Unfortunately, I have been removed from further involvement in the Haile Fund. As such, this post marks the end of the associated blog.
Thanks for visiting this thoughtstream.
Haile Student Investment Fund
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Short Interest at Multi-Year Lows
After peaking last fall at multi-year highs, NYSE short interest has collapsed to multi-year lows. The only time it has been this low over the past coupla yrs was, yep, the deja vu period last spring.
You can see from the chart that low short interest is not a good predictor of near term trend reversals. But it is a data point in support that this rally is in its late stage and that there's a fade trade on the horizon.
position in SPX
You can see from the chart that low short interest is not a good predictor of near term trend reversals. But it is a data point in support that this rally is in its late stage and that there's a fade trade on the horizon.
position in SPX
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Been There, Done That
Yes, I recognize the deja vu. About one year ago I began reallocating assets to reflect a more inflationary posture. That posture lasted only a few months. Last summer's debt ceiling debate coupled with the EU debacle squelched my incremental inflationary expectations, and I peeled off risk positions in favor of a more balanced posture.
Fast forward to now. Once again I find myself adding long exposure in lieu of a tape that seems to be taking the Fed's "0% till 2014" promise to heart.
Will this action once again prove temporary in a world that's drowning in a debt bubble that wants to deflate? Not sure, but currently my actions need to express a perceived uptick in the odds of Big Inflation on the horizon.
position in SPX
Fast forward to now. Once again I find myself adding long exposure in lieu of a tape that seems to be taking the Fed's "0% till 2014" promise to heart.
Will this action once again prove temporary in a world that's drowning in a debt bubble that wants to deflate? Not sure, but currently my actions need to express a perceived uptick in the odds of Big Inflation on the horizon.
position in SPX
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Bullish Patterns
Am noticing lots of cup-and-handle patterns in many large cap equity charts. Some of the patterns span a few days while others are multi-month in nature.
Moreover, the action 'feels' bullish. The tape is consistently bid. Weakness is being bought regardless of news.
Feels too risky to be net short here. As such, I've been adding some long side exposure to balance things out. I've been buying some of my fave blue chip names (CSCO, JNJ, PG). Today I added a little commodity exposure via DBC.
To be clear, I'm in 'rent' rather than 'own' mode here. But I want to reposition my near term stance in this bullish tape. I'm now a coupla percent net long.
position in CSCO, DBC, JNJ, PG, SH
Moreover, the action 'feels' bullish. The tape is consistently bid. Weakness is being bought regardless of news.
Feels too risky to be net short here. As such, I've been adding some long side exposure to balance things out. I've been buying some of my fave blue chip names (CSCO, JNJ, PG). Today I added a little commodity exposure via DBC.
To be clear, I'm in 'rent' rather than 'own' mode here. But I want to reposition my near term stance in this bullish tape. I'm now a coupla percent net long.
position in CSCO, DBC, JNJ, PG, SH
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
University Endowment Trends
This paper is somewhat dated (2008), but it still points out interesting trends in university endowments over a decade or so. Note big difference in endowment size between private (especially Ivy) and public. This really sticks out when examining endowment/student.
Asset allocation shows movement out of fixed income in favor of alternative assets. Some stats (medians):
2005 Overall
n = 726
endowment size = $72 million
return = 9%
AA equity = 59.6%
AA fixed income = 20.4%
AA alternative assets = 7.6%
Interestingly, Ivy League AA in 2005 was 38.1% equity/13.0% fixed income/37.1% asset allocation.
Of course, we now know that those increased allocations toward alternative assets were a source of pain during the credit meltdown of 2008-2009. Many alt investments, particularly illiquid ones, were crushed when bid/ask spreads fell thru the floor.
Still, the attractive characteristic of many alternative assets is that they can be less correlated with other asset classes, which makes them useful for diversification purposes.
position in SPX
Asset allocation shows movement out of fixed income in favor of alternative assets. Some stats (medians):
2005 Overall
n = 726
endowment size = $72 million
return = 9%
AA equity = 59.6%
AA fixed income = 20.4%
AA alternative assets = 7.6%
Interestingly, Ivy League AA in 2005 was 38.1% equity/13.0% fixed income/37.1% asset allocation.
Of course, we now know that those increased allocations toward alternative assets were a source of pain during the credit meltdown of 2008-2009. Many alt investments, particularly illiquid ones, were crushed when bid/ask spreads fell thru the floor.
Still, the attractive characteristic of many alternative assets is that they can be less correlated with other asset classes, which makes them useful for diversification purposes.
position in SPX
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
The 'Risk Out' Scenario
Interesting proposition by Peter Atwater that the ultimate indicator that a secular bottom has arrived may not be one where individuals have moved out of more risky financial assets and into less risky assets. Instead, perhaps it will be a 'risk out' situation, where market participants flee securitized financial assets altogether.
There is, of course, a decent argument to be made that the probability is non-zero of a systemic meltdown that chases participants away. With systemic leverage thru the roof and issues of re-hypothecation raised by last year's blow-up of MF Global, it isn't that difficult to envision a scenario where the financial system ceases to function. Cascading bank failures, sovereign debt defaults, and other contagious events could bring the system to its knees.
Indeed, a good case for owning physical gold or other 'hard assets' is that they are tangible and outside the 'paper' financial system.
I'm going to keep Peter's proposal in mind. Perhaps the time to 'buy the list' is not when people are selling the list, but when both buyers and sellers have gone home en masse.
position in SPX
There is, of course, a decent argument to be made that the probability is non-zero of a systemic meltdown that chases participants away. With systemic leverage thru the roof and issues of re-hypothecation raised by last year's blow-up of MF Global, it isn't that difficult to envision a scenario where the financial system ceases to function. Cascading bank failures, sovereign debt defaults, and other contagious events could bring the system to its knees.
Indeed, a good case for owning physical gold or other 'hard assets' is that they are tangible and outside the 'paper' financial system.
I'm going to keep Peter's proposal in mind. Perhaps the time to 'buy the list' is not when people are selling the list, but when both buyers and sellers have gone home en masse.
position in SPX
Monday, January 30, 2012
Suppot and Resistance Tutorial
Defining support and resistance is perhaps the most useful of all technical analysis skills. Here is a nice little tutorial on various approaches for finding support and resistance.
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