Seeking Alpha
About this author:

Excerpt from Raymond James strategist Jeffrey Saut's latest essay, (published Monday November 9th):

... A man has rigged up a turkey trap with a trail of corn leading into a big box with a hinged door. The man holds a long piece of twine connected to the door that he can use to pull the door shut once enough turkeys have wandered into the box. However, once he shuts the door, he can’t open it again without going back into the box, which would scare away any turkeys lurking on the outside. One day he had a dozen turkeys in his box. Then one walked out, leaving eleven. ‘I should have pulled the string when there were twelve inside,’ he thought, ‘but maybe if I wait, he will walk back in.’ While he was waiting for his twelfth turkey to return, two more turkeys walked out. ‘I should have been satisfied with the eleven,’ he thought. ‘If just one of them walks back, I will pull the string.’ While he was waiting, three more turkeys walked out. Eventually, he was left empty-handed. His problem was that he couldn’t give up the idea that some of the original turkeys would return.

... Why You Win or Lose, by Fred C. Kelly

“I should have bought at Dow 8000 when the DJIA broke above the downtrend line that was formed by drawing a descending line from the May 2008 high to the September 2008 high. Now we are probing another descending trend line that can be seen by drawing a similar line connecting the October 2007 high with the highs of December 2007, May 2008 and October 2009.” So exclaimed one disgruntled portfolio manager last Friday since the senior index again continued to not surrender much ground last week.

Indeed, despite all the “calls” for a correction (including ours) the Dow remains resilient. And, those “correction calls” are now legend with certain pundits trumpeting that the “bear market rally is over” and we are now going to re-test, and break, the March lows. Other mavens continue to opine that the 1937 – 1938 Dow déjà vu is the preferred pattern, which also suggests that new lows lay ahead.

We, however, don’t buy the idea that our nation is at the end of an era. While the U.S. is certainly in a “hard spot,” our sense is that economist Joseph Schumpeter’s notion of “creative destruction” will play once again. One can actually see it at work as labor and capital are moving from dying industries to growing industries like electric cars, biotechnology, green companies, infrastructure, etc. We have been on the infrastructure theme for years, with particular emphasis on electricity and water. Interestingly, much of the stimulus money earmarked for infrastructure is going to go for replacing our country’s aged water pipes. Obviously, that’s good news for pipe manufacturers and we have tilted portfolios accordingly.

As for the equity markets, while we have wrongly been looking for a correction since the beginning of the fourth quarter, the S&P 500 (SPX/1069.30) still hovers around the same level it was when we turned cautious. To us that’s pretty bullish, for as stated in last week’s letter:

While our sense is that we are into a secondary correction, our proprietary overbought/oversold indicator is VERY oversold and the number of S&P 500 stocks that are above their 50-DMAs has fallen from more than 90% to 33.2%. Consequently, we continue to think it is a mistake to get too bearish.

Indeed, despite the “bad mouthing,” all stocks have done over the past month is consolidate their July – September rally by moving sideways. Moreover, that sideways consolidation has seen the equity markets work off their overbought condition into one of being pretty oversold. Ladies and gentlemen, to an underinvested portfolio manager the current environment is a nightmare, especially if you believe as we do that we are going to see an upside celebration into year-end. Manifestly, we have argued that with credit spreads below their pre-Lehman (LEHMQ.PK) bankruptcy levels there should be no reason why the equity markets can’t “fill up” the downside vacuum created in the charts by said bankruptcy.

As can be seen in the following chart, that gives the S&P 500 an upside target of 1200 – 1250. If correct, it implies that the cash rich, underinvested portfolio managers (PMs) will once again be forced to chase stocks higher. Our guess is the PMs will chase the “winners” since the March lows rather than buying the laggards. That suggests investments in emerging and frontier markets, technology, financials, base/precious metals, etc. should trade higher if the aforementioned scenario plays.

Along this “chase ‘em” theme, we have screened the Raymond James universe of stocks that have rallied more than 100% since the March lows, which were rated Strong Buys in March, and are still rated Strong Buy. If we get “melt up” stage 2, such a list should make a decent idea list. The names for your consideration are: RF Micro (RFMD/$4.02); Bank America (BAC/$15.05); Hughes Communication (HUGH/$24.60); Continental Resources (CLR/$37.17); AFLAC (AFL/$42.19); Whiting Petroleum (WLL/$61.30); ADC Telecommunications (ADCT/$6.52); NII Holdings (NIHD/$27.82); Micron Technology (MU/$7.08); JDS Uniphase (JDSU/$6.46); Motorola (MOT/$8.89); Encore Acquisition Co. (EAC/$44.74); Service Corporation (SCI/$7.55); BPZ Resources (BPZ/$6.84); and KVH Industries (KVHI/$10.99).

The call for this week: Time is running out for the bears if our year-end celebration is going to play. If the major averages break out above their recent reaction highs the party could commence. As for us, we are on the road again this week, so these will likely be the last strategy comments for the week.


Print this article with comments

This article has 14 comments:

  •  
    rf micro? jdsu, mu, mot....this is your list? could you pick a group of stocks with worse fundamentals than these? I don't think so and for anyone reading your post, I caution them to stay away from your recommendations. these stocks have sapped so much wealth from people over the last 9 years it isn't funny. these are all fallen angels with terrible fundamentals. I think you should find yourself another job.
    Nov 10 03:59 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I think no one is used to bear markets these days...Whenever the Dow goes down there is lot of hue and cry and the Government and Fed comes to action...Quantitative easing, stimulus packages follow...These are just flooding the system with liquidity...So there is a greater disconnect between fundamentals and markets...

    I would say that if the economy gets weaker the markets might go higher....cos the government will again print some more money...that will be used for speculation in different asset classes....
    Nov 10 04:20 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    This is a typical fund manager analysis that want people to push the stock higher so that they report good numbers at the year end.

    The stock may go higher and as the sayings goes, the higher it goes, the heavier it fall.

    I will rather stay at the sideline, as Art Cashin from CNBC say, It is just an opportunity lost if we don't buy or sell. There are other opportunities If one can wait. Like Gold or commodities when the correction arrived. Equities at this level is not cheap, buying now is like gambling and really not investing.
    Nov 10 05:02 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Wouldn't say resilient. I'd say high......on fake money. As I've said before, based on what we've seen over the past several months, I wouldn't rule out 13K on the Dow. We have a government that has demonstrated that it is willing to continue it's print and prop campaign. It will likely, in the near future, raise the debt ceiling yet again. Does anyone still believe we can print and borrow our way out? And at some point, they will have to stop printing and propping. What then? As someone eluded to above, the higher we climb, artificially, the farther we fall later. Look at the markets, gold...and the dollar. This doesn't wash, and unsuspecting "little guys" out there are going to get wiped out. That will change things, forever.
    Nov 10 05:30 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    MikeD71: " I wouldn't rule out 13K on the Dow."

    Actually, I wouldn't rule out 14K or 15K - The equity markets have become a "poster children" for the economy. They will do anything and everything under the sun to manipulate the markets to show "Mission Accomplished." It makes no difference that millions more may be living in tent cities (something the media doesn't like to report on anymore - but they are still there), or that your local strip mall will look like something out of a post World War III movie.

    This is all about the appearance of a recovery.

    Faisal:

    I like your observations. If you look at the stocks with the greatest volume, there are usually four in there that are essentially the US Government. Citi, BAC
    Nov 10 08:57 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    When I left town on a 10-day road trip in late October I found my modest holdings had dropped nine percent.

    That was the correction. And now they have already rebounded and come close to closing the gap.

    So maybe the called for correction has come and gone. I hope so.
    Nov 10 10:36 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Ooops. This should read "when I returned from a 10-day road trip,I learned my modest......."


    On Nov 10 10:36 AM swaps wrote:

    > When I left town on a 10-day road trip in late October I found my
    > modest holdings had dropped nine percent.
    >
    > That was the correction. And now they have already rebounded and
    > come close to closing the gap.
    >
    > So maybe the called for correction has come and gone. I hope so.
    Nov 10 10:40 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Yes BUT....like many things on Wall Street....lots of short term thinkers in Manhattan....it is temporary. Too many fundamentals are spinning out of control or spiraling down right now to sustain this party.
    Nov 10 01:23 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    For those above saying, I can see 13k coming....well, maybe 15k Dow....but TEMPORARY, you can just as easily see 6K by 2011.
    Nov 10 01:25 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Sorry, Wall Street is gaining at the expense of Main Street, so my forecasts are down from here.
    Nov 10 01:27 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    "...our sense is that economist Joseph Schumpeter’s notion of “creative destruction” will play once again. One can actually see it at work as labor and capital are moving from dying industries to growing industries like electric cars, biotechnology, green companies, infrastructure, etc."

    Heh. Creative destruction of what and by whom??? That is the question! The socialists currently in power are creatively destroying capitalism and Liberty in this land. The movement of labor and capital that you see are real...but these movements are not due to free markets allocating where the best opportunities are, but rather, to where these socialist thugs are forcing them to. That will *not* yield the same beneficial effect that free market "creative destruction" does -- instead, it will yield inefficiencies, misallocation (meaning disruptions to supply and demand) that result in shortages of some goods/services and excesses of others, and general lack of incentive among producers who are increasingly deprived of the natural market for their labors.
    Nov 10 03:23 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I would also note that Big Government is gaining at the expense of capitalism and Main Street. When you cite Wall Street gaining, that's not really true -- keep in mind that corporations are a dichotomy: a few at the top really gain from this propping-up and pillaging of the people; but the bulk of those who work at corporations are middle-class, and are worse off for what is happening, the same as are working-class folks in small businesses. Big Government is the one thing that keeps grabbing more power and a bigger share of the financial pie no matter what. Until we limit the role of government in our lives, the average worker will not be able to keep more of what they earn!


    On Nov 10 01:27 PM chris coonan wrote:

    > Sorry, Wall Street is gaining at the expense of Main Street, so my
    > forecasts are down from here.
    Nov 10 03:27 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Why so uptight?? All you readers of this blog. If you are following news of this market, it means you are interested in its movements. The trend now is ride with the waves,, if you are clever you leave the market on the high surge wave, otherwise be prepared to be dunk by it. If you want to be an investor, wait for DOW to be back at 7000,, you missed it already and its proven that you were wrong when you did not get into the market at that point,, so shut up and stop commenting your 2 cents worth.
    Nov 10 10:33 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Any fund manager with any cash left poured the last of it into stocks when Google and Apple last reported. The money on the sidelines gimmick is played out and a fallacy, which may have always been the case. Even the anecdotal part of the article is convoluted and deceptive. The turkeys under the box more accurately represent profits made in this rally.
    Nov 13 01:43 PM | Link | Reply