Friday, May 29, 2015

A Lower Risk Way to Play Defense

We've been cautious on the U.S. Equity Markets since publishing our April 24th Piece 'Tread Lightly'. Since then the S&P is virtually unchanged (-0.5%). Our rather defensive suggestion to go long Japan and short the Emerging Markets on May 9th has worked out well, with the exchange-traded fund EWJ outpacing ADRE by about 5%. See: Long Japan Short Emerging Markets.

For readers that are interested in another low-risk way to get defensive, we suggest looking at a 'Price Momentum with Reversal' Factor. We take the lead from Ford Equity Research and define this factor as being a stock's: 12 month return minus its 3 month return, minus 3 times its 1 month return. Thus, the factor scores high when a stock has been performing well over the last year, but has recently taken a breather.

To test the strategy, we form long and short portfolios by buying stocks that score in the top quintile based on the factor, and shorting the corresponding bottom quintile. We begin in March of 1999 (193 months), form equally weighted portfolios, and re-rank and rebalance on a monthly timetable. At first glance, there appears to be no relationship between the S&P 500 and the performance of this factor:


But if we look at this factor only during bearish periods, we see that the long-short portfolio performs well. We define the bearish periods as occurring during the following 51 months:


  • The Tech Bubble Burst from 4/1/2000 - 9/30/2002 
  • The Global Financial Crisis from 11/1/2007 - 2/27/2009
  • The aftershock of the Global Financial Crisis from 5/1/2011 - 9/30/2011


Why not just short the market? Well, we could be wrong. This factor doesn't lose money during bullish periods (not shown), but it performs well during bearish periods. That sounds pretty close to a win-win!

In a subsequent post, we'll highlight individual names that look interesting on the long and short side of the factor. Stay tuned!

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Long Japan, Short Emerging Markets

A long-term trade that looks particularly interesting to us is to buy Japan and short the Emerging Markets. But there is a twist... The suggestion here is to do a "dollarized" version of the trade, which is to say, go long the Yen and short a basket of Emerging Market currencies versus the U.S. Dollar. The easiest way to do this is to go long and short the exchange-traded funds EWJ and ADRE, respectively. The former gives one long exposure to the MSCI Japan Index, and the latter gives one short exposure to the Bank of New York Emerging Markets 50 Index. There are several reasons why this trade is appealing:

1) The ratio chart of EWJ:ADRE is carving out a bottom that is almost a decade-long in the making.



The chart above depicts one measure of the relative performance of EWJ versus ADRE. It has all of the characteristics of what some might call a "bearish to bullish reversal". What we see is a trade that was under pressure for several years that is now "coming to life". We have a "breakout" of sorts, and a "throwback" to a very long-term trendline. The expectation is that a new valuation zone is beginning to emerge, one that is above the tops of 2013 and 2014. Admittedly, the "reversal" was in its early stages in 2013, but if one were to "zoom out" on this chart (not shown), and go back to the early 1990's, one would see that, relative to this time period, the trade is still in its early stages.

Shown above is a ratio chart. The ratio chart is especially popular among market technicians and economists alike. Historically, it's been used by market participants to track the price of the S&P 500 in Gold, the price of Gold in Oil, or to track Gold in Euros or Yen. In fact, a graph of any currency pair is a ratio chart of the respective currencies, each in terms of another base currency. There are some subtleties that are beyond the scope of this post that make it, mathematically, not "perfectly the case". But keeping the bigger picture in mind, the ratio chart is a useful tool to track the relative prices of just about any pair of securities.

So a ratio of the price of EWJ:ADRE looks interesting. The next step is to make sure that the "parts that comprise the whole" also look interesting (or to at least, make sure they don't contradict the message of the ratio chart). To do that, we take a look at the component securities. What do the MSCI Japan Index and Emerging Markets ADR 50 Index look like on their own?

MSCI Japan Index


The chart above spans several decades and depicts a breakout of a large consolidation zone that began in the late 80's. 

The chart below spans several years, and is completely neutral, that is, without any particularly bullish or bearish interpretations. 

Bank of New York ADR 50 Index


By looking at the parts that comprise the "whole trade", long EWJ, short ADRE, we certainly don't see anything that would give pause by posing any sort of contradiction to the larger message.

2) We've been cautious on the U.S. Markets beginning in late April. See our earlier post here:Tread Lightly! By taking an equal dollar amount long EWJ, short ADRE, the trader is actually statistically short the S&P 500. This is because the beta of EWJ is about 0.75, and the beta of ADRE is about 1 versus the S&P 500. The net beta is about -0.25.

3) EWJ is implicitly long the Yen, and ADRE is implicitly long a basket of Emerging Market currencies. Thus, by pairing EWJ:ADRE, the trader is implicitly going long the Yen versus the abovementioned basket of currencies. The Yen tends to rise with market weakness, and Emerging Market currencies tend to fall with market weakness. Thus, this is also a defensive currency trade that is in-line with our cautious stance.

4) Should the broader commodities market resume its downward long-term trend, Emerging Markets should follow in-tandem.

5) Japan is at least 11 years ahead of the U.S. in its fight against powerful deflationary forces. They appear to be "all-in" from a fiscal and monetary standpoint, while the U.S. appears to be lacking any meaningful fiscal support. This is a sign that Japan has finally come around to garnering the "political will" to fight deflation, while the U.S. seems stuck in its own political "red tape". Our bout with deflation shares many similarities to Japan's, but time-wise, the U.S. is probably where Japan was in the early 2000's, politically speaking. Japanese equities did not perform particularly well in the 2000's.

Housekeeping

Just a housekeeping item for this post. We wanted to let the readers know that Tim will be posting regularly starting around mid-June, and that we plan to use the blog in the following ways:

1) Tim will write about major markets such as the S&P 500, Oil, Gold, Euro, etc. on a weekly basis (approximately). The focus will be on short-term setups.

2) Tim will also piggy-back off of my posts, expanding on how to trade the longer-term setups that I've identified, but helping us out with the tactical timing of these trades.

3) I will be writing about long/medium-term sector/industry/country themes, and will be identifying individual securities as candidates for going long or short (approximately bi-weekly)

4) I will try to write a well-researched, deeper macro piece that incorporates principles from behavioral finance and quantitative analysis (approximately monthly).

So basically, we just wanted to let the readers know that we are excited to provide a lot more material in relatively short order!