What's
new this week?
This week we
have the pleasure of announcing two TimingCube
related news items.
(Note that the list of past public mentions of TimingCube
can be found on the "In
the News" page).
TheStreet.com
Guiding Principles of Trend-Following -
Read the article here
August
25, 2006
By Frank Minssieux
This
is the first article of a new TheStreet.com column dedicated to
trend-following by our founder and President Frank Minssieux.
The column will appear from time to time in TheStreet.com's "TheStreet
University", in the Personal Finance section. This first article
is a basic introduction to trend following.
All
About Market Timing. The Easy Way to Get Started
A book by Leslie N. Masonson (McGraw-Hill publisher) -
Buy it here
Descriptions
of the TimingCube
system, of its origins, and its founders are included in the latest
edition of this book (Pages 203-204).
Current
Signal Performance as of
Signal
Type |
Trade
Date |
Index |
Return
since issued |
|
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Nasdaq 100 |
|
Russell 2000 |
|
S&P 500 |
|

Markets
moved higher this week, thanks to lower oil prices and good
economic news. First, oil prices receded after hurricane Ernesto
was downgraded to a tropical storm and it appeared that it would
not threaten oil production in the Gulf of Mexico. Stocks responded
by moving higher, as lower energy costs help alleviate recurring
inflation fears. Markets kept climbing Tuesday after the minutes
of the last Fed meeting were released. On Thursday, the July
core PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures) came in at 0.1%,
below economists' median forecast for a 0.2% rise. The core
PCE is supposedly the Fed's favorite inflation gauge. The fact
that it was weaker than expected suggests that inflation is
under control and that the Fed might refrain from hiking rates
again at its next meeting later this month. This view was comforted
by Friday's release of the August employment report. Nonfarm
payrolls were up 128,000 as expected, showing that the economy
still has strength and might not be slowing down too quickly
as once feared. Also, hourly earnings were up just 0.1%, once
again suggesting that the Fed is likely to keep interest rates
steady for the time being. The bullish implications helped stocks
close the week on a positive note.
The Nasdaq 100
and Russell 2000
respectively gained 2.04% and 3.19% on the week, while the S&P
500
finished 1.16% higher. Both the Russell 2000 and S&P 500 closed
the week above their respective 50-day and 200-day exponential
moving averages (EMAs). As for the Nasdaq 100, it rests above
its 50-day EMA and just a fraction below its 200-day EMA. Our
current Buy signal
remains active. 
Creative
economic statistics
The fact that the stock market is starved for economic data
has been very obvious in the recent past. Sure there are times
when corporate earnings or major events are in the spot light,
but in between what really moves the markets are the seemingly
endless streams of economic data. We are flooded with government
statistics and hardly a week goes by without some sort of release
about PPI, CPI, unemployment rates, GDP growth (remember when
it was called the GNP in one of its earlier revisions?), trade
deficit, national debt, etc. from the likes of the Commerce
Department, Labor Department, Treasury Department and many others.
Since we frequently witness clear market reactions to such statistics,
we wonder what the numbers actually mean.
It is a fairly well known fact that governments throughout history
have been using statistics as a primary "opinion shaping" tool.
This is no secret and all it takes is a Google search for "real
CPI", "real GDP", "real unemployment" or other such, to find
countless articles, sites, studies (many of them dubious, as
always on the Internet), which labor with various degrees of
success to reconcile the government produced fictional numbers
with reality. A good example is "Shadow
Government Statistics", the web site of John Williams, a
well respected economist, which keeps track of the "real measures".
All the government numbers are subjected to adjustments, exclusions,
weightings and other creative manipulations, to which the CPI
has been subjected to for years, and as such is probably the
best known and documented example. Why mess with the CPI you
will ask. The Consumer Price Index is a measure of inflation
by measuring the rate of change of the prices consumers pay
for everyday items, and higher CPI readings are just one more
item nibbling at our confidence. There are other motivations
to keep the CPI number down, such as the fact that Social Security
checks are indexed to it. John Williams calculates that if one
removed all the changes made to the CPI going back to the Carter
years, the CPI would be 3.5%-4% higher and Social Security checks
would be 70% higher.
There is little doubt that the top government strategists devise
highly calculated action plans designed and timed for maximum
political impact, but the actual implementation of these plans
at lower levels reveals such an honest and detailed disclosure
of what they are doing that it is hard to call it cheating.
Changes in the way published statistics are arrived at can usually
be found somewhere in the footnotes of disclosures and other
reports.
Take the unemployment rate as another case in point, which way
back when, such as during the great depression when the unemployment
rate first appeared, was a pretty cut and dry item. Unemployed
was unemployed. Since then, creative accounting has been rampant
with the evolving but convenient definition of unemployment
as "anyone not in the labor force". Of course the key words
here are "labor force", which have been redefined endlessly.
For example, the labor force does not include anyone who has
given up looking for a job, or people who are off unemployment
benefits. Today, by most accounts, the real unemployment rate
is somewhere north of 10%, depending on who is counting, but
the decline in the August U.S. unemployment rate to 4.7% announced
by the Labor Department today looks so much better.
Sometimes the government even believes that a statistic is simply
too embarrassing and decides to stop publishing it altogether,
such as M3 the top money supply measure (see "Will the discontinuation
of M3 data impact your Model?" or "Inflation").
This is by no means unique to the current administration or
even the U.S. government. This is a practice commonly used by
all administrations and governments. Some just are better at
it than others.
Another important aspect to be aware of is the political calendar
which highly influences the type of PR that is desired. For
example, early in a first term administration is when it is
appropriate to flush all the bad news out of the system (and
blame the outgoing administration for them). Looking at the
present situation, we see the government laboring for over two
years to slow down growth and control inflation. Now that there
are signs that it has been working, such as the major slow down
in real estate and automobiles, there are fears that the government
may have overdone it. Going into the mid-term elections, the
last thing the administration wants is a recession. In this
context, overstating economic growth and understating inflation
are perfectly natural goals.
All of these shenanigans are meant to manage the public's confidence
in the economy and ironically, since the economy largely rests
on public confidence, are really attempts to control the economy
itself. There is little doubt that such tactics are effective,
and that governments have been shown to use all of the tricks
in their tool box to successfully manage public opinion and
the economy. So, while trying to influence our perception of
reality could be viewed as the lowest form of political manipulation,
when politicians say they are really laboring to shape the economy
itself, should we take their efforts as admirable goals. The
catch is in the timing. Real growth, inflation, employment and
ultimately the economy can only be influenced for so long. You
can postpone a slow down or recession, but you cannot make it
go away. In fact, many argue that the sheer manipulation and
the heavy handed tools employed in the process, such as liquidity
injections, are only delaying the inevitable and will ultimately
make the end result worse than it would have been without intervention.
The funny thing is that for many people the fact that the government
doctors economic numbers does not come as a surprise. In fact,
the average person probably has a pretty good idea about how
much prices are increasing or the state of the job market. So
it seems that it is mostly the professionals and institutional
investors that are so intent on reading the economic tealeaves
as indicators for the future of the stock market. Our trend
following Model does not take economic statistics in consideration,
but whatever effect these statistics actually have on the markets
will be taken into account.
Question:
Were there recent e-mail issues with Verizon.net?
Yes. On the occasion of the most recent signal,
we received numerous questions/complaints from subscribers who
use Verizon.net as their e-mail provider for not having received
their signal. We definitely sent e-mails to all subscribers
but for some unknown reason Verizon filtered these signal notification
e-mails as spam. If you are in this situation we would advise
that, in addition to the usual precautionary steps we recommend
below, you contact Verizon directly to complain about the situation.
If you have an "unwanted mail" or "bulk" folder of some kind,
you might want to check its contents to see if our message
was not stored in it by mistake because of some over-zealous
anti-spam filtering. One of the most effective ways to prevent
this from happening is to include friendly e-mail addresses
in your address book. The three addresses from which TimingCube
sends e-mails are:
- info@timingcube.com
- sales@timingcube.com
- support@timingcube.com
Please
use the "Test e-mail" feature from the bottom
of the "Current Signal" page to check the
communication channel between you and us.
Warm
wishes and until next week.
The TimingCube
Staff
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