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Signal Update |
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Current
Signal Performance as of
Signal
Type |
Trade
Date |
Return
since issued |
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World |
U.S. |
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Nasdaq
100
(QQQQ)
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Russell
2000
(IWM)
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S&P
500
(SPY)
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Market Update |
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It has been a very quiet week on Wall Street as the main indexes were little changed over the 5-day span. Stocks showed their resilience Monday as an afternoon rally erased most of earlier losses, allowing the Nasdaq Composite to recover from a 1.7% intraday deficit. After the close, Texas Instruments said that demand for semiconductors is improving and boosted guidance for the current quarter. The news helped technology stocks outperform during Tuesday's session, yieding the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite a 1% gain. Financial stocks were little changed despite the announcement by 10 major banks that they are ready to repay $68 billion the government had lent them as part of the TARP plan. Fears of inflation and higher interest rates caused the main averages to drop for most of Wednesday's session but a late-day rally allowed stocks to retake much of the lost ground. The turnaround occurred after the release of the Fed's beige book showed that the deterioration of business activity is abating. In other economic news, the government said Thursday that May sales increased by 0.5% over April numbers and that weekly jobless claims came in lower than expected. Stocks finished the day with modest gains before an uneventful session Friday saw the main indexes remain almost unchanged. The Dow Jones Industrial Average's modest 0.3% daily gain was still good enough to push the index into the black for the year.
The Nasdaq 100 (QQQQ) and Russell 2000 (IWM) respectively lost 0.35% and 0.79% on the week, while the S&P 500 (SPY) did slightly better with a 0.56% gain. All 3 ETFs remain located above both their 50-day and 200-day exponential moving averages (EMAs).
For its part, our World portfolio posted a
0.69% loss this week.
The portfolio consists of the 5 top-ranked world ETFs as of
May 22, which marked the beginning of the current 4-week holding
period.
Our current Buy
signal remains in effect.

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Trend Timing School |
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How
to build your portfolio
In our recent article on "Managing your money"
(weekly update sent on 5/29/2009) we enumerated the key activities
involved such as setting objectives, the selection of strategies,
and risk/reward management. Another critical task mentioned
was portfolio allocation. Our portfolio is simply the group
of all our assets, and a sad reality is that most of us never
consciously think about and select the asset allocation that
makes the most sense for us. As life happens we somehow end
up with a collection of assets, and the mix is most likely not
optimal.
For example, few people ever make the conscious decision of
investing 20%, 30% or more of their assets (together with more
borrowed money) in real estate. Yet that is exactly what most
home owners do. Yes, we all need a place to live, but in certain
areas and during certain periods, real estate can be a lousy
investment. Many of us, after a heavy down payment and mortgage
payments, feel that after all these years this money invested
in the stock market would have grown to much more than the price
of our home. On the other hand there are also many who have
refinanced their homes (with subprime loans for some of them!)
and taken out their equity to spend it on SUVs and other ephemeral
goods, and who will probably soon regret not having kept that
"real estate allocation". But we digress.
Before getting into allocation proper it might be useful to
ask why we need asset diversification in the first place. Simply
put, diversification is the key ingredient in any risk management
strategy, and we have been taught not to place all our eggs
in one basket. The idea behind asset diversification is that
non correlated asset classes do not go through market cycles
together and that the losses in one class will be offset by
gains in others, thus reducing overall portfolio risk.
Yes, by necessity we are all involved in asset allocation in
order to best serve our specific circumstances and the need
to satisfy different and sometimes conflicting objectives. For
example, anyone of working age should save and set aside a safety
buffer in cash or other liquid and readily accessible vehicle
as contingency for a job loss. How much you set aside depends
on numerous personal factors such as being single or providing
for a family, years to retirement, your spending habits, how
long a period of time you estimate could be required to find
another job, etc. Other commonly accepted asset allocation strategies
would be for someone in their younger earning years to assign
a large percentage of assets to equity investments for long
term growth and a small fraction to fixed income, versus a retiree
who would reverse that distribution to maximize income generation
and limit risk. This type of asset allocation is justified and
is a must for everyone.
The amount of wealth we have can also dictate or at least curtail
our allocation strategy choices. For example a retiree with
just enough money to generate the income necessary for living
cannot take any risks and is forced to assign everything to
income generating investments. A wealthier retiree with a bigger
cushion is likely to be more aggressive with his/her investments,
be allocated more heavily into stocks and be willing to accept
the associated risks to their capital. Wealthier investors are
also more likely to allocate a portion of their portfolio to
other asset classes such as collectibles (fine arts, jewelry,
etc.), commodities, and precious metals.
The aspect of asset allocation we generally take exception to
is the part that relates to the moneys we have left after the
safety net, the income generation requirements and other necessities
have been taken care of. It is how we allocate the money we
are ready to put to work on our long term wealth building endeavors.
For that portion of their portfolio, buy and hold investors
use asset allocation as a risk management technique. Diversification
has always been a vital corollary of buy and hold investment
strategies. The theory is that by holding on to stocks through
thick and thin you need to reduce how much of your portfolio
is exposed to that downside risk. You place the balance in other
assets such as income generating investments which help offset
losses in equities during downturns and bear markets.
This view has permeated much of the financial industry. A good
example of this is found in the numerous "asset allocation calculators"
or other "portfolio management tools" available from various
sources. Their questionnaires require personal information such
as age, risk tolerance, investing experience, etc. The output
invariably includes a pie chart with colored slices proportional
to the percentage allocated to each asset class. If you use
your broker's tools the asset classes are likely to be restricted
to investments they offer, and typically includes:
- Large
cap equities
- Small
cap equities
- International
equities
- Fixed
income
- Cash
or equivalent
The flip
side of such diversification and traditional asset allocation
is that while it softens the effects of losses in some asset
classes, it also averages down your portfolio's return. The
returns of the best performing assets are guaranteed to be
watered down by the others. As Trend Timers we do not see
how taking a position in bonds, for example, is proper protection
against a severe correction or bear market. Yes, we always
recommend against non-diversified investments, single country
or currency approaches, but we first and foremost do not recommend
holding a long equity position through a severe down turn.
This is why we have always preferred our asset allocation
dynamic and strategic rather than static. We are invested
in stocks during all meaningful up trends, and not invested
in stock (or short the stock market) during the larger corrections
and bear markets. In addition, the World ETF Ranking
pinpoints the markets with the strongest momentum and the
most likely to outperform. Thanks to these directional and
targeting indicators, however imperfect, we can lean towards
the "concentration of force" principle instead of averaging
down with fixed asset allocations.

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FAQ of the Week |
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Question:
What is the impact of currency movements over the valuation
of international ETFs?
Currency fluctuations affect both the returns and the volatility
of international investments, including international ETFs.
For a U.S. investor, it is the relative valuation changes between
the U.S. dollar and the local currency in the country you invest
in which matter. Relative currency valuations also explain some
of the differences observed between international stock market
indices and the ETFs that track them. A stock market index is
calculated on the basis of the price of all its component stocks
in local currency, and is never converted or traded. That international
index will only reflect equity gains or losses, nothing else.
An international ETF on the other hand is an international investment
which is traded in U.S. dollars on a U.S. stock exchange. The
valuation of the ETF begins much the same way as the international
index, on the basis of the price of all its component stocks
in their local currency, but then it gets converted into U.S.
dollars.
Thus, the total return of the investment when measured in U.S.
dollars is equal to the equity returns in that particular country
times the currency return.
As always, a picture is worth a thousand words. Looking at Brazil
and Chart 1 below as an example, we can see
that over the last 3 months the Brazilian Real to U.S. dollar
exchange rate (Yahoo!Finance ticker BRLUSD=X) has gained about
20%, which means that the U.S. dollar lost 20% of its value
against the Brazilian currency during this short period. This
gain in value of the Brazilian Real over the greenback is also
reflected in the share price of the Brazilian ETF
which has outpaced the index it is tracking, the Sao Paulo Bovespa
index. There are other differences between the ETF and the index,
such as the fact that the ETF actually follows another index,
the MSCI Brazilian Index, but the currency fluctuations are the largest contributor
to the discrepancies. It is clear from the graph below that
the Brazilian ETF combines the growth of the Brazilian market
and the rise of the Brazilian currency against the US dollar:
A double win for us!
Chart
1: Currency impact on international ETF performance (Brazil
example)

| EWZ
= iShares MSCI Brazil ETF |
^BVSP
= Bovespa Brazil index |
BRLUSD
= Brazil Real Vs US$ |
The point is that you can observe the currency relationship
with all country/currency combinations. Had you looked at Japan
instead of Brazil, you would see that the U.S. dollar stayed
about flat in value compared to the Japanese Yen (Yahoo!Finance
ticker JPYUSD=X) over the last 3 months, and that accordingly,
the Japanese ETF
stayed in-line with the Nikkei 225 index.
For subscribers now scratching their heads wondering if they
need to adjust the ETF ranking based on currency discrepencies,
we want to tell them not to worry. Our ranking is computed based
on the historical US dollar value of the various ETFs (not their
underlying foreign indexes), consequently the currency effect
is automatically factored in, giving us the best combination
country/currency. A nice and easy way to shelter yourself against
a falling dollar.
Warm
wishes and until next week.
The TimingCube
Staff
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