Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Is The Market About To Top Out?

Never invest with the herd. More often than not, it is disastrous for your investments. No one can predict what the market will do; but one of the best indicators of a market top is when a so called perma-bear becomes a bull.

Is a tiger changing his stripes a sign of a market top?

It is certainly one of them. When a famously bearish analyst joins the chorus of bulls, it's time to be a little careful. One of the loudest contrarian voices, James Grant recently jumped ship.

James Grant is the editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer. Among his books is "The Trouble with Prosperity." He is often referred to as a “perma-bear.” Reporters ring him up when there is a downturn in the markets. A glass half empty kind of guy. His recent article in The Wall Street Journal and newly bullish stance has caused a buzz in the US markets.

The Market Does What It Wants To Do

Sharp rallies are the rule in a bear market, not the exception. It is common for the market to rocket upward in an overall downtrend. Take a look at the following chart of the Dow Jones from 1929 – 1932.

During that time, there were seven major declines and six major rallies. The rallies ranged from 19% to as high as 101%. And in every case, investors probably thought the worst was over and a new bull market had dawned.

This rally has not been built on the foundation of improving fundamentals. There is still too much wrong with the economy to hope that a new bull market is beginning just yet.

What To Do?

Don't sell and exit the market. This rally could run much higher regardless of the fundamentals. Book 50% of your profits, set trailing stop losses and let the rest of your profits ride.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Is Irrational Exuberance Back In The Markets?

With market chaos abating the return of risk appetite in stock and lending markets is logical - up to a point. Markets probably overshot to the downside and some level of recovery is therefore only a return to a sensible middle ground.

But there are clear signs of an overshoot on the upside - an 'echo bubble'. Sensible analysis of stock prices for instance suggests that after the run-up of recent months, markets are clearly overvalued. A recent rash of IPO's (NHPC, Adani Power, Oil India), follow-on offers and QIP's (Axis Bank) and large bond issues can be seen as a return to business as usual.

Investors are also tired of talking about the macro issues. That's understandable given the return of a modicum of stability to markets. Yet the things that keep people awake at night are still the big macro concerns:
  • Is the US consumer going to pull back further?
  • Is a continuing downturn in commercial property going to undermine the credit recovery?
  • Are bad things still lurking in the banking system?

The fact is that the foundations of a recovery are scarcely in place, yet the optimists are already looking for the lift to the new skyscraper's observation deck.

Is Reliance Bidding For LyondellBasell ?

Is Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) in talks to buy bankrupt LyondellBasell, one of the world's largest polymers, petrochemicals and fuels companies? The buzz on Dalal Street is that RIL is looking to is looking at acquiring some or all of the assets of the company.

On December 20, 2007, Basell, owned by New York-based investor Len Blavatnik's Access Industries, acquired Lyondell Chemical Company through an all-cash leveraged buyout at $48 per share. This deal left the combined entity, LyondellBasell saddled with a heavy debt load.

LyondellBasell filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy under the US Bankruptcy Code on January 6 this year because of a short-term liquidity crisis. The company had USD 27 billion in assets and USD 19 billion in debt when it filed for bankruptcy. The company also had annual revenues of USD 50.7 billion in 2008.

Adding further fuel to the fire, on Tursday 17th September, RIL sold 1.5 crore treasury shares at an average price of Rs 2,125/share and raised Rs3,188 crore (USD 655 million). The treasury shares were created in May 2002 after the merger of Reliance Industries with the Reliance Petroleum (the old entity). The Petroleum Trust which was created to house the treasury shares still owns 9 crore worth 18000 crore (assuming RIL trades at Rs 2000/share). This money could be used to fund the LyondellBasell deal.

As per news reports RIL declined to comment on the rumored deal, but said "the company is committed to growth and creating value for long-term investors. Its sale of treasury shares on Thursday indicates the management intends to make large investments".

LyondellBasell’s reorganization plan will be provided to the US bankruptcy court on October 14, so that is when the details will be made public. So if the buzz on the street is right, the information should be in public domain before October 14.

Read about LyondellBasell’s bankruptcy here

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

1 Year After The Demise Of Lehman

One year ago on the 15th of September 2008 Brothers filed for bankruptcy. Reuters has created a great multimedia recap of the financial crisis 1 year after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

Read more
here

Monday, September 14, 2009

Same Old Hope: This Bubble Is Different

This time is different.

That’s what people argue every time a bubble inflates, and what they think every time they lose money when it pops. But year after year, decade after decade, century after century the process repeats all over again.

Not long ago, the housing bubble burst and brought the global economy to a standstill. Now investors, recognizing that bubbles tend to come in bunches, are on the lookout for the next market to fizzle. Possible candidates are the capital markets in China, commodities like gold and oil, and government bonds in heavily indebted countries like the United States.

Bubbles are episodes of collective human madness — euphoria over investments whose skyrocketing values are unsustainable. They tend to arise from perceptions of pending shortages (as happened last year, with the oil bubble); from glamorized new technologies or investment frontiers (like the dot-com bubble of the 1990s, the multiple railroad bubbles of the 19th century); or from faddish cultural obsessions (like the Dutch tulip bubble of the 17th century).

Often they are based on legitimate expectations of high growth that are “extrapolated into the stratosphere”. Such is the fear over investment in emerging markets like China. “I am a long-term bull on Asia, but right now it’s premature to be celebrating the ‘Asian Century,’ like some investors seem to be doing,” said Stephen Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia.

But a sovereign debt bubble — which many argue is driving the acceleration in gold prices — could prove far more dangerous. So many countries, like the United States, are running up such large national debts as a percentage of their overall economies that they could risk eventual default. Even without outright default on their obligations, the value of government bonds sold to finance these deficits could plunge, costing investors a lot. Debt crises are usually associated with developing countries, like Brazil, Argentina or Zimbabwe. But they can affect big, rich economies too, where the scale of global damage can be much greater.

The depth and breadth of the pain unleashed by the recent housing bust have led political leaders and central bankers to reconsider their duties to preempt, rather than just respond to, potential bubbles, and the same is true with the potential bubbles that economists foresee today. China has started to tighten monetary policy to rein in the hype surrounding its equities. Politicians in the United States, while torn over the means, are discussing ways to bring the deficit until control. The G20, at its coming meeting in Pittsburgh, is expected to address ways to calm financial frenzies. The solution may involve additional regulation, guidelines for financial compensation and possibly requirements for more market transparency so that, at least in theory, investors can better judge what they are taking on.

But however stringent such new regulations may be, economists say, they cannot completely defeat human nature. Investors will continue to be hypnotized by get-rich-quick deals, seeking investments that magically double, triple even quadruple without toil or trouble.

Ultimately, bubbles are a human phenomenon. Sometimes, people just get a little crazy.


PS: This is a summary of an article from the New York Times. View the original here (Registration required)

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Secrets Of Formula 1 Helmets

Felipe Massa’s dramatic accident during qualifying for the Hungarian Grand Prix brought driver safety - and in particular the great strides made in helmet design over the past few years - into much sharper focus.

Read more
here