Fans of Boxing

Nobody really cares about boxing anymore.  Of course, true fans of the “sweet science” will always appreciate the sport, but most fight fans gravitate towards MMA thanks to the UFC and their brilliant marketing over the last 10 years.  The UFC has consolidated the power base in MMA through M&A and worked out sweetheart distribution deals to keep the brand exposed via Spike, at first, and now the mainstream Fox.  Don’t get me wrong.  I love MMA but pugilistic warriors, especially highly-skilled boxers, are every bit as entertaining as today’s MMA stars.

Via Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Championship (“PBC”) series, boxing has returned to the public networks in a return to the renaissance days of yesteryear when boxing was displayed in full glory to the masses.  Sure, the biggest fights are still controlled by HBO, Showtime, and the greasy fight promoters by way of the pay-per-view model but you can’t blame them.  Promoters are simply maximizing their take-home pay for themselves and their fighters.  That’s how Money May has been the highest paid athlete in the world for a few years running.  You think MMT would be grossing over $100M if NBC aired his fights on public broadcasts?

Which brings me to Errol Spence Jr., the future of boxing.  If you didn’t watch his destruction of Chris Algieri last night, then you missed a glance into the window of what lies in store for fighters from 147 to 154.  Up until his 20th fight last night, Spence has fought virtually nobody as he was tuning up his pro record.  S.O.P. for the fight game. Algieri was his first true test and Spence passed with flying colors.  He did what Amir Khan or Manny Pacquiao couldn’t do.  Hell, even the jack-hammer hitting Ruslan Provodnikov couldn’t do it either.  Spence knocked the very game Algieri out in the 5th round.

At barely 26, I can see Spence dominating for another decade if yesterday’s fight was a sneak peek into his potential supremacy.  He showed discipline by consistently working the body early and often.  He followed his game plan of catching Algieri on his ducking with huge straight lefts.  It was beautiful.

The only question mark for me is Spence’s chin.  Algieri definitely did not test it.  He did hit Spence with a few very good counters, but to absolutely no effect.  Algieri is not a power puncher.  He’s a combo-throwing decision winner.  Regardless, Spence just walked right through any punches he took to his face and countered with an even bigger hit.  I’m real curious to see how Spence does against world-class power punchers.

At this point, I can see a lot of fighters begin to duck Spence very much like Gennady Golovkin has been ducked.  Golovkin is the people’s champ because everybody loves his KO power but nobody wants to face him.  Finally, payouts have risen so high that fighters simply cannot refuse a match with Golovkin.  The money’s just too good.

I would hate to see that happen to Spence for too long, because this guy is truly special.  If you love a knockout artist who uses skilled body punching as his set up to a chin-wrecking finish, then you’ll love Errol Spence Jr.  Keep your eyes on him.  Styles make fights and some fighter out there just may be his kryptonite but I just don’t see it right now.  His future is bright and it would appear the only thing that could derail him is the potential for ego-growth.  The taste of spectacular success can change the emotionally-weak for the worse.

Then again, it hasn’t seemed to do much to harm Floyd Mayweather Jr., so let’s hope the PBC can keep Spence on air for free for as long as possible because we probably don’t have too long before Errol Spence Jr. could be working his own way to the top of the list of pro athlete earners.

Time For an Energy Release

The S&P 500 is up 8% on the un-abating bounce off the lows in the 2nd week of February. Were you able to participate or were you too scared?

Regular readers will recall that I suspected we could see action like what has occurred in my previous post. That’s 2 for 2 in my last two major market calls. Don’t get used to that sort of accuracy. Right now I’m in a zone. Regular speculators understand that zone. Sometimes you get in it and you take on risk, fitting moves together as if breezing through a Rubik’s Cube. These times are fleeting though as the HFT shops will be sure to remove any edge you perceive yourself as having and cold water will be splashed on my zone. Make hay while the sun shines.

I suspect the current bounce has utilized most of its positive energy and the market will need to take a little break. It doesn’t necessarily need to correct but just work off some of the speculative energy that has driven its 8% gain over the last month. If I had to guess, I think we see about 7 weeks of sideways consolidation and then a catalyst at the end of May or beginning of June will present itself to drive the S&P 500 back up to the old highs.

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Don’t discount the positive effects of the ECB’s expansion of it’s QE process. The TLRTOs have been released for potential use in investment grade assets plus they’re able to plug another €250 billion annually in the EU on top of current output. The media creates narratives with potential false attributions so be careful how you position your capital. Don’t be a sucker and necessarily fall for all the misleading accounts of spurious correlations like oil and short covering which were the du-jour narratives last week.

In stale and tired fashion, I want to reiterate that I believe we are currently in a topping process which began last October. That doesn’t mean that we can’t see new highs on the S&P 500, so for longer term capital it still would probably behoove you to significantly liquidate in preparation. But if you fashion yourself a trader, there’s potentially still money to be made opening new long positions.

Lastly, gold related equities have just been playing in another universe in relation to any other sector since the start of 2016. One of the stocks from the J-perp Watchlist is up 600% over the last 9 months. Have a read of the original post and the portfolio update page for more info.

Update 3/29/2016:

Ignore that 600% nonsense from the previous paragraph. PLG had a reverse split that I somehow missed. The position is actually showing a loss and I have corrected the tracker to account for the reverse. PLG is on the watchlist, however, the actual J-perp portfolio has had a great run to start the year so go have a read anyways.

Continue to Suspect a Face Ripper

The evidence at hand looks very compelling that the credit cycle has turned in the world, kicked off by the downfall of the oil and natural gas industry. Energy was the spark, but loan impairment is rising around the world and before the cycle is over I’m confident we’ll see at least one major financial institution go belly up. Which in turn would then test the system’s ability to contain SIFI counterparty risks.

Fear of 2008 is back and back with a vengeance, especially fear of the banking industry’s quality of assets on balance sheets across the world. Look at all the articles that have sprung up over the last week. Look at the rise of credit default swaps on financial institutions, specifically European entities.

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Investors are acting as if the ECB doesn’t exist and that European leaders somehow won’t acquiesce to the notion of an increase in monetizing commercial bank assets to calm things down. Deustche Bank’s balance sheet has the whole world in a tizzy but the jawboning has already begun by Schäuble and I have no doubts that Draghi will increase Euro-area QE to settle things should fears continue rocketing higher. I know that the public as well as the powers in charge do not have the stomach for another bail-out like we saw in 2008. Bail-ins will occur when a true crash occurs but before then we’ll continue to see back-door bail-outs that are easily sold to the investing public.

The fears are not just consigned to European banks.

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As further proof of an excessive level of 2008-style fear, Forbes featured an article by Peter Tchir sharing the above index of credit default swaps pricing for senior financial institutions.

And just look at the performance of bank stocks as depicted by GaveKal.

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Relative to the lows of the 2008 and 2011, bank equities are performing at their worse over the last 10 years. This is incredible to me. In 2008, it was as if people thought the whole system was going to implode. Literally. As for 2011, the fears centered on the Mediterranean as people thought Greece and Italy were going to sink into the seas dragging down the world economies with them.

Even the all-seeing eye of Goldman Sachs is being assailed upon. Just look at the gap-ups in the pricing of the squid’s 5-YR CDS, courtesy of ZH via a Bloomberg.

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The fears surrounding the world’s financial institutions are not unfounded. There are countless current articles on the deterioration in credit quality in addition to the impairments of balance sheets at financial institutions around the world. It’s just the intensity with which markets have become scared of virtually all banks is truly remarkable.

The ability and the will to continue and increase quantitative easing in Europe and Japan is not being properly discounted. The US does not have to go so far as initiating QE again. Yellen and crew can simply jawbone fears downward by stating they will desist from further rate rises, which we’ve already seen Yellen hint at today. If needed the Fed can simply reverse the rate increase it implemented months ago and that should put a wind in the markets as speculators collectively wipe the sweat from their brows, despite the actual message that would be conveyed.

If we were currently in the midst of a market crash where indices drop by 50% or 60% then it would be the first one I’ve ever read about where people saw it coming months in advance and common market fears totally anticipated it. As I’ve said before, that’s not how these things work. Markets don’t crash while everybody is staring straight at them. That may be attributing too high of a weighting to mass market psychology, but I stand by the contention.

I suspect that animal spirits will be assuaged through various methods by the central banks of the world. Then stock markets can reassert a positive trend on to new highs. Despite the fact that debt markets are far larger and far more important, the stock markets are the thermometer of risk that people seem to spend the most attention on. If 2016 is to be the final hurrah for the stock markets before a rehash of 2008, then I think price action in the S&P 500 could resemble what we saw coming out of the lows of Q3 2011 but on a shorter timeline.

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There are many sentiment indicators that are showing an excess of fear. People seem to be expecting a 40 VIX or some sort of blow-off to mark when to get back into stocks to take advantage of the final run in risk-on, but I contend that the markets have shown enough of their hand already. I’ve already allocated capital into trades to take advantage of a bounce in markets. If correct, I think we could see a real face-ripper of a move.

Should the Investing Public Be Worried if Some of the Biggest Banks are Genuinely Scared?

Questions of investing and speculating always require context within time-frame. Players in all asset classes, professional or not, approach the game from their own perspective.

Traders surfing the waves of volatility may be looking only days or weeks out. Investment managers overseeing a growth-oriented portfolio may be looking ahead months or quarters while a value-oriented portfolio manager may be looking years out. The 401k-watching worker bee may be wringing their hands at every market move and every ignorant headline despite the fact that they have 30 more income-earning years left before retirement.

The game is tougher than ever even for the professionals and it’s difficult to decide a course of action with the information overload coming at market players. Determining what’s noise and what is actually valuable information is critical in making the right moves within your portfolio.

I have long been pounding the table on building cash reserves while staying invested in the markets. I’ve also stated that I thought the downturn of late 2015 was the start of the next major bear market. I think that dip and recovery in 2015 was the bear waking up and the poor start in 2016 is investor realization of that bear. However, because everybody now sees it, the markets aren’t going to execute a full-frontal stage-dive. That’s not how these things work, right?

I think we get a recovery into new highs followed by another much smaller correction and consolidation potentially followed by another new high. After that, I suspect all the bull energy will be fully used up and the bear will begin in earnest. Remember, these are simply my suspicions based on behavioral observation of the markets; nothing more than forecasts of potential outcomes.

It’s been a long time since I’ve hit readers with some good old chartporn, but I’m in the mood to throw a bunch of squiggly pics out there to possibly help the reader better assess the market situation in 2016. Observe a 20-year, monthly chart of the S&P 500 along with some relevant indicators.

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Observe the long-term breakdowns in the indicators matching the actions of 2008 and 2000. Does that mean crisis is imminent? Nope, but I do think it reinforces my call that a new bear has started. Notice also in 2001 and 2008, we saw strong support and a bounce off of the 50-month moving average. Too many technicians are looking for that and thus too many algorithmic shops will be front running ahead of that signal, blowing out orders to drive the market higher.

I suspect this bounce we are currently in the midst of may be a bit stronger than people realize. Market players have been so used to the V-recoveries and yet they’ve already forgotten what they can be like. It appears that players are numb to the potential of a multi-week to multi-month V-bounce from the January 2016 lows. Despite what I surmise about a stronger than expected bounce, nobody can blame investors for either running for the hills or shoving their heads into the sand.

We’ve already seen the peak in net profit margins for this business cycle in the largest US corporates at the same time that markets continue to be overvalued, despite the corrective moves in December and January. Observe the following chart courtesy of ZH via Thomsen Reuters via Barclays. It depicts how the recession fuse has likely been lit.

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And with recession generally comes a bear market correction. Or is it the other way around?

Regarding overvaluation, have a look at this comparison chart from AQR depicting market returns based on various starting points of the Shiller P/E. AQR is the shop that Cliff Assnes, billionaire hedge fund manager, founded and runs.

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This coincides with GMO valuation models for future returns based on current valuations. There are plenty of Shiller P/E naysayers who believe that the indicator is bunk. The fact of the matter is that evaluating a normalized 10-year look at P/E ratios is a simple and intelligent way of quickly gauging valuation levels compared to prior periods. Of course every period in history possesses its own specific circumstances as the backstory of the valuation levels, but the raw Shiller P/E paints a clear picture for equity performance going forward.

Besides I don’t see or hear anybody calling Bob Shiller a dumb man. Despite what you may think of his ratio, Shiller is a respected academic even within the professional financial community.

Let’s take a look at a chart from one of every perma-bull’s favorite bear-shaped piñata, Dr. John Hussman. Unfortunately, Hussman catches a lot of flak. Less so after admitting to his analytical mistakes coming out of 2011 but I think he catches a bad rap for simply calling it how he sees it. Hussman’s analysis is based on a quantitative and thorough study of the markets. Can the same be said of a vast majority of the financial blogosphere? No it cannot, including myself. Observe the Hussman Hindenburgs. They nailed the current action coming into Q4 of 2015.

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The criterion of the Hussman Hindenburg is detailed in the upper left corner of the chart. Dr. Hussman’s Hindenburg indicators proved to be quite prophetic in 1999 while essentially nailing the top in 2007. For your own long-term holdings, ignore these signals at your own risk. Dr. Hussman, like Dr. Shiller, is respected amongst fellow financial professionals. Have a look at Research Affiliates’ (“RA”) own analysis on current valuation levels.

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In a research piece they published in July of 2015, RA evaluates the differences in relative valuation metrics (CAPE, Hussman, Tobin) and absolute valuation metrics. They came to the following conclusion.

Our answer to the question “Are stocks overvalued?” in the U.S. market is a resounding “Yes!” Our forecast for core U.S. equities is a 0.8% annualized real return over the next decade. The 10-year expected real return for emerging markets equity, however, is much higher at 5.9% a year. The return potential of the nondeveloped markets is so high, in fact, that the valuation models, warts and all, paint a very clear picture.

May want to rethink that lack of EM exposure going forward, depending on your time-frame.

Shall we move on to a couple of less orthodox indicators of potential trouble in the markets? Observe the two following charts which pertain to income as opposed to valuation or price action. In the first one, created by McClellan, we get an interesting correlation to total tax receipts for the US government as compared to US GDP.

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Notice that in 2000, the US crossed the 18% threshold and stayed there awhile before rising even higher at the beginning of the market selloff. For the GFC of 2007, America almost got to 18% but not quite and we still literally almost vaporized the entire financial system. Currently, we’ve reached 18% but that may or may not mean anything. In each previous occurrence, tax receipts stayed at the level for months or even years so this is an indicator worth watching but only in conjunction with many others.

Interestingly, federal tax receipts as a percentage of GDP currently reached 18% right before the markets began selling off last year. Repeat after me. Correlation is not causation, but the timing is still interesting.

The other chart that doesn’t get a lot of coverage but is very well known is net worth of US households and non-profit organizations as a percentage of disposable personal income. You can find it courtesy of our friendly Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and their FRED tool. The grey vertical bars in the FRED charts denote recessions.

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It’s been a clear indicator in 5 of the last 6 recessions and we also had that annoying fakeout in 1987. Much like the prior graph, this particular chart should be coincident with additional economic indicators if one is attempting to forecast potential economic as well as investment outcomes.

I want to move on to a particular area that everyone should be concerned about and that is nonperforming loans (“NPL”) at major banks. Not just at US banks but around the world. China’s commercial banks have raised fear levels in even the most seasoned professional investors due to their NPL levels increasing so drastically in 2015. I’ve long stated how debt levels in Italy have the potential to dismantle a good portion of the financial system because the Mediterranean Boot is such a key economic cog in the European Union. Some of the biggest commercial banks in Italy are on the verge of toppling during a period where now the ECB is less amenable to the previously used “bad bank” options. The pressure is beginning to mount for Italy’s leadership to formulate a strategy around potential bank failures.

You might be inclined to observe the following chart and think all is at least well for the US.

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But take a look at the following chart in commercial-only loan performance and begin to understand why the total situation looks toppy from the economy to the markets.

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For the record, commercial loans comprise approximately $2 trillion of the outstanding debt within the banking system. It is clear to see that a bottoming and an upturn occurred before the last 3 recessions and market dislocations. Now we are currently in the early innings of an upturn in NPL. If commercial loan performance behaviorally adheres to what we saw in the prior two recessions, we will see at least an additional 2% of total commercial loans become impaired assets. That’s potentially between an additional $40 billion to $50 billion at minimum that banks will have to provision for. No easy task in light of current leverage levels and collateral utilization across the repo and derivative space.

This is especially concerning because of the systemic importance of each bank to the entire financial system. Just look at the consolidation that has occurred since 1990.

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Couple this concentration with a lack of regulation allowed by Gramm-Leach-Bliley and you can see that debt impairment at the banks is not going to have a happy ending. And if you think Dodd-Frank was the answer to all of our problems, I might stop laughing sometime in March.

What would work to alleviate a lot of the financial pressures around the world in the short term is a weaker dollar. I don’t say that as a proponent of a weaker dollar. Rather, I am stating that currency exchange due to a weaker USD could help sugarcoat revenue reporting across international corporates. It would relieve pressure in the management of reserves for countries with an excess of US treasuries. The oil price could stabilize temporarily but it is well-documented that abundant supply and less-than-expected demand is still the story. Commodities could lift and thus commodity producing countries who are already fighting with their reserves issue could see a double-positive impact. All these effects would be temporary as world debt levels are at unsustainable levels and a bear market for all assets has potentially already arrived. It just has yet to completely sink its claws and fangs entirely into the world’s financial system.

Coming back to the initial question behind this post. Should the investing public be scared? Maybe not scared. Let’s call it aware. They should be aware of all the happenings that are occurring right now. Cash levels should be raised. Certain assets should be paired down depending on losses, gains, and risk exposure. More importantly it’s time to take stock in your own investing psyche. If you are building cash levels, will you have the courage to act at the appropriate time? That’s what raising cash boils down to. Do you have an understanding of the intrinsic valuation levels of specific asset classes that will motivate you to put cash to work?

Aside from brushing up on your ability to properly assess valuations, take a look inside yourself and evaluate your ability to deploy cash when fear is running rampant and the nadir of multiple markets appears to be nowhere in sight.

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Cousin Sal, I Am Not

Okay, so I want to throw out my picks for the NFL conference championships this weekend. Because there are only 2 games, the books should be able to clean up because the action fiends will bet everything and everything simply can’t be bet. Not everything has value.

Despite that, I’m going to throw out my picks anyways.

Most of Vegas has each game at minus 3. Of course, right? The most common and consistent spread put out by the books throughout the NFL season is 3 points. Why? Because it’s a cash cow, period. I think you take the Carolina Panthers to cover that with ease. Here’s my reasoning besides home field advantage, best defense in the game, and the MVP at QB. It’s only one simple reason.

Carson Palmer. He has shown a tendency to choke when in the big time games. What’s that old pro athlete saw about big timers? Big time players make big time plays in big time games. Carson Palmer will make big time mistakes for big time turnovers in big time situations. When he was a Raider I used to call him CP3Turnovers because his standard stat line was 2 interceptions and a fumble or 3 interceptions. You saw a bit of his chokeyness against Green Bay but they decided they didn’t feel like covering or even tackling one of the game’s all-time great wide receivers and they paid the price.

If the Packers had tightened up on Fitzgerald and forced Palmer to take his chances with Brown and Floyd, then I feel the outcome would have been different. Arizona has all the weapons to beat the Panthers from the coach to the O and the D as well as special teams, but I just don’t believe good old CP3Turnovers is going hold up against that hellacious Panthers defense. Take Carolina at minus 3.

In case you haven’t guessed it yet, I’m a Raider fan. Which means I am biased as all hell against Tom Brady. I will never let that damn Tuck Rule nonsense die. NEVER!

But here are the facts. The Patriots are 10 – 0 with Edelman on the field this year. Gronk is healthy and ready to drag defenders around the field. And they still got Tommy Boy.

Despite my unfailing and unending hate for him, I admire Tom Brady’s mental toughness. In the modern era, meaning after 1980, I challenge you to name another athlete that possesses more sheer mental toughness than Tommy whose last name isn’t Jordan, Jeter, Montana, Rivera, or Bryant. The dude’s a straight-up killer who’s cooler than anyone when the pressure is on…and I hate him.

I mean c’mon. Top model in the world for a wife. Top football team in the world. Pretty hot actress baby-mama. And he’s gotta moat with gators and sharks. C’mon!

Alright enough about bellicose Brady. Take the Broncos in the moneyline to win straight up. I know this is a revenge game and it’s incredibly tough to beat a team two times in a row but consider this. Belichick has only 8 playoff losses. All 8 of those losses came against teams the Patriots had faced during the regular season, which means 0 – 8. That’s right. A donut.

One major con to betting Denver. Tom always beats Payton. He’s got his number and revels in crushing Payton’s post-season dreams. Payton against the Patriots is just generally not a safe bet but I thought Payton looked pretty darn sharp last week. If his damn receivers could have caught a football then Manning would have had a very good line. His passes looked crisp. An occasional duck but nothing like we saw at the beginning of the year. Good lord.

Also, I know Payton just does not throw touchdowns at home but I think the defense up at Mile High carries the day and wins won for the old Papa John’s loving Eighthead. Take the Broncs to win straight up.

Before you go, let it be known that I fully recognize my status as an armchair quarterback with absolutely no athletic prowess and a horrible track record as a sporting event speculator to boot. But I also have a notebook, broadband, and a comical opinion so thanks for stopping by.