Sunday, November 13, 2016

11/13/2016 Hail to the CEO

Sector Model
XLB
0.64%
Full Model
Date
Return
Days
BT
8/11/2015
-34.05%
460
DY
10/30/2015
14.45%
380
TMK
11/23/2015
16.78%
356
UPLMQ
12/1/2015
18.95%
348
NVR
12/16/2015
-7.85%
333
CMP
2/19/2016
11.36%
268
NVR
2/22/2016
-3.97%
265
ENOC
3/15/2016
-15.98%
243
AMWD
3/17/2016
13.46%
241
CASY
5/12/2016
2.36%
185
AVB
5/24/2016
-5.54%
173
AEM
6/7/2016
-15.80%
159
ESRX
6/13/2016
-1.74%
153
AMED
6/16/2016
-18.38%
150
FRO
6/27/2016
-2.44%
139
ASTE
7/12/2016
9.35%
124
BSET
8/3/2016
13.31%
102
MFC
9/1/2016
21.32%
73
SFM
9/8/2016
10.47%
66
CFFN
9/12/2016
13.68%
62
(Since 5/31/2011)
S&P
Annualized
9.11%
Sector Model
Annualized
15.69%
Full Model
Annualized
11.80%
S&P
Total
60.90%
Sector Model
Total
121.51%
Full Model
Total
83.75%
Sector Model
Advantage
6.58%
Full Model
Advantage
2.69%
Previous
2016
S&P
51.94%
5.90%
Sector Model
77.79%
24.59%
Full Model
57.78%
16.46%

The collapse of the futures on the night of the election was followed by a rally the next day – in different industries.

What happened was a simple rotation.  Those expecting a Clinton win were invested in industries they expected to outperform with her as President, and they sold off those stocks to buy others in industries favored by a Trump Presidency.  My sector model was in materials and did well.  The rotation during the week pulled the full model into an intriguing set of industries for the new buy zone:

BUILDING
FURNITUR
HOMEBILD
HUMAN
INDUSRV
MINING
NWSPAPER
PACKAGE
REIT
SEMI-EQP
SOFTWARE


Notice a commonality for the election of a real estate tycoon: Building, Furniture, Homebuild, Reit.  All related to real estate.  Mining, Indusrv, and Semi-Eqp are secondary beneficiaries.  And finally, it’s reasonable for Nwspaper to prosper during the Presidency of such a colorful figure.  Whatever Trump’s attributes, “boring” is not one that normally comes to mind.

A lot is being made about the stock market hitting all time highs.  In the short term Donald Trump and Paul Ryan agree on some bullish policies, such as tax and regulation reform.  In the long term they will have to fight over some catastrophically bad ideas that Trump has on protectionism and mass deportation.  He’s backed off on the latter, but still holds the protectionist threat out there.

Economically, Trump is a mercantilist – seeing government as having a role to increase exports and decrease imports as a means of bringing wealth to the country.  In a vacuum, such an idea looks good, but in history all that happens is that the other countries adopt similar policies in trade wars that slow down economic activity for everyone.  The threat of deporting undocumented workers and starting a trade war while baby boomers retire faster than they are being replaced could trigger a global recession, if not an outright depression.  I voiced these concerns two summers ago when Trump first announced his Presidential run.  Trump hasn’t changed his protectionist policies since then, so the threat still exists.  However, his backing off on the mass deportation idea greatly reduces the amount of immediate harm he is likely to do.

I cannot predict the effect on the market short term.  We are overdue for a recession anyway, and we should see a selloff on the S&P somewhere down into the 1600-1800 range between now and 2019 just as a matter of normal market behavior.  But guessing when is a fool’s errand.

The best stock in my buy zone for the past week has been CCO.TO in the Mining industry.  I don’t currently own it, but I’m watching it.

As for the stocks I hold, the only ones still in my buy zone are AMWD, BSET, AVB, and NVR.  The rest are holds.

Trump will be the new President – next year.  The first two years will likely focus on the pro-growth agenda Trump and Ryan agree on.  After that, it will be a contest between Trump’s bad ideas and Ryan’s good ones.  Who wins that contest remains to be seen – but Trump doesn’t like to lose.

Tim



No comments:

Post a Comment