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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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The main indexes lost
ground for the second week in a row. After last Thursday's steep
drop, stocks were able to stabilize Monday following news that
the ISM index of service activity rose from 44 to 47 in May.
The next session proved to be more challenging, as investors
turned cautious ahead of earnings season, causing all major
averages to shed in excess of 2%. Stocks continued to retreat
Wednesday morning but a late-day rally helped trim most of the
losses, with the Nasdaq Composite even finishing in the black.
After the close, the first major company to report earnings,
Alcoa, announced results that topped expectations. Coupled with
better-than-expected economic reports regarding jobless claims
and May wholesale sales, the news helped the market post modest
gains during Thursday's session. Falling oil prices and uneasiness
ahead of next week's rash of earnings reports pressured stocks
early Friday, but outperformance from the tech sector allowed
the Nasdaq composite to finish the day in positive territory.
The Nasdaq 100 (QQQQ), S&P 500 (SPY) and Russell 2000 (IWM)
respectively lost 1.91%, 2.06% and 3.63% on the week. If the
Nasdaq 100 remains located above both its 50-day and 200-day
exponential moving averages (EMAs), both the S&P 500 and Russell
2000 now rest below their two EMAs.
For its part, our World portfolio posted a
3.19% loss this week.
The portfolio consists of the 5 top-ranked world ETFs as of
June 19, 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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The
power of diversification
Diversification is a key tenet of the Trend Timing risk management
discipline and should be part of every investor's strategy.
The simple definition of diversification is to include an assortment
of investments in a portfolio in order to limit the exposure
to any one of them going bad. There are however many types of
diversification:
Asset diversification. This is the
theory that one should place their financial assets in diverse
areas such as real estate, stock market, collectibles, precious
metals, etc. TimingCube does not offer specific recommendations
along these lines. However, if you are interested by this type
of diversification we can recommend our sister company ETFTide
which has a momentum-based fund ranking system seeking at identifying
the best performing and overall strongest ETFs, regardless of
asset class, geography or industry sectors.
Strategy diversification. Since no
system is perfect, this seems like a wise proposition. We frequently
get asked "how much of my money should I invest according
to the TimingCube
Model?" The answer is highly personal, and since it depends
on your specific circumstances, your style and risk tolerance,
and your level of trust in our system, we cannot answer the
question for you. For our own investments, we refuse to risk
any money on strategies that have poor track records, such as
Buy and Hold. Instead, we follow our own signal with the majority
of our moneys using a blend of strategies described in the "Our
Service" page.
Portfolio diversification. The conventional
wisdom that evolved in tandem with Buy and Hold is that you
should spread your portfolio amongst negatively correlated (i.e.
which move in opposite directions) investment vehicles, so that
when one goes down - like your stocks during a bear market -
others will go up. We reject any method which guarantees mediocre
returns by watering-down the best performers with losers.
Instead we advocate the Trend Timing Model which enables us
to commit substantially all of our serious money to the stock
market, and benefit in both up or down markets. For diversification
we favor index-tracking investment vehicles which represent
broad baskets of stocks, a method that is significantly less
risky than the individual stock picking approach. We also favor
the diversification towards the best performing foreign markets
through the use of our World ETF ranking system.
Our research has verified the high correlation between major
stock market indices - both U.S. and international - when applying
our Trend Timing Model. While the indices move in unison, they
represent different facets or segments of the broad market and
exhibit changing relative strength over time.
For a well-diversified approach for conservative investors,
we can recommend the combination of TimingCube (including its
World ETF ranking strategy) along with a wider
asset allocation model like the above mentioned ETFTide
system. Though both are trend-following strategies seeking at
maximizing profits through the identification of best performing
investment candidates, they react differently, invest differently,
and do not always follow the same path. Their occasional lack
of correlation makes them good companions in an overall portfolio
strategy.

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FAQ of the Week |
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Question:
Does the same signal still work with all the international markets?
In the continuously evolving world of finance, a legitimate
question to ask ourselves is whether or not the US and international
indices continue to be well correlated with one another. We
explained several times in the past that our Model does not
require an individual signal for each of the three major indices
we track - the Nasdaq 100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 - and
going further, that the same signal also works perfectly well
with the world ETFs that are ranked within TimingCube.
For more information about the correlation of broad markets,
you can review the Trend Timing School article
titled "A connected world" and "Correlation
of world stock markets" in the June 11, 2004
and March 14, 2008 issues of our Weekly
Updates.
Since a picture is worth a thousand words, here is a graph of
the 5 country ETFs currently at the top of our World
ETF ranking system plotted along with the Nasdaq Composite
index over the last 18 months. It is clear from this picture
that the world markets have been moving up and down in unison,
only differing by their own degree of amplitude.
Warm wishes and until next week.
The TimingCube
Staff
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