Wall Street Archives

The Economy is On First Base

And there’s joy at Fenway as  Boston Puts It To the Yankees.

If….you love the Yankees, I understand.

Every morning after a Red Sox game, Lisa’s grandmother tells me about the game. I already know what she tells me, but she gets quite excited at age 95.

She says, “Big Poppie (David Ortiz) clocked his third home run, and things are looking up for him” and “the stock market”, I add.

OK; not so fast, Randall. We have a lot of ground to travel before returning to solid ground. No banners hanging over Wall Street yet.

Just the same, the news is better.

Market analysts support viewpoints with statistics. Most of us find the data dreary. We scan the dull parts faster than a furtive glance.

Baseball stats dull the sound of the bat, the “wave”, and a Fenway Frank. Just the same, statistics and probabilities matter.

This summer, I went to my second Red Sox game. We sat perpendicular to third base. What seats! To my right and to my left, two middle-aged men kept track of every hit and every pitch for every inning.

I asked, “How come you do that?” They both said, “I just enjoy the game more when I do.”

So, for those who enjoy stock statistics, the attached SEI Investments commentary gives you plenty to ponder.

Quiz:  Can you guess the stat before reading the right coloumn? They all seem esoteric to me.

GIDP Ground into Double Plays
IBB Intentional Bases on Balls (Walks)
GOAO Ground Outs / Fly Outs Ratio
MB9 Baserunners Per 9 Innings
OFA Outfield Assists

Here’s the article, “Small-Cap Stocks: Too Far Too Fast or Just the Beginning?” by James Solloway, CFA, Senior Portfolio Manager, Global Portfolio Strategies, SEI Investments, Inc.

NOTE: This material represents an assessment of the market environment at a specific point in time and is not intended to be a forecast of future events, or a guarantee of future results. This information should not be relied upon by the reader as research or investment advice regarding the funds or any stock in particular, nor should it be construed as a recommendation to purchase or sell a security, including futures contracts. There is no assurance as of the date of this material that the securities mentioned remain in or out of the SEI Funds. SEI Investments Management Corporation (SIMC) is the adviser to the SEI Funds, which are distributed by SEI Investments Distribution Co. (SIDCo.) SIMC and SIDCo are wholly owned subsidiaries of SEI Investments Company. For more information, including a prospectus with charges and expenses, call 1-800-DIAL-SEI. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing. For those SEI Funds that employ the ‘manager of managers’ structure, SEI Investments Management Corporation has ultimate responsibility for the investment performance of the Fund due to its responsibility to oversee the sub-advisers and recommend their hiring, termination and replacement. Mutual fund investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. In addition to the normal risks associated with equity investing, international investments may involve risk of capital loss from unfavorable fluctuation in currency values, from differences in generally accepted accounting principles or from economic or political instability in other nations. Narrowly focused investments typically exhibit higher volatility. Products of companies in which technology funds invest may be subject to severe competition and rapid obsolescence. Index performance returns do not reflect any management fees, transaction costs or expenses. One cannot invest directly in an index. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Ethos provides this news page for information purposes only and it should not be construed as legal, accounting, tax, or professional advice. Ethos Advisory Services disclaims any loss or liability which is incurred as a consequence, directly or indirectly, of the use or application of this news page.

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The Stock Market and Dead Cats Bouncing

The Stock Market and Dead Cats

Dead cat stock market bounces are “A temporary recovery from a prolonged decline or bear market, after which the market continues to fall.” (Investopedia)

Hypothesis: Dead cats bounce.

If dead cats bounce, the metaphor is useful when predicting stock market trends.

Dead cats bounce along Wall Street after short sellers cover their yet-to-be-owned stock. Their doubt about the market’s continued price-drop prompts them to buy the stock (ie. cover their short position).

Dead cats bounce along Wall Street when investors cover their option positions. Their action may encourage false hopes of a bounce in the markets.

Dead cats bounce along Wall Street when speculating investors throw a dart at Wall Street “blue light specials” (for you KMart shoppers). When checking their purchase in the Sunday papers, they find their shares for sale at a deeper discount.

Dead Cats Don’t Bounce…They’re Dead!

The dead cat bounce is a silly idiom; no experiment I know of proves a dead cat bounces. No economist or analyst predicts dead cat bounces in the stock market consistently.

An ancient test for a prophet requires exact and fulfilled predictions every time, not some of the time.

Stock market moves are not dead or alive, bullish or bearish unless investors make them so. Momentum comes when the greater number of investors take action that opposes other investors. This makes momentum possible.

Most importantly, you don’t know until you presume the cat bounced. Predicting market direction expresses chutzpah blended with keen observations.
You may be right, but the likelihood of accurate and successive predictions confirms the unparalleled dimensions of uncertainty.

Market optimism or pessimism occurs when a mass of people make the result theoretically probable. The determination or prediction of probable outcome never eliminates uncertainty unless there are glaring market anomalies (**see Robert Schiller).

The Pareto Principle

Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto’s principle asserts that 80% of value comes from 20% of those who have the potential to create value. The calculations do not support the 80/20 rule every time, but at minimum the concept retains its assertion.

Therefore, 80% of market analysts are right 20% of the time or 80% of stock market predictions are right 20% of the time. As with all predictions, there’s no certainty of which prediction is right.

For me, further proof that asset allocation, with static weighting and dynamic investment methods works when market anomalies lack affect.

Pareto said, “If dead cats bounce, they’ll only bounce 20% of the time.”

When Vilfredo’s cat died, he did not drop her stiff body out of his bedroom window to see if she’d bounce.

“It is a maxim of empirical economics that if you torture the data sufficiently, they will confess.”
(Stephen A. Marglin, The Dismal Science “How Thinking Like An Economist Undermines Community” (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2008) 122.

Empirical economics is distinct from theoretical economic theory or the fundamental distinction between deductive and inductive economic ideas.

Is this a stock market dead cat bounce?

We’ll all know in six months.

“If you want to have a better performance than the crowd, you must do things differently from the crowd.” – John Templeton

Templeton is right, but most of us act according to John Emerson’s views posted on Scienceblogs.com.

Economists have always had trouble with bubbles, like the one we just experience (sic), and this is partly because not only are people not totally rational and not only do they not have perfect knowledge, but besides that, they communicate with one another, so the irrationality is not randomly distributed so that the irrational individuals are weeded out, but can pervade a whole population.

What will the maddening crowds do? Uncertainty prevails for the moment. We may presume, I think, that Americans possess an unwavering commitment toward work and prosperity, and these ethics should become evident in the value of stocks.