think about Asia for a moment – specifically China, India, and Indonesia. In terms of population, they rank first, second, and fourth respectively. The U.S. is third. There are over 2.8 billion people in these three countries. Are you, as an investor, going to ignore them as if they don’t exist? Wall Street wants you to. They want you to buy U.S. stocks. That’s why most Wall Street firms badmouth China every chance they get. Use Your Common Sense Investing overseas is really just common sense. Most people wouldn’t put 100% of their money into one stock. Nor would they limit themselves to stocks from Pennsylvania just because they live in that state. Why then would you limit yourself to just one country? My favorite analogy is that it would be like grocery shopping in only one aisle of the store. But investors continue shopping in one aisle. Home bias remains a big problem for even financial professionals. The toughest sell remains getting clients to diversify. Many stubbornly cling to putting all or most of their eggs into one basket. At a conference for registered investment advisors in November, Charles Schwab’s Jeff Kleintop said, “That’s exactly the opposite of what they should be doing now.” Now Is the Time to Diversify I would put the emphasis on the word now. The U.S. market has outperformed international markets since 2009. I can assure you it won’t continue. Markets will revert to the mean. In simple terms, underperforming markets will begin outperforming – and vice versa. As someone who has been in the investment business since the 1980s, I can tell you it’s a basic fact of financial markets. It’s like the sun rising and setting every day. Many markets – particularly the emerging ones – are at valuations not seen in decades. That’s thanks largely to U.S. fund managers selling. In other words, home bias. I think it’ll be a lot easier and more profitable to find companies that are serving those 2.8 billion-plus consumers in Asia, than finding an undiscovered gem in the U.S. The mass of Wall Street research makes that near possible, except for an occasional penny stock. I’d like to end with a piece of advice from famed investor, Jim Rogers. He said you should wait until you see money lying in the corner and all you have to do is go over and pick it up. That describes overseas markets right now more than the U.S. Link to the original article on Wall Street Daily .