Birchtree's Account Talk

From the print edition of TWSJ 3/15.

"Harris Private Bank is in the middle of a debate over whether to boost its small-stock exposure. The bank has decided to cut investments in Europe, Japan, and Australia and increase U.S. holdings - but which U.S. holdings?

Harris's small-stock analyst is leery of the group, feeling it has become expensive, Harris's Mr. Albin says. The Russell currently trades around 52 times its companies' profits for the past year, making it more than twice as expensive as the stocks in the S&P 500, according to Thomson Reuters.

But analysts are forecasting that small-company earnings could double this year, compared with growth of 10% to 12% at larger companies, Mr. Albin says. He is tempted by the group's prospects and its stock momentum.

The problem: There are enormous expectations built in, so room for disappointment is enormous. We may end up buying a little of both small and large stocks. Some analysts warn that the trend toward risky stocks may be nearing its apex.

We are taking some money out of the high fliers and reallocating a bit, thinking we might be near the high end of the market's 2010 gains, says Jeffrey Klleintop, chief market strategist at brokerage firm LPL Financial in Boston, who has been bullish.

He worries that uneven economic performance could make stocks volatile and limit gains, especially if world-wide demand for Chinese goods proves uneven. He isn't recommending that clients cut back on small stocks yet, but he thinks that time is nearing.

Investors are embracing risk, Kleintop says. But as the headwinds for growth reemerge later this year, I think we will see small stocks give back most of their gains relative to large stocks."
 
I'm doing a little buying this morning: LPX, ANN, VCI. I've now made 780 individual stock buys since June 26th '09, so I'm making good progress. The plan is to tap in 1000 buys before June 26th '10 - running in front of this bull market.
 
This is a repost but I think it is important as a piece of history. "Since the 1942 market bottom, there have been 16 bull markets in the Dow. Of these, only nine have shown corrections of 10% or more. And there were never more than one 10% - or greater correction in any of these nine bull markets. So rather than being commonplace, pullbacks of this magnitude are relatively infrequent. As such, it is possible to see how they could be interpreted as the initial phase of major market declines. This would be especially true when the correction occurred at the mid-point or later in the bull market, as was the case in six of the nine sell-offs."

http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article17460.html
 
Birchtree, tell all your minions to make an exit for the G-Fund. I've climbed up the tracker this month, and would like to push some more folks aside before it's all said and done.
 
I seldom tell anyone what to do unless there is a direct question - and there are very few questions. However, there is a lot of short term decisions being made and that's kosher with me - they'll move on their own intuition and provide the opportunity for the longer term thinkers. Keep those sticky pants on and let's ride Captain America. The NYSE is showing the strength today.
 
Today's market is providing me with ample buying power if it holds - I'm ready to do some heavy buying tomorrow. This rally may run all month and then some. Cash is starting to slosh around looking for opportunity and I'm making my opportunity by staying long and strong. The sweet smell of superlative bull manure is everywhere this spring and probably driving the fence sitters crazy - build the bull pen and eventually they will come.
 
As Tom mentioned this advance has been impressively inclusive. The NYSE overbought/oversold indicator reached a rare high above 90 again yesterday. This indicator has exceeded the 80 level about 65 times or so since 1970, and one year after each instance, the SPX was higher. We confirmed the Dow Theory with the Dow going above 10.725.24 - providing we can hold it. The question now becomes where is the top. I think we are months away from any serious pullback - probably during the four year cycle nesting during the July to October period. The A/D line has typically been declining half a year before a final top in the major indexes is made. The A/D line just made a new high yesterday. So a top is likely at least four to six months away. I'm a nervous buyer today but I have to step up - I'll be adding to my lamb chop account which is my sacrifcial account to cover any potential margin calls that slap me. The A/D line is not diverting, and it's very rare the price will top without A/D divergence. No fear here.
 
Buying on the highs again for my lamb chop account: ACI, AA, AVY, MEE, CX. If we can hold into the afternoon I will probably DCA into my oceanic account. I would have thought the VIX would be softer - but it's holding only down 0.31. It's a long day yet.
 
The VIX is actually at 16.75 negative 0.93 - that makes more sense. When and if the Dow gets back to up +50 I'm a buyer into my oceanic account. I may make as much money today as I did yesterday and that was considerable.
 
Birch,

Looking at changing my small cap's vs. large cap's allocations for the coming months. I think the risk of being in S is increasing while the risk in the C are staying level. Plus I bet that the returns for the next few months in the C are looking the same or better than S. Have you crunched any numbers on this and can you give any thoughts?

My "New economies" private account is sailing high for the first quarter this year...way better (almost 2x) than anything TSP offers. Hope it continues but am thinking of chasing some individual stocks later this year with the some of those profits.
 
Mcqlives,

Would suggest you read my post #7958 and look at the graph - that'll give you a nice hint. I'm very light on the S fund and will be out of it completely by July-August.
 
The trend is my friend. Buying: KBH, MTW, TEX, CBG. And I will load up again tomorrow because now is the time while Coolhand builds that wall of worry.
 
Mcqlives,

Would suggest you read my post #7958 and look at the graph - that'll give you a nice hint. I'm very light on the S fund and will be out of it completely by July-August.

What are your thoughts on the I fund? Now that it's finally positive for the year is it time to bail for awhile?
 
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