Archives 2020

The Week Ahead

Navigator Algorithms - 100% Cash

For Once – Some Plain English

If the stock market does not make sense to you, it likely boils down to synchronicity. The stock market anticipates the future, so it rises when the present seems awful. Then, when everything looks fine again, the stock market pulls back into a correction. It seems maddening to the average person, but stock market performance results from the time horizons of a myriad of traders and investors. 

Long-term investors keep the needle generally pointed north. Short-term traders give us the ebbs and flow along that path. Generally, corrections of 10% or less arrive courtesy of the short-term traders. When a correction begins to exceed 10%, long-term investors are likely becoming nervous and beginning to sell as well. 

Long-term investors tend to stay the course, excepting the most exigent of circumstances. When long-term investors head for the exits, corrections carve much deeper as we saw in March. If the long-term crowd becomes despondent, we experience challenging bear markets or consolidation periods that take many years to resolve (e.g., 2000 – 2009).

To make matters more complicated, the government has tended to get involved in recent years when the entire universe of investors sour on the markets. There are times, such as March, when every investor wants to sell simultaneously, and nobody wants to buy. The government, through the Federal Reserve, steps in to help cushion the blow. Then you end up with a rational market (as investors sort through the issues at hand) with an artificial element, as the Federal Reserve influences rational investor behavior and thinking. 

As the year closes, we can observe that the stock market has recovered significantly since the March crash. To some extent, the comeback has been artificially induced by government policies. Yet, the recovery is also quite real. Company earnings have improved from their worst levels.

Lately, investors have been taking profits in leading stocks that were the first to rise after the crash. These stocks benefited from people staying at home (e.g., Amazon). The good news is that investors, rather than hoarding their profits, have reinvested them in more traditional, economically sensitive companies that will benefit as the economy expands again in a post-vaccine environment (e.g., Caterpillar and Chevron). When I refer to “breadth” in our more technical discussions, I am identifying that a broader group of companies are beginning to attract investors rather than just a small group of tech names. The market rally becomes healthier and more sustainable when it broadens out and becomes more inclusive.

At this writing, the stock market is sputtering a bit. Partly, we see indications that the short-term crowd is fully invested, possibly lacking additional funds to carry the market much higher, at least in the short-term. More lockdowns,  a more contagious virus, and a rather slow rollout of a yet unproven vaccine has put a temporary damper on the narrative of the traditional economy recovering as soon as we would like to see. Government policies continue to favor the bull market, so while a correction may be underway shortly, the overall bull trend is likely to remain intact.

It bears mentioning that the contentious political environment at hand also negatively impacts investors, not to mention business and consumer optimism. The prickly environment remains a risk and could cause the market’s ebbs and flow to become more volatile. 

The general public feels fleeced – both by the 2007-2009 Financial Crisis and now the Pandemic. A significant portion of the American public does not benefit from the stock market or real estate investments. All they see are corrupt politicians and Wall Street bankers living large, with no consequences or accountability for the ravages they have sewn, negatively impacting normal, hard-working Americans. The latest Stimulus bill, loaded with pork and favoring billions in foreign aid over a pittance for suffering Americans, has poured gasoline on this fire. As an example, $14 million to study the effects of Transgenderism in Pakistan? Really? Is this our government’s priority with so many Americans suffering, losing their jobs and businesses?

Some of the disgruntled Americans end up on the left as so-called “Bernie” supporters. Some of them end up on the right as the so-called “Deplorables” or Trump supporters. It would be a scary day in Washington, D.C., if both of these groups ever got together, united by their common disdain for the current ruling class, and recalled every Congressman and Senator currently in office. Anyway, one can only dream, right?

If there is a risk at hand, something that might arise unexpectedly as a so-called “Black Swan” event, the genesis might very well be rooted in the public’s discontent with the malevolence currently masquerading as our government. This theme will carry forward into 2021 – and it contributes a certain dissonance to the most optimistic of forecasts.

So, where does that leave us for the week ahead? A final stimulus package, especially if it includes a $2,000 payment rather than $600, could give us one last thrust to new stock market highs even before year-end. Then I believe that a 5% to 10% broad, profit-taking correction will get underway early in the year.

I will have more to say about the year ahead and some exciting announcements in a few days.

At this writing, the core Navigator Algorithm model is up 896% year to date. It is the best year I have ever experienced as an advisor. I am glad you had the opportunity to experience it with me, and I hope these writings have been helpful.

I wish you a Happy New Year – and I intend it to be a profitable one for all of us!

A.F. Thornton – 12/27/2021

Clients, Friends and Family:

Wishing all of you a Merry Christmas. I hope it was a joyful and peaceful day, spent with family and friends. In these turbulent times, family and friends are what truly matters.

Arthur

What Happened to Santa? Did the Covid Nazis Cancel the Santa Claus Rally Too?

Navigator Algorithms – 100% Cash

A week ago today, we were back to cash after a beautiful buy signal and small profit off the 21-day line on the previous Friday’s S&P 500 index. With our year-to-date returns solidly north of 800% (an 8-bagger for the year as it is affectionately referenced in trading jargon) – there was no incentive to play around when the market failed to follow-through on the bounce.

But the market gyrated the rest of the week right through to Friday’s last half-hour close – eeking out a small gain. From Tesla’s inclusion into the S&P 500 index to all the year-end shuffling, even I thought the S&P 500 Futures would hold 3700 and the Dow 30,000.

After all, Santa Claus is slated to arrive for his year-end rally around December 15th or so, and what could be better than a boost from a Stimulus package, finally reached in Congress Sunday and slated to pass some time today?

Then I remembered, this is the year from hell. Nothing is what it seems or what it was. Given the equal opportunity dream killer that the market can be, what would be the best way to fool this giddy crowd right before Christmas? Voila, I wake up to the S&P 500 futures parachuting into a low volume pocket, hitting the ground at 3600. That is about 1,000 Dow points off the peak in Globex at the open Sunday night.

Granted, it is 4:00 am here in the mountains, and New York does not open for another 3.5 hours. But a cruel, downside gap appears to be awaiting the longs at morning coffee. Needless to say, I am happy we are in the audience seats, popcorn in hand, to watch this unfold. At the same time, we must also be alert for the buy, as the market has breached the mean at the 21-day line, leading us further south for the winter.

Once again, I am reminded how much smarter the Navigator Algorithms are than I am, having painted double sell alerts – warning of the market’s potential, short-term demise. The yellow down arrows on the chart below are the alerts painted, with that prominent engulfing red candle at the end showing the overnight action at this writing.

I also want to pay homage to the dumb money – that Robinhood App crowd. We need each other. Who else would feed us these wonderful profits all year? When they zig, it is best to zag and vice versa. The more new traders, the merrier. Apparently, there are 14 million of them, and we are happy to take their money. This is a zero-sum game, after all.

So, where does that leave us, and what does this sell-off mean? Is this the end of the bull? Will we revisit the bottom of the megaphone pattern from this top at Mount Everest? Are we facing the second coming of the toilet paper crisis?

Funny you should ask. Rather than focusing on my usual homework, I spent the weekend preparing my 2021 forecast. You will find it quite interesting. The theme centers around the idea that 10-years of the digital revolution have been compacted into a year, and the implications for trading, investing, and life, in general, are profound.

For now, we could blame this decline on the new lockdowns, the new strain of the virus, the election, and all manner of bad things. However, at the end of the day, there is always something to tag for a rally or decline in the markets. And perhaps the Stimulus passing later today will be the catalyst for a turn back to the north.

For now, the chart above is enough of an explanation for me. The Dumb Money has been giddy while the smart money had already headed for Christmas vacation. Once again, I am reminded of that famous quote from my mother when she didn’t like one of my friends – “tell me who you walk with, and I’ll tell you who you are.”

The 2021 forecast video will be out by the end of this week. In the meantime, be on alert for a buy signal.

AF Thornton

Navigator Algorithms – 100% Cash

After my weekend review, I have nothing significant to add to the last few outlooks. In the normal course, the market is due for a minor pullback early this week. Otherwise, the market is internally healthy – certainly the best it has been since the March lows. But valuations in many quarters continue to be lofty and bullish sentiment is at a short-term extreme. Perhaps the frothy sentiment can be tamed with a few days of profit-taking. We shall see.

But what bothers me the most at this moment is the market’s vulnerability to an exogenous event. When the market is touching the clouds, it is susceptible to bad news and an associated liquidation event. With the kind of leverage out there right now, any such event could be doubly brutal.  

There is a crisis looming about the election results – and it will soon come to a head. This could lead to a black swan event for the country and the markets. It would be very naive to underestimate the powder keg that may be about to blow. The powers that be need to do whatever it takes to verify the results and give the election legitimacy. Absent that, I am very concerned about where we are headed over the next few months.

I wrote four more paragraphs here but decided to delete them. It was cathartic to write them, but I fell back on my rule that politics has a limited role on these pages. Politics are only relevant here to the extent that the disputed election could impact the markets – if a constitutional crisis results.

I relaxed a bit this weekend, as it may be the last calm weekend before the storm. I hope I am wrong, but I am comfortable in the stock market bleacher seats for now. I don’t need to be playing on the field.

Absent anything significant, I am still on vacation until early January. So my next report will be in a week. I am vacationing in the remote mountains – satellite dish on, generator fueled, guns loaded, a couple of months worth of food and water, etc. etc. 

Be careful! 

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