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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's been
another week of solid gains for stocks. The Institute for Supply
Management (ISM) released its July manufacturing index on Monday.
The number came in at 48.9, which was better than expected and
marked the highest reading since August of last year. This is
yet another indicator pointing to an economic recovery. Investors
reacted to the news by bidding stocks higher, resulting in a
1.5% daily gain for the S&P 500
. The main indexes were little changed over the next two sessions
before selling pressure returned on Thursday: investors decided
to exercise caution ahead of the much-anticipated July employment
report and took profits after retailers reported disappointing
sales for last month. The Nasdaq Composite
slid 1% on the day. The weakness did not
last, however, as market participants took the latest jobs report
in stride: the Labor Department said Friday morning that 247,000
non-farm payrolls were lost last month, much less than the expected
320,000, and that the unemployment rate dipped to 9.4% from
a 9.5% reading in June. Stocks rallied on the news, sending
the S&P 500 to its highest close in 10 months.
The Russell 2000 (IWM), S&P 500
(SPY) and Nasdaq 100 (QQQQ)
respectively gained 2.74%, 2.42% and 1.09% over the five-day
span. All three ETFs remain located above both their 50-day
and 200-day exponential moving averages (EMAs).
For its part, our World portfolio posted a
0.82% loss this week.
The portfolio consists of the 5 top-ranked world ETFs as of
July 17, 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
stock market and economic indicators
One of the favorite sources of news and discussion topics
in the financial media is the economy and speculation about
its future health. Everyone knows that economies, whether
local, national or global, repeatedly go through boom and
bust cycles. These business cycles affect all of us to some
degree but many in the investment community pay particular
attention to them because of a fundamental belief that as
the economy goes so goes the stock market. As shown in the
chart below, there is little doubt that economic and market
cycles are somehow linked and that they influence each other,
but we do not believe that many of the much touted economic
indicators can be used by investors to accurately and reliably
forecast the future of the stock market.

Economics,
often referred to as the "dismal science" since
Thomas Carlyle coined the term in the nineteenth century,
are really the study of how society behaves in the struggle
between unlimited wants and limited resources. Today, an entire
industry thrives on the creation, monitoring, reporting and
interpretation of a multitude of economic indicators such
as employment, consumer sentiment, inflation, interest rates,
inventories, price of raw materials food or energy, trade
deficits and many more. The Commerce Department, the Labor
Department, academic institutions and numerous think tanks
crank out an endless stream of numbers. Econometrics then
applies statistical theories to economic ones for the purpose
of forecasting future trends. While much of this is way above
our heads, the complex web of causes and effects between the
multitudes of variables in society is backed by much research
and for the most part seems quite logical. Most of us can
follow simple scenarios such as growing unemployment negatively
affects consumer sentiment, which in turn reduces their level
of spending causing increased inventories. The reduced demand
for goods causes prices to drop and manufacturers to slow
down production and so on and so forth.
The disconnect occurs when trying to interpret all of this
data in order to issue stock market forecasts. As with all
market interpretations the result is highly dependent on the
interpreter's point of view, the market context, and the then
prevailing investor psychology. Depending on these conditions
the same set of economic data can lead to diametrically opposed
conclusions, which helps explain why so many respected expert
forecasts are dead wrong. This is best illustrated with practical
examples.
Example 1: Higher interest rates are bad
news for the stock market (and vice versa)
Or are they? Recently, the Fed pushed interest rates as low
as they could in order to rescue
a depressed economy. At first, it is interpreted as a good
thing for the stock market, but it is often a perfect opportunity
for highly regarded economists and pundits to contradict themselves.
They would later say that lowering interest rates is not enough
to restore confidence in the economy, and that the roots of
the desease are much deeper. The perception of what the Fed
does is highly subjective. Sometimes, what Ben Bernanke says
or does not say is more important than what he does.
Example 2: War is good for the economy and
the stock market
While this theory has long ago been proven to be fundamentally
flawed by economists, investors and politicians hold on to
the myth. The simplest way to explain this one is with the
"Broken Window Fallacy". The story goes something
like this: a punk throws a rock through a storefront window
which has a visible set of consequences. The shop owner has
to pay the glass maker $1,000 to fix it. This $1,000 causes
the glazier to purchase more raw materials from other merchants
and hire employees to make the window, who in turn can spend
their new earnings. The logical conclusion is that the punk,
far from being a vandal, is actually an economic benefactor
to society. Economists then like to point out that he has
actually caused a net decline in the economy. Instead of having
a window and $1,000 the store owner now only has a window.
He could have spent the $1,000 to buy a suit, so he would
have a window and a suit, and the $1,000 he paid for the suit
would have generated the same economic boon as when he paid
the glass maker.
In similar fashion the war has to be funded by a combination
of reduced spending elsewhere, higher taxes and/or higher
debt, all of which are bad for the stock market.
Example 3: Rising unemployment is bad news
for the stock market
Or is it? Research tells us that it depends on which phase
of the economic cycle we are in. Announcements of rising unemployment
tend to be good news in economic expansions during which investors
worry more about interest rates. News about higher unemployment
reduces the risk that the Fed will increase interest rates.
The same exact news will on average be perceived as bad news
during an economic contraction like the one we are in at the
moment, during which investors tend to be more worried about
corporate dividends and equity risk premiums which can be
negatively affected by layoffs.
Now that we better appreciate the difficulty in using economic
leading indicators to forecast the stock market we can also
point out that in fact the stock market itself just happens
to be one of the most reliable leading indicators of the economy's
future direction. Not the other way around. In mysterious
ways the stock market anticipates what is coming. A bear market
always reaches its bottom while the recession is still worsening,
well before economic recovery begins. The falling interest
rates and prices provide the consumer a glimmer of hope which
in turn triggers the next bull market cycle and in turn a
recovery begins. As the economic recovery gains steam, prices
start inching up, the Fed raises interest rates all over,
and consumer expectations start declining as the stock market
peaks. And so on.
As Trend Timers we prefer to watch the market itself for clues
of what it is doing. Following the market trend is much simpler
and more reliable than reading economic tea leaves.

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FAQ of the Week |
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Question:
Which equal weight ETFs to choose from?
Last week's Trend Timing School introduced the concept of equal
weight ETFs without properly listing their names. The truth
is that there are still not that many to choose from. The best
source is Rydex which pioneered this concept. Here is their
link: RydexShares
Equal Weight Exchange Traded Funds
As you will notice, many of them are sector specific. Rydex
actually only offers one broad-market index equal weight ETF,
it is RSP
(equal weight equivalent of the SPY).
Investors can also use the thinly traded QQEW from First Trust
(equal weight equivalent of the QQQQ).
Warm wishes and until next week.
The TimingCube
Staff
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