A Scary Time for Stocks
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Estava a ser irónico, mas isso não interessa porque o mercado vai subir à mesma.
Em todo o caso, em resposta a um post do Bertolucci, deixei alguns gáficos que permitem ver que a loucura já está instalada no mercado.
Fica o pedido de desculpas.
Um abraço
Em todo o caso, em resposta a um post do Bertolucci, deixei alguns gáficos que permitem ver que a loucura já está instalada no mercado.
Fica o pedido de desculpas.
Um abraço
Existe um mundo melhor... mas é caríssimo!
- Mensagens: 189
- Registado: 6/2/2003 21:14
Incognitus:
Bom, então ainda bem que me alguem me alertou a tempo de não realizar os fortíssimos reajustamentos aos meus investimentos que tinha planeado para a abertura dos mercados de hoje!
Bicho:
Se estavas a ser irónico acho que deverias deixar isso mais claro... De outro modo podes enganar o pessoal que não te conhece (como é o meu caso)...
Bom, então ainda bem que me alguem me alertou a tempo de não realizar os fortíssimos reajustamentos aos meus investimentos que tinha planeado para a abertura dos mercados de hoje!

Bicho:
Se estavas a ser irónico acho que deverias deixar isso mais claro... De outro modo podes enganar o pessoal que não te conhece (como é o meu caso)...

Earthlings? Bah!
- Mensagens: 1541
- Registado: 20/11/2003 11:37
O Bicho estava a ser irónico.
Mas resumiu bem o que vai na cabeça dos milhões de compradores por esse mundo fora.
O facto de estarmos sempre a ver gráficos que incluem o ano de 2000, tem muito a ver com os movimentos que observámos em 2003 e observamos em 2004.
Mas resumiu bem o que vai na cabeça dos milhões de compradores por esse mundo fora.
O facto de estarmos sempre a ver gráficos que incluem o ano de 2000, tem muito a ver com os movimentos que observámos em 2003 e observamos em 2004.
- Mensagens: 3255
- Registado: 6/11/2002 19:27
Isso é que é sabedoria:
Todos no mesmo saco, e para o lixo com eles! (Velhadas estúpidos!)
Aliás quem lhes pode ligar alguma coisa, (especialmente ao Warren Buffett, essa espécie de fóssil vinda de um passado já tão distante), quando temos acesso às previsões do Bicho?
E assim:
Pronto, agora que já sabemos o que vai acontecer, vai ser só facturar.
Por mim, logo na Segunda-feira de manhã, vou vender tudo o que tinha em carteira e comprar opções de médio prazo (ou talvez LEAPS... o que escolheria o Bicho? saberá exactamente qual é o prazo necessário?), bem out-of-money, para apanhar ao máximo a subida do DAX e NDX.
Depois vou simplesmente descansar à espera de ficar rico.
E, mesmo antes dessa feliz ocorrência (que estimo para daquí a uns 6 a 8 mesitos?), envio desde já o meu bem haja ao Bicho, por ter partilhado connosco as suas sapientes certezas...

Esses tipos (John Templeton, Bill Gross, Marty Whitman, George Soros e especialmente o Warren Buffett) estão a ficar ultrapassados. Desta vez vai ser muito diferente.
Todos no mesmo saco, e para o lixo com eles! (Velhadas estúpidos!)



Aliás quem lhes pode ligar alguma coisa, (especialmente ao Warren Buffett, essa espécie de fóssil vinda de um passado já tão distante), quando temos acesso às previsões do Bicho?
E assim:
Neste momento só existem pontos positivos no horizonte e estamos mesmo no início de uma subida que até pode vir a ser violenta.
A consolidação bullish do DAX na Europa (+80%) e do NDX nos EUA (+50%) só pode mesmo acelarar, porque, quando se olha para o gráfico do anterior ciclo económico (que teve o seu pico em 2000) é como olhar para uma escadaria do seu patamar inferior. Até atingir-mos o pico do novo ciclo económico iremos ver o DOW nos 20.000pts.
Pronto, agora que já sabemos o que vai acontecer, vai ser só facturar.
Por mim, logo na Segunda-feira de manhã, vou vender tudo o que tinha em carteira e comprar opções de médio prazo (ou talvez LEAPS... o que escolheria o Bicho? saberá exactamente qual é o prazo necessário?), bem out-of-money, para apanhar ao máximo a subida do DAX e NDX.
Depois vou simplesmente descansar à espera de ficar rico.

E, mesmo antes dessa feliz ocorrência (que estimo para daquí a uns 6 a 8 mesitos?), envio desde já o meu bem haja ao Bicho, por ter partilhado connosco as suas sapientes certezas...

Earthlings? Bah!
- Mensagens: 1541
- Registado: 20/11/2003 11:37
Esses tipos (John Templeton, Bill Gross, Marty Whitman, George Soros e especialmente o Warren Buffett) estão a ficar ultrapassados. Desta vez vai ser muito diferente.
Neste momento só existem pontos positivos no horizonte e estamos mesmo no início de uma subida que até pode vir a ser violenta.
A consolidação bullish do DAX na Europa (+80%) e do NDX nos EUA (+50%) só pode mesmo acelarar, porque, quando se olha para o gráfico do anterior ciclo económico (que teve o seu pico em 2000) é como olhar para uma escadaria do seu patamar inferior. Até atingir-mos o pico do novo ciclo económico iremos ver o DOW nos 20.000pts.
Em relação aos especialistas eles também são unânimes. Gostei especialmente do Chief Strategist do US Bancorp Pipper Jaffrey que espera o SPX nos 1.500 pontos no final deste ano (máximo de mar2000 deve ter sido 1.550pts). No fundo é só um recuperar do tempo perdido.
Um abraço
Neste momento só existem pontos positivos no horizonte e estamos mesmo no início de uma subida que até pode vir a ser violenta.
A consolidação bullish do DAX na Europa (+80%) e do NDX nos EUA (+50%) só pode mesmo acelarar, porque, quando se olha para o gráfico do anterior ciclo económico (que teve o seu pico em 2000) é como olhar para uma escadaria do seu patamar inferior. Até atingir-mos o pico do novo ciclo económico iremos ver o DOW nos 20.000pts.
Em relação aos especialistas eles também são unânimes. Gostei especialmente do Chief Strategist do US Bancorp Pipper Jaffrey que espera o SPX nos 1.500 pontos no final deste ano (máximo de mar2000 deve ter sido 1.550pts). No fundo é só um recuperar do tempo perdido.
Um abraço
Existe um mundo melhor... mas é caríssimo!
- Mensagens: 189
- Registado: 6/2/2003 21:14
De facto excelente, não conhecia este Whitney Tilson...
Assustadora a compilação de smart-money opiniões e comportamentos...
No site deles tem uma boa compilação tb de artigos do buffet. http://www.tilsonfunds.com/. Já está nos meus favoritos.
Assustadora a compilação de smart-money opiniões e comportamentos...
No site deles tem uma boa compilação tb de artigos do buffet. http://www.tilsonfunds.com/. Já está nos meus favoritos.
Em qualquer caso, gosto do ponto de vista do WB sobre esta questão:
Ignore Macroeconomic Factors
"We try to price, rather than time, purchases. In our view, it is folly to forego buying shares in an outstanding business whose long-term future is predictable, because of short-term worries about an economy or a stock market that we know to be unpredictable. Why scrap an informed decision because of an uninformed guess?
"We purchased National Indemnity in 1967, See’s in 1972, Buffalo News in 1977, Nebraska Furniture Mart in 1983, and Scott Fetzer in 1986 because those are the years they became available and because we thought the prices they carried were acceptable. In each case, we pondered what the business was likely to do, not what the Dow, the Fed, or the economy might do. If we see this approach as making sense in the purchase of businesses in their entirety, why should we change tack when we are purchasing small pieces of wonderful businesses in the stock market?"
--Warren Buffett, 1994 Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder Letter
"We will continue to ignore political and economic forecasts, which are an expensive distraction for many investors and businessmen. Thirty years ago, no one could have foreseen the huge expansion of the Vietnam War, wage and price controls, two oil shocks, the resignation of a president, the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a one-day drop in the Dow of 508 points, or treasury bill yields fluctuating between 2.8% and 17.4%.
"But, surprise - none of these blockbuster events made the slightest dent in Ben Graham's investment principles. Nor did they render unsound the negotiated purchases of fine businesses at sensible prices. Imagine the cost to us, then, if we had let a fear of unknowns cause us to defer or alter the deployment of capital. Indeed, we have usually made our best purchases when apprehensions about some macro event were at a peak. Fear is the foe of the faddist, but the friend of the fundamentalist.
"A different set of major shocks is sure to occur in the next 30 years. We will neither try to predict these nor to profit from them. If we can identify businesses similar to those we have purchased in the past, external surprises will have little effect on our long-term results."
--Warren Buffett, 1994 Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder Letter
Earthlings? Bah!
- Mensagens: 1541
- Registado: 20/11/2003 11:37
Um artigo verdadeiramente excelente e muito oportuno.
Obrigado pelo post.
Em termos pessoais ajuda-me a consolidar as ideias de longo prazo que já tinha, e tambem a reajusta-las um pouco num sentido ainda mais bearish.
Espero poder ajustar os meus investimentos de forma a não perder os ganhos potenciais da continuação dos movimentos ascendentes actuais, mas é ainda mais importante ajusta-los de forma a assegurar que não vou ser "queimado" por um previsível downturn acentuado da economia dos USA, como os reflexos que terá inevitavelmente na nossa apática "velha europa"...

Obrigado pelo post.
Em termos pessoais ajuda-me a consolidar as ideias de longo prazo que já tinha, e tambem a reajusta-las um pouco num sentido ainda mais bearish.
Espero poder ajustar os meus investimentos de forma a não perder os ganhos potenciais da continuação dos movimentos ascendentes actuais, mas é ainda mais importante ajusta-los de forma a assegurar que não vou ser "queimado" por um previsível downturn acentuado da economia dos USA, como os reflexos que terá inevitavelmente na nossa apática "velha europa"...
Earthlings? Bah!
- Mensagens: 1541
- Registado: 20/11/2003 11:37
A Scary Time for Stocks
Motley Fool
A Scary Time for Stocks
Friday January 9, 12:34 pm ET
By Whitney Tilson
Last March, as the market bottomed just before the war in Iraq, I was buying stocks like crazy, primarily because I was finding many bargains, but also because I was convinced that we would win the war decisively (which is what happens when a military with an annual budget of nearly $400 billion encounters one with a $1 billion annual budget), and that there would be the mother of all post-war relief rallies.
Both of these micro and macro viewpoints ended up being correct and they made my year, despite my best efforts to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory by becoming nervous too early (though I haven't changed my opinion). In fact, the only way not to make money in 2003 was to be short anything or long the dollar. Otherwise, everything -- and I mean everything -- went nuts, as all but one of the 87 industry groups in the Dow Jones U.S. Total Market Index rose last year. (Trivia question: what was the lone declining group? Answer below.)
So, what about now?
What does 2004 hold for investors? Before I answer that question, I want to share some of the wisest words ever spoken about investing, by (surprise!) Warren Buffett, at the 1992 Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting:
If we find a company we like, the level of the market will not really impact our decisions...We spend essentially no time thinking about macroeconomic factors...We simply try to focus on businesses that we think we understand and where we like the price and management.
I agree with Buffett that one should have a bottoms-up approach to stock picking, but when it comes to managing my overall portfolio -- how much to have in cash vs. long positions vs. shorts/puts -- I think it's important to have a general opinion regarding a few big factors such as the economy, interest rates, and overall valuation levels in the stock market.
So, without further ado, my opinion on these three factors is quite bearish. In contrast to the current cheery consensus, I think that the economy is not as strong as it appears, interest rates have nowhere to go but up, and high stock valuations already reflect a best-case scenario, so there's little upside and substantial downside.
The bull case for the economy
There are genuine signs that the economy is finally picking up:
GDP grew at a remarkable annualized rate of 8.2% in the third quarter and is expected to grow at a still-strong 4% rate in Q4.
The Institute for Supply Management's index of manufacturing activity soared in December to its best gain in two decades.
Unemployment has fallen to 5.7%, the lowest level in a year, and initial jobless claims, after peaking at 459,000 during a week in April, fell to 339,000 in the last week of December, the lowest level since President Bush took office.
The U.S. service sector grew for the ninth straight month in December (though the pace of expansion slowed, contrary to expectations).
Consumer confidence is improving. The University of Michigan consumer survey showed that "the highest proportion of consumers in two decades anticipate a falling unemployment rate."
The bear case for the economy
That's a strong bullish case, but I think the bearish one is equally, if not more, compelling. Summarizing the bearish argument, to quote Jeremy Grantham, we're experiencing " The Greatest Sucker Rally in History" as investors pile back into the most speculative profitless companies, while ignoring many dark clouds on the horizon, among them:
The economy, especially consumer spending, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of the nation's economic activity, has benefited mightily from two short-term factors: easy year-over-year comparisons and a massive injection of liquidity from low interest rates, tax cuts, increased government spending, and the lingering benefits from the massive wave of home refinancings. When these factors pass -- I can't think of any more liquidity levers that the government or Fed can pull -- look out below!
By almost any measure, the American consumer appears overextended after 47 consecutive quarters of increased spending. As Fred Hickey notes in the latest The High-Tech Strategist: "Consumer debt (credit cards and auto loans) have more than doubled over the past ten years to $2 trillion, with the rate of growth accelerating in the last two years. That equates to every household in America with $18,700 in credit debt. This does not include mortgage debt, which has soared at a 14% annual pace over the past year...Consumer credit as a percentage of income is at a record 19%. Household debt as a percentage of household assets is also at a record. Total U.S. debt is $33 trillion, or three times GSP. No major nation has ever carried such a sum (in dollars or as a percent of GDP). The consumer savings rate is almost negligible at 2%. The debt is a ticking time bomb."
There are some signs that the bomb could start to go off: The American Bankers Association just reported that the percentage of consumers who were late on their credit card bills hit a record high in the third quarter of last year, and retail sales during the holidays were disappointing, despite very easy year-over-year comps.
The latest employment figures aren't promising either: The Labor Department report released this morning showed that while the unemployment rate hit a one-year low, the number of workers on U.S. payrolls outside the farm sector in December increased by just 1,000, far below expectations of 150,000-200,000. And the manufacturing sector, which many expected would finally take on new workers in December amid signs of a turnaround, instead shed another 26,000 jobs, the 41st month of declines.
Oil, natural gas, gold, silver, copper, and other commodity prices are at exceptionally high levels.
The trade and budget deficits are high and rising, triggering the dollar to multi-year lows against many major currencies.
In short, there's a lot to worry about, yet both stock and bond investors seem oblivious to the risks.
Interest rates
With interest rates at or near multi-decade lows, it doesn't take a genius to figure out that the next big move can only be in one direction. I don't know when and by how much interest rates will rise, but when they do, imagine what will happen to the highly leveraged American consumer (not to mention corporation).
This is why I reject the argument that stocks today should trade at a high multiple of earnings because interest rates are so low: The market is (or at least should be) forward looking and anticipating higher rates eventually. Buffett pointed out the mistake that investors are making today in a brilliant 1999 article which showed that one would have been far better off historically investing in stocks when interest rates were high, not low.
Valuations
According to the Wall Street Journal, the S&P 500 is trading at 28 times trailing earnings and 20 times 2004 estimates. The Nasdaq is at 63 times and 39 times, respectively, while the Russell 2000 has negative trailing earnings (hence, no P/E) and is trading at 41 times 2004 estimates. These figures are far above historical averages, and the multiples are especially egregious in the most popular sectors such as the Internet, nanotechnology, biotech, and semiconductors. It's mind-boggling that so many investors are piling back into the same sectors that crushed them only a short while ago, like moths drawn to a flame.
Advice
Given these concerns, one might think that my advice is to sell everything and sit on cash -- but it's not. Based on my bottoms-up analysis of individual stocks, combined with my big picture viewpoint, I'm doing three things:
1) As always, I'm focused on owning the stocks of solid, well-run businesses with improving financials. Of course, price is critical as well and true bargains -- let's call them 50-cent dollars -- are exceedingly rare today, but I'm content to hold (though I'm not buying more) a number of 70-cent to 80-cent dollars. Among my favorites in this category are McDonald's (NYSE: MCD - News) and Yum! Brands (NYSE: YUM - News).
2) Avoid speculation and rich valuations at all costs. While I wouldn't characterize the entire market as frothy and wildly overvalued, there are large pockets to avoid, such as the sectors I noted above. Look at what insiders are doing, according to Hickey:
Insider sellers currently swamp buyers by nearly 40 to 1, with insider selling the highest on record and insider buying at the lowest rate in 10 years. Of course, the heaviest selling of all is from tech insiders.
Now would be a good time to go through your entire portfolio, reevaluating each position. If you're not certain that it's trading at least 10%-20% below your conservative calculation of intrinsic value, sell it!
3) If you're a sophisticated investor, consider shorts, puts and/or credit default swaps, which now account for a bit over 20% of my fund, the highest percentage ever. I've made such bearish bets -- both on specific companies like Farmer Mac (NYSE: AGM - News) and also indices like the Nasdaq 100 tracking stock (AMEX: QQQ - News) and the Semiconductor Holders Trust (AMEX: SMH - News) -- primarily to make money, but I also view them as insurance policies.
Conclusion
It's an especially good time to be humble and cautious, and to listen to investing legends like John Templeton (who has "never been more bearish"), Bill Gross (from his latest commentary: "bonds (and stocks too) will be low return asset classes for the foreseeable future"), Marty Whitman, George Soros, and Warren Buffett (who said he's "not finding anything" in the stock market and has purchased foreign currencies for the first time in his career because of his concerns about the U.S. trade deficit).
I fear investors are repeating the deadly mistake of projecting the immediate past indefinitely into the future and pricing stocks accordingly. They are acting as if the future is quite certain, when it is in fact highly uncertain.
Answer to trivia question: The one losing group was fixed-line communications, including the Baby Bells and long-distance phone companies, which was down a mere 4%.
Whitney Tilson is a longtime guest columnist for The Motley Fool. He owned shares of Berkshire Hathaway, McDonald's, and Yum! Brands and held bearish positions on Farmer Mac, the Nasdaq 100 tracking stock and the Semiconductor Holders Trust at press time, though positions may change at any time. Under no circumstances does this information represent a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. Mr. Tilson appreciates your feedback at Tilson@Tilsonfunds.com. To read his previous columns for The Motley Fool and other writings, visit http://www.tilsonfunds.com/. The Motley Fool is investors writing for investors.
The Motley Fool is the #1 rated website for people who have complex financial problems. (Hey, who doesn't?) We offer practical solutions in plain English. Advice that's neither biased nor boring. For less anxiety and more confidence, join the Fool.
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A Scary Time for Stocks
Friday January 9, 12:34 pm ET
By Whitney Tilson
Last March, as the market bottomed just before the war in Iraq, I was buying stocks like crazy, primarily because I was finding many bargains, but also because I was convinced that we would win the war decisively (which is what happens when a military with an annual budget of nearly $400 billion encounters one with a $1 billion annual budget), and that there would be the mother of all post-war relief rallies.
Both of these micro and macro viewpoints ended up being correct and they made my year, despite my best efforts to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory by becoming nervous too early (though I haven't changed my opinion). In fact, the only way not to make money in 2003 was to be short anything or long the dollar. Otherwise, everything -- and I mean everything -- went nuts, as all but one of the 87 industry groups in the Dow Jones U.S. Total Market Index rose last year. (Trivia question: what was the lone declining group? Answer below.)
So, what about now?
What does 2004 hold for investors? Before I answer that question, I want to share some of the wisest words ever spoken about investing, by (surprise!) Warren Buffett, at the 1992 Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting:
If we find a company we like, the level of the market will not really impact our decisions...We spend essentially no time thinking about macroeconomic factors...We simply try to focus on businesses that we think we understand and where we like the price and management.
I agree with Buffett that one should have a bottoms-up approach to stock picking, but when it comes to managing my overall portfolio -- how much to have in cash vs. long positions vs. shorts/puts -- I think it's important to have a general opinion regarding a few big factors such as the economy, interest rates, and overall valuation levels in the stock market.
So, without further ado, my opinion on these three factors is quite bearish. In contrast to the current cheery consensus, I think that the economy is not as strong as it appears, interest rates have nowhere to go but up, and high stock valuations already reflect a best-case scenario, so there's little upside and substantial downside.
The bull case for the economy
There are genuine signs that the economy is finally picking up:
GDP grew at a remarkable annualized rate of 8.2% in the third quarter and is expected to grow at a still-strong 4% rate in Q4.
The Institute for Supply Management's index of manufacturing activity soared in December to its best gain in two decades.
Unemployment has fallen to 5.7%, the lowest level in a year, and initial jobless claims, after peaking at 459,000 during a week in April, fell to 339,000 in the last week of December, the lowest level since President Bush took office.
The U.S. service sector grew for the ninth straight month in December (though the pace of expansion slowed, contrary to expectations).
Consumer confidence is improving. The University of Michigan consumer survey showed that "the highest proportion of consumers in two decades anticipate a falling unemployment rate."
The bear case for the economy
That's a strong bullish case, but I think the bearish one is equally, if not more, compelling. Summarizing the bearish argument, to quote Jeremy Grantham, we're experiencing " The Greatest Sucker Rally in History" as investors pile back into the most speculative profitless companies, while ignoring many dark clouds on the horizon, among them:
The economy, especially consumer spending, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of the nation's economic activity, has benefited mightily from two short-term factors: easy year-over-year comparisons and a massive injection of liquidity from low interest rates, tax cuts, increased government spending, and the lingering benefits from the massive wave of home refinancings. When these factors pass -- I can't think of any more liquidity levers that the government or Fed can pull -- look out below!
By almost any measure, the American consumer appears overextended after 47 consecutive quarters of increased spending. As Fred Hickey notes in the latest The High-Tech Strategist: "Consumer debt (credit cards and auto loans) have more than doubled over the past ten years to $2 trillion, with the rate of growth accelerating in the last two years. That equates to every household in America with $18,700 in credit debt. This does not include mortgage debt, which has soared at a 14% annual pace over the past year...Consumer credit as a percentage of income is at a record 19%. Household debt as a percentage of household assets is also at a record. Total U.S. debt is $33 trillion, or three times GSP. No major nation has ever carried such a sum (in dollars or as a percent of GDP). The consumer savings rate is almost negligible at 2%. The debt is a ticking time bomb."
There are some signs that the bomb could start to go off: The American Bankers Association just reported that the percentage of consumers who were late on their credit card bills hit a record high in the third quarter of last year, and retail sales during the holidays were disappointing, despite very easy year-over-year comps.
The latest employment figures aren't promising either: The Labor Department report released this morning showed that while the unemployment rate hit a one-year low, the number of workers on U.S. payrolls outside the farm sector in December increased by just 1,000, far below expectations of 150,000-200,000. And the manufacturing sector, which many expected would finally take on new workers in December amid signs of a turnaround, instead shed another 26,000 jobs, the 41st month of declines.
Oil, natural gas, gold, silver, copper, and other commodity prices are at exceptionally high levels.
The trade and budget deficits are high and rising, triggering the dollar to multi-year lows against many major currencies.
In short, there's a lot to worry about, yet both stock and bond investors seem oblivious to the risks.
Interest rates
With interest rates at or near multi-decade lows, it doesn't take a genius to figure out that the next big move can only be in one direction. I don't know when and by how much interest rates will rise, but when they do, imagine what will happen to the highly leveraged American consumer (not to mention corporation).
This is why I reject the argument that stocks today should trade at a high multiple of earnings because interest rates are so low: The market is (or at least should be) forward looking and anticipating higher rates eventually. Buffett pointed out the mistake that investors are making today in a brilliant 1999 article which showed that one would have been far better off historically investing in stocks when interest rates were high, not low.
Valuations
According to the Wall Street Journal, the S&P 500 is trading at 28 times trailing earnings and 20 times 2004 estimates. The Nasdaq is at 63 times and 39 times, respectively, while the Russell 2000 has negative trailing earnings (hence, no P/E) and is trading at 41 times 2004 estimates. These figures are far above historical averages, and the multiples are especially egregious in the most popular sectors such as the Internet, nanotechnology, biotech, and semiconductors. It's mind-boggling that so many investors are piling back into the same sectors that crushed them only a short while ago, like moths drawn to a flame.
Advice
Given these concerns, one might think that my advice is to sell everything and sit on cash -- but it's not. Based on my bottoms-up analysis of individual stocks, combined with my big picture viewpoint, I'm doing three things:
1) As always, I'm focused on owning the stocks of solid, well-run businesses with improving financials. Of course, price is critical as well and true bargains -- let's call them 50-cent dollars -- are exceedingly rare today, but I'm content to hold (though I'm not buying more) a number of 70-cent to 80-cent dollars. Among my favorites in this category are McDonald's (NYSE: MCD - News) and Yum! Brands (NYSE: YUM - News).
2) Avoid speculation and rich valuations at all costs. While I wouldn't characterize the entire market as frothy and wildly overvalued, there are large pockets to avoid, such as the sectors I noted above. Look at what insiders are doing, according to Hickey:
Insider sellers currently swamp buyers by nearly 40 to 1, with insider selling the highest on record and insider buying at the lowest rate in 10 years. Of course, the heaviest selling of all is from tech insiders.
Now would be a good time to go through your entire portfolio, reevaluating each position. If you're not certain that it's trading at least 10%-20% below your conservative calculation of intrinsic value, sell it!
3) If you're a sophisticated investor, consider shorts, puts and/or credit default swaps, which now account for a bit over 20% of my fund, the highest percentage ever. I've made such bearish bets -- both on specific companies like Farmer Mac (NYSE: AGM - News) and also indices like the Nasdaq 100 tracking stock (AMEX: QQQ - News) and the Semiconductor Holders Trust (AMEX: SMH - News) -- primarily to make money, but I also view them as insurance policies.
Conclusion
It's an especially good time to be humble and cautious, and to listen to investing legends like John Templeton (who has "never been more bearish"), Bill Gross (from his latest commentary: "bonds (and stocks too) will be low return asset classes for the foreseeable future"), Marty Whitman, George Soros, and Warren Buffett (who said he's "not finding anything" in the stock market and has purchased foreign currencies for the first time in his career because of his concerns about the U.S. trade deficit).
I fear investors are repeating the deadly mistake of projecting the immediate past indefinitely into the future and pricing stocks accordingly. They are acting as if the future is quite certain, when it is in fact highly uncertain.
Answer to trivia question: The one losing group was fixed-line communications, including the Baby Bells and long-distance phone companies, which was down a mere 4%.
Whitney Tilson is a longtime guest columnist for The Motley Fool. He owned shares of Berkshire Hathaway, McDonald's, and Yum! Brands and held bearish positions on Farmer Mac, the Nasdaq 100 tracking stock and the Semiconductor Holders Trust at press time, though positions may change at any time. Under no circumstances does this information represent a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. Mr. Tilson appreciates your feedback at Tilson@Tilsonfunds.com. To read his previous columns for The Motley Fool and other writings, visit http://www.tilsonfunds.com/. The Motley Fool is investors writing for investors.
The Motley Fool is the #1 rated website for people who have complex financial problems. (Hey, who doesn't?) We offer practical solutions in plain English. Advice that's neither biased nor boring. For less anxiety and more confidence, join the Fool.
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