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Portfolio Diversification Strategy During The Fed’s Rate Hike Cycle

Summary Where the Fed, analysts and the market see the Fed funds rate and when. What we’re trading and how to capture the move higher in the Fed Funds rate. How to experiment with any potential outcome for this fully disclosed Fed Funds Trade. HCB Stocks & trading strategy, which I believe will offer a superior return on risk during the rate hike cycle. I believe diversification and objective risk control will be essential during the next 36 months as the Fed gradually hikes rates. My objective of this report series is to introduce new sectors and strategies to capture the major market moves being generated by current extreme economic fundamentals. As opportunities develop in metals, energies and currencies I’ll share what I’m doing in these sectors and how. I encourage your comments on sectors and trades your in with similar or higher returns on risks. The goal of this report series is generating POSITIVE dialogue among fellow TRADERS who share the objective of finding the most effective solutions to the problem of making money. It’s not set up for tradeless academic master debaters who can subjectively criticize but can’t offer objective facts to support their opinion or a solution. In this report I have provided strategy to capture the move higher in the Fed Funds rate over the next 13 months . I’ve also included 11 HCB stocks (high cash buffers) that could benefit from higher rates and included defined risk strategy on how to trade them during the rate hike cycle. The first rate hike in 10 years is on deck in 5 days (16 December 2015). Using this fully disclosed strategy even if the Fed is wrong about the Fed Funds rate the Fed sets, there is no hike on 16 December 2015, this position is structured to maintain and capture any future rate hikes over the next 9 FOMC meetings through 31 December 2016. Last objective guidance where Fed Chair Yellen sees the Fed Funds rate and when (video 1:59) Source Federal Reserve What the move is worth Current contract value = $552 (cash market 0.1325%). Fed projection by December 2016 = $7,500 (1.8000%). Fed projection by December 2017 = $13,125 (3.1500%). Probability = 85.30% for 16 December 2015 . Source Chicago Mercantile Exchange Click here for more information on what this rate is and how it’s set. One simple trade to capture the move higher in the Fed Funds rate through 31 December 2015 . Trading the Fed Funds rate higher requires establishing a short position in the underlying futures contract . To convert the contract price into the rate it represents Take 100.00 – the contract price = the rate. Example 100.00 – a contract price of 99.46 = a rate of 0.54%. Each 0.01 change in price = $41.67 change in contract value. Position Short at 99.46, the December 2016 CME futures contract (ZQZ16) Trading this rate higher from 0.54% Contract value = $2,250 Objective The Fed’s target by 31 December 2016 Contract price = 98.20 Rate = 1.80% Contract value = $7,500 Click here to enlarge the rate, price, valuation chart below Current chart and quotes To experiment with any potential outcome for this trade. Click here and open the interactive risk reward spreadsheet Watch the 5 minute video linked below on how to use it As this position appreciates we’ll update its performance and share hedging strategy/updated spreadsheest showing you how we’re locking in gains. This trade was originally posted on Seeking Alpha 12 October 2015 . Federal Open Market Committe meetings schedule & Fed statements The last tightening cycle from 1.00% June 2004 to 5.25% June 2006 Stock diversification strategy during the rate hike cycle Below are 11 companies that have built sizable cash buffers and links to monitor them on SA moving forward: Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT ), Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE ), Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO ), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS ), Moody’s (NYSE: MCO ), Oracle (NYSE: ORCL ), AT&T (NYSE: T ), AbbVie (NYSE: ABBV ) and JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM ). From past ratios and what I’m seeing between interest rate hike expectations through December 2018, relative to stock price change, it appears rate hikes might actually fuel these stocks higher. I’m trading these stocks using “collars” to define my risk on all trades and for the duration of every trading period. Example of a “collar” to define risk: Own 1,000 shares of GOOGL at $745 Write the $800 call collecting premium (1,000 shares) Using the collected premium buy the $700 put (1,000 shares) Trade outcomes 1) The market stays the same, if you set the trade up right you should be collecting approximately as much time value on the $800 call you’ve written against your $745 long position as you’ve spent on the purchase of the $700 put to hedge the position. In some scenarios you’ll actually have a credit. 2) Market sells off hard to $500, your loses below $700 are negated by the put you’ve purchased at $700. At $500 you can offset the put for a $200 profit and reestablish a new hedge by buying a new put at $500 lowering your entry cost by $200. Your new average entry price has now dropped from $745 to $545 making recovery more obtainable. 3) The market continues to move higher and the position is called away at a profit at $800, you can always reestablish it. Click here for more on Seeking Alpha on why we’re trading these high cash buffer (HCB’s) stocks and how.

5 Must-See Economic Charts Show Why Stocks May Stumble In 2016

On your mark. Get set. Terrible. How do we know the economy is slowing down rather than picking up? The treasury yield curve is flattening. Key credit spreads are widening. The manufacturing segment is contracting. Labor market conditions are moderating. And the consumer is spending less. Everyone has a guilty pleasure or three. Mine? I am addicted to Seth MacFarlane’s “Family Guy.” I cannot get enough of outrageously random references on everything from a pizza place’s version of a salad to writers plying their trade at Starbucks. Underneath it all are characters whose comments are outlandish and whose behaviors are impetuous or harebrained. This morning, a particular exchange in a Family Guy episode is stuck in my head. Peter Griffin is blackmailing his father-in-law about an extra-marital affair. As part of the extortion, Peter requires the father-in-law to produce a list of exceptional catch-phrases. (Peter wants his own catch-phrase attributable to him.) One of the catch-phrases that he admires is as inane as it is nonsensical. “On your mark. Get set. Terrible.” Why is this scene playing on a loop in my head right now? Perhaps it has to do with the Federal Reserve’s imminent directional shift with respect to borrowing costs. Or maybe it has to do with the current state of the economy. Or even more likely, the catch-phrase aptly describes what is likely to happen to risk assets when the Fed is hiking overnight lending rates into a decelerating economy. How do we know the economy is slowing down rather than picking up? The treasury yield curve is flattening. Key credit spreads are widening. The manufacturing segment is contracting. Labor market conditions are moderating. And the consumer is spending less. Let me start with the all-important yield curve. A steepening curve is indicative of a healthier economic backdrop whereas a flattening curve is indicative of weakness in an economy. Granted, a flattening curve by itself is not a death blow for an expansion. On the other hand, the less the difference between long maturities (e.g. 25 years, 30 years, etc.) and short maturities (e.g., 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, etc.), the less confidence the financial world has in the well-being of an expansion. Right now? Investors have less confidence in the well-being of the current expansion than they did when the Fed put plans in motion for its awe-inspiring QE3 stimulus back in 2012. Beyond the yield curve’s warning about the economy as well as riskier assets like stocks, we have the widening of 10-year treasuries and comparable corporate bonds. For example, six months ago, the Composite Corporate Bond Rate (CCBR) was at 3.85% and the 10-year Treasury was at 2.4%. Today, the spread has widened with the CCBR at 4.32% and the 10-year treasury at 2.22%. The jump in this credit spread from 1.45% to 2.10% – 65 basis points – is significant for just 6 months. There’s more. One can investigate the risk preferences of investors by comparing the lowest end of the investment grade corporate bond (Baa) spectrum as it compares with a comparable 10-year treasury. Not only has the spread moved nearly 100 basis points in the last year – from 2.2 percent to 3.2 percent – but the same move from 2% to above 3% in this spread preceded the last two recessions. Still not persuaded? Let’s take a look at one of the most consistent economic forecasting tools: The Institute For Supply Management’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). Economists tend to interpret PMI in two ways – on a single reading as well as over a time horizon. In essence, a percentage over 50 expresses manufacturing health and a percentage under 50 expresses a manufacturing recession. On an absolute basis, November PMI came in at 49.8. We are already in pretty bad shape. More troubling, however, is the persistent downtrend over the last 12 months. Keep in mind, the same type of downtrend preceded the real estate inspired Great Recession. What’s more, when the Fed acted to stimulate the U.S. economy in 2009 as well as 2012, PMI expanded handsomely. Based on what the manufacturing sector is telling us, does it make sense that the Fed is hell-bent on hiking overnight lending rates now? Wouldn’t it have been more “opportune” to do so immediately after QE3 ended in 2014? From my vantage point, the timing of the Fed’s directional shift is on the wrong side of history. Contraction in the manufacturing segment, the flattening of the treasury curve and the widening of credit spreads are signs of economic deceleration. Is it wishful thinking to place all of our hopes in the service sector basket? Probably not. Take a look at the state of retail sales. The last time that year-over-year retail sales looked this anemic, the Federal Reserve shocked and awed the country with its boldest ever stimulus program. In complete contrast, the Fed is gearing up to set a course for gradual tightening. If risk assets like stocks are going to power ahead to new 52-week record highs, they’re going to need that course to be as gradual as a snail crossing a 5-lane highway. (And the snail better hope it does not get crushed by a car as it attempts to cross!) Still not convinced that the economy is on shaky ground? Still think the Fed is invincible with respect to its policy wisdom? Then take a look at the Fed’s own Labor Market Conditions Index (LMCI). The model incorporates labor market conditions across 19 underlying indicators. Just this month, November’s reading came in at a less-than-promising 0.5. That was revised down from 2.2 in October. Equally troubling, there have been 12 negative revisions with only 6 positive revisions over the last year and a half. When the LMCI drops below zero, it is meant to be a warning to economists that labor market conditions are contracting. The current reading of 0.5, then, doesn’t exactly promote warm and fuzzy feelings with regard to claims that labor market is healthy. What’s more, each of the last five recessions were preceded by an LMCI reading below zero. With the current reading of 0.5, is the Fed is genuinely confident about the well-being of the labor market? Is the chatter about “nearing full employment” more of a smoke screen to distract others from discussing the Labor Market Conditions Index (LMCI) in greater detail? Why are voting members of the Fed’s Open Market Committee (FOMC) downplaying the fact that the percentage of working-aged individuals (25-54) in the labor force continues to evaporate? Millions of working-aged Americans (25-54) are not counted as part of the headline unemployment rate such that prospects for the prime working-aged demographic (25-54) haven’t been this grim since the early 1980s. The economy is fragile. If the economy were humming along, the treasury yield curve would be steepening, not flattening; if the backdrop were rosy, key credit spreads would be coming together, not widening. If the economy were firing on all cylinders, manufacturers would be growing their businesses, not making less stuff; households would be spending more each year, not increasing their savings and holding back on holiday purchases. Additionally, the percentage of working-aged individuals in the labor force (25-54) would be growing, not disappearing; labor market conditions via the LMCI would be vibrant, not wobbly. Now, if someone wants to make a case that the economy’s shakiness is irrelevant to the near-term or intermediate-term direction of stock prices, he/she might be able to argue it. However, history suggests otherwise. For one thing, a contraction in earnings (a.k.a. “earnings recession”) is already in effect. Earnings contraction typically portends weaker economic output as well as inferior total returns in the stock market. In fact, corporate earnings on the S&P 500 have declined 14% year-over-year – from $106 to $91. Even the Wall Street Journal/Birinyi Associates Forward P/E Ratio of 17.4 – a ratio that is 25% higher than the 35-year average Forward P/E of 13 – would require 33% earnings growth over the coming 12 months. Is this economy going to witness an industrial/energy revival as well as extraordinary demand for U.S exports to support 33% earnings growth over the next year? Not likely. Stocks will only be moving from overvalued to insanely overvalued. Second, there’s a remarkably strong link between profit margins and recessions. Not that long ago, Jonathan Glionna at Barclays’ noted the relationship between shrinking profit margins and recessions for the last seven business cycles, going back to 1973. He wrote: The results are not encouraging for the economy or the stock market. In every period except one, a 0.6% decline in margins in 12 months coincided with a recession. Already, profit margins have declined 60 basis points. Will stocks and the U.S. economy be more like 1985, then? Or will they be more like 1973-1974, 1981-1982, 1987, 1990, 2000-2002 and 2007-2009? For my moderate clients, I am maintaining an asset allocation that is less “risky” than normal. Whereas it might be appropriate for a moderate client to have 70% equity exposure across all stock types (e.g., large, small, foreign, emerging, etc.), we have 60% primarily dedicated to the large company space. Some of the ETFs that we own include the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ), the iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF (NYSEARCA: IWF ) and the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLK ). Similarly, it might typically be appropriate for a moderate client to own 30% across all income assets (e.g., investment grade bonds, convertibles, higher-yield, master limited partnerships, short maturity, long maturity, etc.). However, we have 25% primarily dedicated to investment grade bonds with intermediate maturities. Some of the ETFs that we own include the SPDR Nuveen Barclays Municipal Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TFI ), the iShares Core Total U.S. Bond Market ETF (NYSEARCA: AGG ) and iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ). The remaining 15%? Cash and cash equivalents. In addition, if the economy worsens and market internals degenerate and stock valuations become obscene, I would make a tactical decision to raise cash levels. There’s only one way to acquire assets at lower prices. You’ve got to have the cash on hand to take advantage when the world seems to be falling apart. 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.

VWELX: This 86 Year Old Fund Is Still An Ideal Choice For Retirement

Summary Vanguard Wellington is the first balanced fund in the U.S. having launched in 1929. The fund has ranked in the top 10% of its Morningstar peer group over the past 5-, 10- and 15-year periods. The fund has a beta of 0.65 compared to the S&P 500 while outperforming the index over the long term. Wellington held up remarkably well during the 2000 and 2008 bear markets. In a world where there are literally thousands of funds and ETFs available that cover almost every niche, sector and style available, sometimes it’s the most tried and true investment vehicles that still remain the best choices. In the case of the Vanguard Wellington Fund (MUTF: VWELX ), we’re talking about literally the oldest balanced mutual fund in the country. Launched all the way back in 1929, Wellington looks to maintain a balance of roughly two-thirds of assets in conservative large cap stocks and one-third of assets in a mix of high quality bonds. It’s this type of asset allocation that makes for an ideal core holding in many retirement portfolios. Historically, Wellington has provided exactly what retirement investors should be seeking – above average returns with below average risk. With a current beta of 0.65, you’d expect the fund to return about two-thirds of the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF’s (NYSEARCA: SPY ) return but over the past 20+ years that hasn’t been the case. VWELX Total Return Price data by YCharts Looking at the past 2+ decades of history is especially appropriate because it takes into account both bull and bear market environments. The fund has performed about how one would expect – outperforming the S&P 500 in a down market but trailing in an up market. The fund’s risk minimization strategy proved especially effective during the Nasdaq bubble providing a relatively steady market performance given the economic environment. While the chart above doesn’t illustrate Wellington’s performance during the financial crisis particularly well but you can see below how well the fund held up. VWELX Total Return Price data by YCharts While the S&P 500 dropped around 55% from its 2007 peak, Wellington was down about 35%. That’s roughly what you’d expect considering the fund’s 60/40 allocation but the fund’s long term performance has been exceptional. Over the last 10 years, the overall performance of Wellington and the S&P 500 has been almost identical. Using a more apples to apples comparison, Wellington has also outperformed the Vanguard Balanced Index Fund (MUTF: VBINX ) – a fund with a 60/40 stock and bond allocation – during the same 10 year period. Morningstar drops Wellington into the Moderate Target Risk bucket. While the fund has returned 8.2% per year since the fund’s inception, it has consistently ranked at the top of its peer group. Wellington ranks in the top 6% of its peer group over the past 5-year and 10-year periods and ranks in the top 4% in the past 15-year period. It’s this type of risk-managed performance history that retirement investors should be seeking out. Retirement income investors will also appreciate the fund’s 2.43% yield. The fund has a few dividend champions among its equity holdings and the bond holdings are almost entirely high quality corporate and Treasury securities ensuring that the fund’s dividend is secure and reliable. Conclusion I’m a firm believer that in the case of most retirement investors, simpler is better. Sophisticated investors may feel comfortable building a more complex portfolio using stock, sector ETFs, etc. but for those who want an all-in-one long term holding that they can just establish and forget about, it’s hard to imagine someone doing much better than Vanguard Wellington. The combination of strong long term performance, risk minimization and low costs make this an ideal core retirement holding even if it’s not as exciting as some of the newer niche products hitting the market today.