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Matthew McCall A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary N/A Jun 05, 2017

Markets. He is not worried about Trump not being able to get things through. The rally through since the election was based on Trump’s election. There is an issue with him not being able to get three major pillars of his campaigned through, but it has only been 120 days. We will not expect to see the benefits of him for the next three years. He is focusing on global growth internationally at the moment. An increase in oil prices would be bullish in the short term. He is fine with oil in the range of $40 to $53. This range is great for the stock market. He is avoiding energy stocks right now. BP is the only one he owns because of the large dividend. He is overweight technology. He likes small to mid cap names.

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COMMENT
Selling pressure remains on big tech.

Tariffs are one thing, and a big thing. But there's lots going on in the market, and tech has been going through a shift since June of last year. Tariffs have accelerated moves in some sectors. But reality is that whether you're looking at semiconductors, the Mag 7, or growth stocks in general, the market's been rotating. So there are headwinds.

At the end of the day, this giant buildout for AI is a big deal. However, the infrastructure that's been built is going to weigh on tech companies for some time; a lot of depreciation will have to be written off. It's possible that there's been some overbuild. 

Don't have FOMO (fear of missing out) right now. There's no indication that tech will return to leadership anytime soon. His firm has 0% in tech right now.

COMMENT
Sectors to lead us out of the volatility quagmire.

He's a big believer in tracking breadth across the market -- which sectors have the highest percentage of stocks performing well? Where is it improving, where is it weakening? When you get into a tough decline almost everything is impacted, and this decline has been similar to that.

The last group to break down was financials. Within that group, P&C insurance companies were strongest, have not broken down, and have done pretty nicely on the bounce over the last couple of weeks. Wherever you look in the world, financials are the best-performing sector aside from precious metals.

We're in an inflationary environment, likely to have a second wave of inflation especially due to tariffs. Financial services companies benefit from an inflationary environment.

DON'T BUY
US regional banks.

Problem with regional banks is they're probably most closely tied to the US domestic economy. When he looks at market signaling, such as what's happened with crude and other commodity prices, there is a risk we are headed to recession. 

Regional banks have a lot of real estate exposure, hold a lot of treasury bonds (and that market has not been very friendly), and it was the first group in the financials to break down technically. RSI weakening since November. Don't be a hero. 

COMMENT
Portfolio positions.

He's being very cautious right now. Has about 35-45% cash in portfolios, and that's a lot. Precious metals make up 10-15%. Also 10% global, but ex-North America. 

Strangely, global stocks are performing better than US stocks, even though global stocks are the target of tariffs. Part of that is because 31% of the MSCI world index is financials.

Holding cash gives you flexibility. It could be one of those times when we get a quick reversal in the market. But his guess is that a lot has changed in the last month in how we look at the world, and it's going to take some time to sort out.

COMMENT
Stop losses at work.

To be successful over cycles, you have to be a good seller. Of the 20-30 companies in a portfolio, out of 6000 to choose from, it's OK if one doesn't work. Your success depend on holding your winning positions, and getting the heck out of Dodge on the ones that don't work.

For every position, he sets a stop loss limit. As stocks do well, he ratchets up the stop loss in behind the stock price. Every security has a different personality with some being more or less volatile. He looks for a change in this personality to indicate when caution is needed and an exit may be near. For example, a stock that was making higher highs and lows starts making lower highs and lows.

He uses point-and-figure charts, an old-fashioned technical chart made of X's and O's. You could also use the 150-day or 200-day MA. As a short-term investor, you could use the 50-day, but you'll get stopped out a lot.

Unlikely that the market will forget about tariffs tomorrow, make a V bottom, and everything reverses from here. There will be time to see what's stronger, and what doesn't pull back when the market makes a new low.

COMMENT
Preferred shares.

Not a homogenous market, every preferred share has its own terms and conditions. You really need to know what you're buying. Can they be called away if rates go lower? Terms are usually in the company's favour to give it more flexibility than the investor.

COMMENT
Volatility.

Last week, indicators showed that stocks were in the opportunistic zone and investors should start to look for opportunities. On Wednesday we saw a face-ripping rally. But the level of volatility is still very elevated, and we're in the very early innings of this.

Seems that one day there's good news, then the next it leans against that. Mixed messages coming out of the White House. That level of uncertainty doesn't portend the beginning of a new bull market. There's a lot more to go and still a degree of caution. All this volatility increases trading, which is great for companies like GS and MS.

So while at 4900-5000 on the S&P there was opportunity, there isn't at 5400-5600 because we won't be able to sustain these levels looking out 3-6 months.

COMMENT
Market bottom.

It's going to be lower than what we've already made, but we need to see the economic decay and job losses that the market's worried will tip us into recession. If we don't see that, then he's wrong and the market can go higher. 

Remember that we started from a place of extreme valuation relative to history. So it's not as though the market got cheap last week; it didn't and is still very expensive at a 21-22x multiple. Earnings would have to grow phenomenally, which is going to be tough in this environment of uncertainty. We're starting to hear from companies as earnings season begins. Earnings from retailers and those with global channels will tell us whether to be conservative.

COMMENT
Price of oil bouncing around.

The market's trying to get its head around 2 massive uncertainties. One is tariffs, and the impact they may or may not have on global GDP and, therefore, on global oil demand. A few analysts have cut global oil demand for this year. Some parallels are being drawn between March 2020 and today. Back then we had a demand shock, and now we have a potential demand shock. In March 2020, Saudi Arabia surged production capacity to the maximum.

Today we have the voluntary members of an OPEC deal that has curtailed volumes; they've now announced that they're adding barrels and at an accelerated pace. He thinks this is intended to force greater compliance from OPEC "cheaters" of the agreed-upon lower volumes.

In April, seeing production down by a little, but not yet seeing full compliance. Raises concerns as to what OPEC leadership will do in the next several months, which is the second uncertainty. 

Right now, the market's very underexposed to oil. Nobody's bullish, everybody's throwing in the towel. It feels as though we've reached the bottom from a sentiment perspective. He struggles with what's it going to take to see $75-80 oil over the next year. Massive demand uncertainties could change with a single tweet. Overall, feels as though the market could be sloppy for the next year.

COMMENT
Low oil price encouraging share buybacks?

There was an opportunity about 2 weeks ago when share prices fell, but the price of oil and FCF did not. Massive disconnect. ATH for example, a big holding of his, bought back 2% of its shares in the month of March; very aggressive. He's also notice insider buying throughout companies.

When the price of oil collapses, a company's priorities to protect are, in order: the business, the balance sheet, dividends, and then share buybacks. The sector average for balance sheets is 0.9x debt to cashflow at $60, which is very strong. Dividend sustainability is $51 with production flat. Any residual free cashflow is going to buying back stock.