Who's Underinvested When Europe Matters Less? - Tactical Trading
November 27 2011 - 6:00PM
Zacks
I love mornings when you wake up and S&P futures are 2% higher
before dawn... and then they are 3% higher before the NYSE open! As
I said on November 3, when the Euro-mess was the primary weight on
an otherwise strong stock market and I bought the fear the day
Greece went rogue, you have to be prepared for these days...
So, now that we just made 40 S&P points, is
it still up, up, and away from here? The market could definitely
run away higher from here. That's a clear risk for equity fund
managers who don't want to be caught under-invested at this
time.
And I love this kind of tension too where, after
months of bearish sentiment, all it takes is a good news catalyst
that removes doubt about something (like European systemic banking
contagion), and you can move another 30 points higher before the
open (like the S&P did last week on Thursday October
27).
By the way, that kind of strong "Good morning
and how the heck are ya!" where the futures are 1-2% higher before
the opening bell rings is fund managers scrambling to get exposure.
They use the S&P futures because it's the fastest, most liquid
vehicle they have.
But not all are this nimble. And lots of that
futures buying is by hedge funds putting the screws to the
portfolio guys. Yes, markets fall faster than they rally, since
panic is often stronger than greed. Yet, a surging market is also a
wonder to behold, especially if you are already long and watching
other investors chase your stocks.
That's why you want to have some core long
positions so that you are invested in this potential, not chasing
it. And then you wait for other fear-driven dips to buy.
So while I had the first target in this slide
correct -- the drop to S&P 1,150 once we took out 1,225 and
1,200 -- I was somewhat blind to the sleepy holiday market just
waiting for another weekend of euro risk to pass. I was looking for
more fear to give us a better buying opportunity.
Apparently Santa went shopping with a vengeance and
was ready to buy stocks on the next real work day. And the fear was
to the upside as being under-invested is usually a bad play at this
time of year. Throw in a healthy does of scaring the bears out of
their shorts and you have an up 3% opening.
Volatility and Valuations
I should have taken a page from the playbook that
has worked all year for me: when volatility is contained and stocks
reach compelling valuations again anywhere near S&P 1,100,
money managers can't resist.
But this raises the question, "Which money
managers?" Because they can't all be right. Then the market would
truly be some weirdly efficient machine, instead of the dynamic,
complex and barely predictable system it is.
The thing is, stocks can drift lower without heavy
institutional selling. All it takes is a buyer's strike by some big
and smart funds who just step back and let others hit the sell
buttons.
So while I thought we needed more fear to wash out
the final weak hands and truly test the 1,140-1,150 area, the
biggest owners of the market just were never that scared. Indeed,
they were licking their chops.
Exactly what I've been saying -- and trading most
of the time -- since August. Give them a little reason to see how
Europe could right the ship and the buyer's strike is over.
For my trading, I didn't get burned too bad. I had
one short position via the S&P 500 3X Bearish ETF (SPXU) and
reeled 1,000 shares back in before the open to keep 2.5% of the 10%
open profits I had.
Will this rally be sold by the smart money? That's
a good question. If this is about Europe taking real action to stem
the crisis, I don't think so. If this is another eurozone "let's
wait till the next meeting" moment, then we may have to test
S&P 1,175 again before next week's EU summit.
Be sure to check out my other column today on how
Germany continues to control the game over there -- even if through
apparent inertia.
Kevin Cook is a Senior Stock Strategist with
Zacks.com
Zacks Investment Research
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