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Caution Needed In The Current Volatility Market

Summary The Greek/Chinese event didn’t even come close to causing a market freakout. We need bigger and better freakouts for the most profitable results. Freakout! Queue “Le Freak” by Chic. This article will focus on historical levels of contango and backwardation and how that can guide your volatility investments. Even though it was a point of contention with some of my readers, we saw a swift and sudden drop off in volatility, just as I predicted. Why? China and Greece. Two very different countries with very different problems. China: China is hunting for market manipulators while banning short selling of stocks and selling in general. Who is manipulating whom over there? Eventually fundamentals will begin to rule the Chinese market, but it will trade at a discount for some time based on a lack of trust from global investors. Greece: Speaking of trust, the Eurozone ran out of it for Greece. After agreeing to a deal that was worse than the one it rejected, Greece is now begging to stay part of the family. I was sure we would get more drama out of this one, but for now fears have subsided. Still a volatility wildcard in the short-term. The continuing question I have on Greece is, what was resolved? Nothing is set in stone yet and you have the IMF stating that the current deal will never work. I personally think the best thing for Greece and the Greek people would be to return to their own currency. Just my two cents. UVXY The ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (NYSEARCA: UVXY ) had quite a run over the past few weeks. We will take a look at the chart below after reviewing what drives UVXY (regular readers can skip to the chart). UVXY profits from increasing VIX futures. By investing in second month contracts, usually priced at a premium known as contango, it hopes they will increase in value before being sold off to roll into the new second month. Backwardation is when second month futures are priced higher than from month futures. This benefits UVXY and reverses the usual time value decay caused by contango. For more on contango and backwardation, click here . (click to enlarge) As we spoke about before, UVXY benefits from backwardation. See below for the contango/backwardation in the VIX futures over the past few weeks. (click to enlarge) The VIX futures reached 1.36% into backwardation (higher in intraday) and receded into backwardation several times (again during intraday). Warning If you have been a regular reader of mine you know my strategy is cut and dry. Always avoid trying to catch a spike up in volatility. Wait until VIX futures spike and then initiate a short position. During the next year, you need to be very careful about when to short volatility. As previously pointed out, some writers on Seeking Alpha were screaming “short volatility” the second it spiked after the Greek news came out. This is purely bad advice. Sure you may win some battles, but you will lose the war. Not all spikes in volatility are created equal which is why there isn’t a science that works 100% of the time when investing in volatility. My point is, eventually and I believe in the next year, a market pullback will turn into a correction. Right now the U.S. is a safe haven because things are more risky around the globe. Are you going to go all in shorting volatility 3% into a possible correction? I would hope not. Telling signs The phrase “it will get better” doesn’t always apply to the stock market in the short-term (which is what you should be focused on with volatility). The market has bred a new class of investor that believes every pullback will be followed by a subsequent recovery and market rally. This is simply not true. Advice The contango and backwardation indicators are one of the best resources to use for when to short volatility. The other is your brain. See below: (click to enlarge) I created this chart myself using historical data from The Intelligent Investor Blog . Dates are not included in the chart due to some issues I am having with Excel and axis placements. The chart begins in 2004 and runs to present in 2015. When removing 2008 the normal contango and backwardation events would look like the ones below: (click to enlarge) I have added wording to the chart which describes my personal opinion on events and the level of backwardation they would warrant. Depending on the level of a recession you would most likely see backwardation in excess of 25%. In this period of ultra low volatility I would expect a correction to possibly produce a backwardation event in the 20% range. Conclusion My point in these charts are that 1.36% backwardation should not cause you to go “all in” on volatility, ever. You could bet more when the economy is great, but I would not use that word to describe the current state of the economy. I need much healthier and organic growth to feel rosy about the U.S. economy. UVXY Call Spread (Options) I have posted a call spread strategy to my blog which you can view here . UVXY Recommendation The shorting opportunity for UVXY has passed. I never recommend purchasing or holding UVXY to bet on rising volatility. For more information on my strategy of only shorting volatility, please view my past articles. Patience is key and greed will eventually destroy you with volatility. Now is again a time to be patient and wait for another spike in the VIX. Keep an eye on the backwardation meter to judge the proper timing. Wait until things feel like they can’t get much worse, then wait some more. Thanks for reading and I hope you have a profitable week! Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Why The Law Of Large Numbers Dictates Effective Risk Management

Summary It is effective risk management that determines profitability rather than the incidence of wins to losses. The law of large numbers suggests that a larger number of trades with a positive reward to risk ratio will be more effective than a smaller number of trades. In this regard, it is possible for a trader to be “wrong” a majority of the time while continuing to remain profitable. “It’s not whether you’re right or wrong that’s important, but how much money you make when you’re right and how much you lose when you’re wrong.” – George Soros The entire dynamic of successful trading could probably be summed up in the above sentence. When I started out trading forex, I was overly concerned with getting the trades right. However, I have come to learn that the most successful traders are not the ones who are right all the time; rather they are the ones who know how to manage their risk most effectively . For instance, the odds that a plane will crash somewhere in the world are 1 in 11 million. Indeed, this is a very low probability. However, when one considers the vast number of flights that take off and land every day, it is sadly almost inevitable that there will be a plane crash at some point in the future. The odds of a golfer getting a hole in one are 5,000 to 1. However, across the world there are far more than 5,000 games of golf being played in a single day; it is therefore almost inevitable that a player somewhere in the world will manage to score a hole in one today. The above phenomenon is known as the law of large numbers ; where an event with a low probability of occurring on its own has a higher probability of occurring when subjected to a large number of trials. This has important implications for risk management, and moreover it demonstrates how a trader can still be wrong the majority of the time while continuing to be profitable. Let us take this as an example. Suppose that we have eight forex trades in a particular month, with a 1:3 risk-reward ratio, or a stop loss of 50 pips and a take profit of 150 pips. For each trade (discounting technical or fundamental factors), the odds are greater that we will make a loss rather than a profit. However, the profit on each trade far outweighs the potential loss. With a 1:3 risk-reward ratio, we have a 75 percent chance of the price hitting our stop loss with a 25 percent chance of it hitting our take profit ratio. However, this also means that only two of the eight trades need to be profitable for us to breakeven. Moreover, the law of large numbers dictates that at least two of our trades are indeed likely to be profitable. 1-(1-p)^number of trials where p is the probability of an event occurring In the above instance, we need at least three of our trades to hit the take profit point in order to be profitable. Given that we have a 0.25 probability of this happening, our probabilities are as follows: 1-(0.25)^1 = 0.25 1-(0.25)^2 = 0.4375 1-(0.25)^3 = 0.5781 1-(0.25)^4 = 0.6835 1-(0.25)^5 = 0.7626 1-(0.25)^6 = 0.8220 1-(0.25)^7 = 0.8665 1-(0.25)^8 = 0.8998 We see that with eight trades being placed, we have an 89 percent probability that at least one trade will hit our take profit point. Given that we need three trades to be profitable: 0.8998^3 = 72.85 percent probability of three trades being profitable In this regard, we see that the law of large numbers provides us with an attractive risk-reward set up in that it limits our downside while maximizing our upside. Moreover, we can be wrong more often than we are right and still remain profitable. One of the big reasons why most new traders fail is the inability to manage risk effectively. For instance, if we decided to set up trades with a high risk and low return, e.g. 150-pip stop loss and 50-pip profit, then even if we were right a majority of the time it would only take a couple of losing trades to wipe out our winnings. Ultimately, being a successful trader is not always about being right. It is about managing your risk effectively. As we can see, the law of large numbers plays a key role in doing so. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Taking Stock: Putting Equity Valuations In Perspective

Summary Investors feel there’s little margin for error in equity markets when macro concerns such as rising interest rates and geopolitical hot spots are part of the equation. Valuations matter and investors are overly concerned with the downside and are failing to appreciate the impact of solid macro fundamentals. We may certainly see market dips, but history shows that short-term losses not caused by deteriorating fundamentals are often recovered quickly. Lately, hardly a day goes by without a headline proclaiming that developed market equity valuations are rich. Throw in macro concerns such as rising interest rates and geopolitical hot spots, and it’s no surprise that investors feel there’s little margin for error in equity markets. In this commentary, I’d like to steer away from the headlines and offer some perspective on valuations and how much they matter relative to other return drivers. In my view, investors are overly concerned with the downside and failing to appreciate the impact of solid macro fundamentals, improving earnings in Europe and Japan, and global accommodative central bank policy-forces that are sufficient to maintain or elevate equity valuations further. We may certainly see market dips, but history shows that short-term losses not caused by deteriorating fundamentals are often recovered quickly. Looking at Price/Earnings Ratios (P/E) 1 from Multiple Angles There are numerous ways to analyze valuations. I prefer 12-month forward P/Es because of their intuitive nature-they are the price of a stock divided by median analyst expectations for earnings over the next 12 months. They answer the question: How much are investors willing to pay for this stock, given what the market expects earnings to be over the next year? As Figure 1 shows, P/Es for these developed markets are reasonable, relative to long-term averages. FIGURE 1: 12-Month Forward P/E Ratios (click to enlarge) Sources: IBES; Datastream. With any valuation method, it is useful to compare current valuations to history and to other markets. Today, market consensus is that equity valuations in the U.S., Europe, and Japan are high, suggesting stocks are expensive. But valuations can rise and fall as economic regimes change, so it’s important to look at longer-term metrics as well, for a more complete picture. For example, Figure 2 shows that compared to their five-year history, valuations in all three developed equity markets are in at least the 97th percentile, meaning that forward P/Es have been cheaper 97% of the time over the last five years. However, looking back at the last 20 years, current valuations generally seem more reasonable, as evidenced by lower percentiles and higher median P/Es over that period. The U.S. and Europe do appear more expensive relative to short- and long-term history, but Japan is a different story, seeming cheap relative to its 20-year historical median, and more expensive relative to the recent five-year period. Investors should remember that during the mid- and late 1990s, the Japanese equity market experienced a bubble with very high valuations. Nonetheless, I believe it’s better to include the total history instead of subjectively excluding specific time periods, as other regional equity markets have experienced bubbles as well. FIGURE 2: Comparing Current Valuations to Historical Time Periods Sources: IBES; Datastream; Wellington Management. FIGURE 3: Comparing Current Valuations Across Regions Sources: IBES; Datastream; Wellington Management. Comparing the valuations of regional markets can also be informative. Figure 3 shows that the current P/E difference between the U.S. and Europe is 1.17, meaning U.S. equities are trading at a premium relative to their European counterparts. However, the median P/E differences over the past five and 20 years are 2.01 and 1.88, respectively, meaning that U.S. equities have historically been more expensive relative to Europe than they currently are. Put another way, European equities look expensive relative to U.S. equities today. On the other hand, Japan currently trades at a P/E discount of 2.07 versus the U.S., but over the past 20 years, Japan’s equity market traded at a 2.88 premium, and has traded close to parity with U.S. equities over the past five years. As a result, Japan looks cheap relative to the U.S. over both time periods. Considering Other Factors Valuations are only one input, and investment decisions should be based on multiple factors. For example, despite Europe’s relatively unattractive equity valuations, it remains one of my favored equity markets for more fundamental reasons. Earnings In the simplest terms, equity total returns can be thought of as the sum of dividends, earnings growth, and the P/E multiple. Valuations expand and contract, according to market cycles and investor sentiment, while dividends are fairly stable. The other important consideration is earnings. I think the earnings picture in Europe and Japan is more positive than that of the U.S. In Europe, earnings should benefit from lower fuel prices and a weak euro. In Japan, the management teams of many large companies are focusing more on adding value for shareholders by increasing returns on equity and capital. I’m less optimistic about earnings in the U.S. As Figure 4 shows, U.S. profit margins-which rose steadily following the financial crisis-appear to have peaked in 2013. At the same time, employee compensation as a percentage of gross domestic product (NYSE: GDP ) 2 -which had been falling over the same period as U.S. companies squeezed efficiencies out of everything, including labor, to prop up profits-may have turned a corner. The trend may have reached its limit; after almost eight years of record margins, wages are just beginning to rise, suggesting that earnings could suffer. FIGURE 4: Rising Wages and Falling Profits Could Squeeze U.S. Earnings U.S. Corporate Profits and Labor Compensation as % of GDP Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis; Haver; Wellington Management. Note: This chart uses a four-quarter moving average of corporate profits after tax, with inventory and capital-consumption adjustments, as well as a four-quarter moving average of total employee compensation. Inventory and capital consumptions adjustments smooth out infrequent corporate behavior such as inventory buildups and capital consumptions. Macro Fundamentals Investors also need to consider the effects of macro fundamentals on equity markets. In the U.S., fundamentals are solid but are challenged by a stronger dollar and weaker growth in the first quarter, although some of that may be weather-related. Improved earnings in Europe and Japan are due, in part, to improving fundamentals in those regions. Business and consumer confidence in Europe is increasing, and the lower euro is helping to boost exports. Germany has been growing strongly and boasts a record-low unemployment rate of 4.7%, which should support more domestic consumption. The European Commission recently forecast that even countries that experienced negative growth last year, such as Italy, are expected to rebound into positive territory, and Spain is expected to grow 2.8% this year, double the 2014 rate. Overall, Europe still suffers from high unemployment, which will need to come down for the recovery to be sustained. But even a slight acceleration in growth from current low levels would likely be perceived by equity investors as an important development. Wellington Management’s macroeconomists expect 2015 eurozone GDP growth of around 2%. This is above consensus and reflects our general optimism on the region. I am also optimistic about the Japanese economy. Japan imports almost all of its energy, so it has enjoyed an outsized benefit from cheaper oil. The Bank of Japan’s quantitative easing program has led to improved terms of trade via a weak yen, and Japanese companies have been reporting record profits. In addition, as I mentioned above, companies in Japan are beginning to reallocate capital for shareholders’ benefit. One of the catalysts for this shift is macro in nature. The Japanese government has pushed for the creation of an index (JPX Nikkei 400) comprised only of those companies that meet high standards of corporate performance and return on equity. The Bank of Japan and the world’s largest government pension fund, Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund, now use this index to measure performance of their equity portfolios. All these changes should contribute to solid growth for Japanese equities. Importance of Differentiating Between Noise and Signal As always, risks can weaken an investment thesis. Four major risks on investors’ minds are: a Greek exit from the euro, an escalation of the Russia/Ukraine conflict, a hard landing for China’s economy, and a significant rise in interest rates. If any of these risks come to fruition, I would expect a sustained sell-off in global equities. I believe the risks of these events occurring are low, but I would expect noise related to them could result in isolated, albeit sharp, sell-offs. This would cause short-term pain, but analysis I’ve done on this issue shows that the effect on equities tends to be short-lived and these dips are often buying opportunities. Sell-offs of at least 2% occur an average of nine times per year in the S&P 500 Index, but the market generally recovers in short order. Figure 5 (which uses U.S. data, but is illustrative of developed markets as well) shows that median 10-, 30-, and 60-day total returns following sell-offs of 2% or more are, on average, greater than returns following any random day. The results are even more compelling when controlling for the economic environment. When the U.S. Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) 3 (a metric used to help gauge economic strength) is above 50, signaling economic expansion, total returns following a 2% or greater sell-off are around twice as high as those following any random day. I expect the U.S., European, and Japanese economies to continue expanding in the near term. The recovery effect indicates that “tail risks” from exogenous factors can impact daily returns, but markets ultimately focus on fundamentals and recover from panic-driven one-day dips. Note: Due to the heterogeneity of emerging markets, I have limited the scope of this commentary to developed markets. FIGURE 5: U.S. Stocks Have Historically Rebounded After Most Sell-Offs S&P 500 Forward Total Returns Sources: Bloomberg; Institute for Supply Management; Haver; Wellington Management. Note: The analysis uses S&P 500 Index total returns over 10-, 30-, and 60-day forward periods since 1989. The PMI used is the Institute for Supply Management’s Composite Index. The blue diamonds represent the median return over 10, 30, and 60 days following any random day, regardless of the prior day’s performance. The orange squares represent the median return over 10, 30, and 60 days following a 2% or greater loss. The green triangles represent the median return over 10, 30, and 60. Investment Implications Developed equity valuations are reasonable. While valuations look rich over the recent past, a longer history suggests they are closer to fair value. Consider factors beyond valuations. Investors should also consider potential earnings growth and economic fundamentals. Favor Europe over the U.S. Despite rising valuations, a virtuous cycle of a weak euro, quantitative easing, and cheap oil is forming, and earnings should benefit. Favor Japan over the U.S. In addition to attractive valuations, Japanese companies are recording record profits and focusing on maximizing shareholder value. Notes 1 Price-Earnings Ratio is valuation ratio of a company’s current share price compared to analyst median 12 month forward per-share earnings. 2 Gross Domestic Product is the monetary value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a specific time period. 3 Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) is an indicator of the health of the economy. Disclaimer: Investors should carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses of Hartford Funds before investing. This and other information can be found in the prospectus and summary prospectus, which can be obtained by calling 888-843-7824 (retail) or 800-279-1541 (institutional). Investors should read them carefully before they invest. All investments are subject to risks, including possible loss of principal. Investments in foreign securities may be riskier than investments in U.S. securities. Potential risks include the risks of illiquidity, increased price volatility, less government regulation, less extensive and less frequent accounting and other reporting requirements, unfavorable changes in currency exchange rates, and economic and political disruptions. These risks are generally greater for investments in emerging markets. The views expressed here are those of Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson. They should not be construed as investment advice or as the views of Hartford Funds. They are based on available information and are subject to change without notice. Portfolio positioning is at the discretion of the individual portfolio management teams; individual portfolio management teams may hold different views and may make different investment decisions for different clients or portfolios. This material and/or its contents are current at the time of writing and may not be reproduced or distributed in whole or in part, for any purpose, without the express written consent of Wellington Management. All information and representations herein are as of May 2015, unless otherwise noted. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.