The Macro Trader

Archive for January, 2010

Gold and TIPS Diverging

Since the Match 2009 bottom many correlations have held extremely well.  We covered one in a previous post titled “US Dollar Correlation Breaking Down” and other ones here.  We can now add one more broken correlation to the mix.  TIPS and GOLD have been trading very much inline with each other over the last nine months or so.  The primary reason for the correlation is that since they are both seen as inflation hedges they should trade together.

As you can see in the chart below gold and TIPS have trade very much in line for most of the last nine months.  Over the past two weeks however the two instruments have diverged with TIPS going higher and gold going lower. 

GLD-Gold ETF and TIP-TIPS ETF

gold-tips-overlay

So the big questions are why are these diverging and how can we make money from it.  You irst have to decide if you think inflation is going up or down and if you think TIPS and Gold are good inflation hedges.  If gold is a good hedge and you think that inflation is going to increase then you would want to be a buyer of gold.  If you think that inflation is set to decrease or that inflation expectations are overdone then you would likely want to short TIPS.  The other main way to trade this is to bet on a convergence and a return to correlation.  To take advantage of this you could buy gold and short TIPS.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-No positions in the securities mentioned.

Global Interest Rate Outlook

It has been a while since the last time we posted our global GDP weighted yield curve.  While it has been months it might as well have been a day as nothing has really changed.  After being inverted for all of 2007 and most of 2008 the yield curve flipped and became extremely positive as central banks worldwide lowered short term rates.  You can see this very clearly in the chart below of the G-10 nations short and long term rates. In spite of Australia raising theirs, short term interest rates remain extremely low everywhere else.

G-10 Short and Long Term Interest Rates

g10-long-and-short-interest-rates

Another way to look at interest rates and in fact the title of this post is by using the global GDP weighted yield curve.  In the chart below you can see the global yield curve.  While it has fluctuated it has essentially gone nowhere for the last eight months.

Global GDP Weighted Yield Curve

gdp-weighted-global-yield-curve

So whats The Macro Traders outlook?  We think that things will remain more or less the same for most if not all of 2010.  On the deflationary side banks have not started to lend, real estate is not going up anytime soon, debt deleveraging is in overdrive, unemployment is as bad as ever, etc.  On the inflation side commodities are up, stocks are up, and bonds are up.  At best we would call this a standstill.  So while we could envision long term rates going higher on credit risk, yes we think that sovereign debt is full of credit risk, we think that short term rates will remain low for most if not all of 2010.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader is long TLT

It’s Time For A Pullback In Stocks

After a 72% move higher in the SP500 a lot of bears are saying that the market has gone far enough and that we are due for a new crash that will take us back to and in some cases past the lows of 2008.  While a crash is possible and probably justified we are instead looking for something along the lines of a modest pullback to maybe a 10% correction.

One of our favorite sentiment indicators is that of put/call ratios.  We use the 5-day equity only put call ratio to warn of high risk areas and to point our low risk areas.  As you can see in the chart below we are currently at a reading of .51 which is not only below out “high risk” threshold but is also the lowest reading in over a year.  While the signal could be wrong it is hard to argue that options traders are not overly one sided right now.

5-Day Equity Put/Call Ratio and SP500

sp500-5-day-equity-put-call-ratio

In case you want to see more bearish sentiment look no further than the 10-day total put/call ratio.  Anything below .75 is typically considered very bearish and right now we have a reading of .68 which is the lowest reading in two years.  Needless to say this indicator is also showing that option traders are too bullish.

10-Day Total Put/Call Ratio and SP500

sp500-10-day-total-put-call-ratio

One price based indicator that we use at The Macro Trader fairly extensively is what we call a reversion to the mean chart.  Basically it takes a long term reading of the market, normalizes it, and then gives an overbought/oversold reading.  We then plot one and two standard deviation lines above and below the mean.  As you an see in the chart below we are about 1.5 standard deviations above the mean which is significantly higher than we saw for most of the 2002-2007 bull market suggesting that things are a bit overdone.

SP500 RTM Chart

sp500-reversion-to-the-mean-chart

Add to all of this a TD Sequential sell signal a few day ago and how near we are to a 50% retracement of the crash and things look less like a buying opportunity and more like a selling/shorting opportunity.  Again we are not calling for a new low, just a pullback/correction.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader is short the SPY-Sp500 ETF

Freddie Mac Delinquences Continue to Rise

Here is a shocker…..in spite of rising stock and bond markets and the supposed V shape recovery more and more families continue to go 90 days or more delinquent on their mortgages.  As you can see in the chart below since June of 2007 delinquencies have risen every single month. (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

Freddie Mac Delinquencies

freddie-mac-delinquencies

To put this into perspective let’s drill down into the numbers a bit.The historic average delinquency rate for non-credit enhanced is .71% and the current reading is 2.88%.  The historic average rate for credit enhanced is 2.81% and the current reading is 7.84%.  The historic average rate for total is 1.08% and the current reading is 3.72%.  And finally the historic average rate for multi-family is .04% and is currently at .14%.  In case you haven’t noticed the current reading on each of these is anywhere from 2.8 to 4.08 times their historic average.

This is just one of the indicators pointing to further weakness in residential real estate.    One potential trade that we are following is that of shorting IYR.  For now we are just stalking it as it continues to move higher but we expect that in the next one or two months the reality will once again hit home and investors will start paring off some of their gains as the underlying fundamentals do not justify current prices let alone higher ones.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader currently holds no positions in housing related stocks.

Favorable Risk to Reward in Treasuries

While many investors are calling for a large drop in long term Treasuries we are currently seeing a good risk reward trade to the long side in the long bond.  In the chart below you can see our reversion to the mean chart on the 30-year Treasury yield.  When it is stretched to the downside things are bearish and when it is stretched to the upside it is bullish.  Right now it is stretched almost 1.5 standard deviations away from its historical mean which usually leads to a move lower in yields and a move higher in bond prices. (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

30-Year Yield Reversion to the Mean Chart

tyx-30-year-treasury-yield-rtm-chart

As you can see in the chart below of the 30-Year Treasury yield we are at the top of a long term downtrend in yield.  Each time since the 1987 that yields have hit this line they have gone lower.  Eventually this will stop and yields will breakout to the upside but if history is any guide and the trend continues than at least for now yields are once again headed lower. (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

30-Year Treasury Yield

tyx-30-year-treasury-bond-yield-long-term-chart

Finally lets look at the LT 20+ year Treasury bond ETF.  As you can see below it has found support over the last seven months in the highlighted $86-89 range.  On the upside we have resistance around $98.  The risk to reward is quite favorable right now as we can risk $1-2 with an upside around $9.  (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

TLT-20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF

tlt-one-year-chart

So while this may be the time that Treasuries tank and yields go screaming higher we doubt it and are modestly positioned to the long side.  Eventually we will be shorting Treasuries but not until yields break out and end the trend that has been in place for over 20 years.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader is currently long TLT

II Survey Shows Overheated Sentiment

While extremely bullish sentiment does not always call tops it has never, at least to our knowledge, ever called a bottom either.  Looking at the chart below of the Investors Intelligence Bull Bear Ratio along with its 13-week (3-month) moving average you can see that not only has sentiment risen as fast as the market but it is at highs not seen since 2004.  While this is not necessarily a sign of a market crash like some would lead you to believe we do think that the current situation warrants caution.  We are currently not selling off our long positions but we are holding off from most long opportunities right now.   (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

Investors Intelligence Bull Bear Ratio

investors-intelligence-bull-bear-ratio

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com