This may be a good time to be a little more cautious in the equity markets. I was reading Decision Moose earlier and it looks like stocks may be overbought. It is also a time of year when market crashes have been known to occur. Decision Moose switched from stocks to gold this week. Time to rebalance and also to reduce variable portfolio risk? Possibly.
Of course, as Harry Browne knew, I could be wrong.
No, I mean bah, as in bah, humbug! I'm careful in the pp, but if a variable portfolio is truly money we are willing to lose, why be careful? True, if there were any place to try to time the market, it would be here in vP space. But, it seems like when stocks (or gold) go up, we see articles talking about the S&P at 20,000 (and gold at $5000/oz. When stocks go down, we see articles saying they are overbought. Bah.
Market is in fear and taking profits - sounds like the perfect time for another rally... I know my fear and greed never seem to predict accurately; why should anyone else's?
"I came here for financial advice, but I've ended up with a bunch of shave soaps and apparently am about to start eating sardines. Not that I'm complaining, of course." -ZedThou
Reub wrote:
This may be a good time to be a little more cautious in the equity markets. I was reading Decision Moose earlier and it looks like stocks may be overbought. It is also a time of year when market crashes have been known to occur. Decision Moose switched from stocks to gold this week. Time to rebalance and also to reduce variable portfolio risk? Possibly.
I'm waiting for a clear signal to go short. The third time is the charm, right? VXX didn't work and neither did SHY in past two tanks. I'm not risking messing up on a potential 2001 or 2007 style top.
Take a look at RGLD, its almost parabolic. Silver's momentum turned negative on Monday in the short term as well. DecisionMoose always switches to assets that are overbought in the short term by nature of how it works, but there's no guarantee of a sufficient pullback first to clear it. I've seen it go both ways. You need steel balls because when its wrong, it will be wrong from that overbought point and gold has had the most disastrous drawdowns.
When asked what the stock market will do, J.P Morgan (1837-1913) (banker, financier, businessman) replied: "It will fluctuate."
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Breadth went negative last Thursday. Fortunately, that wasn't the sell signal for me or I'd be pissed since I didn't notice the indicator wasn't updating until this morning (fixed a bug).
This month we have once or twice in a decade timing window lining up. The bottom of the Internet bubble in 2002 as well as the top of the bull market in 2007 both converge. If Romney is going to win, we have got to tank starting this week or he's lost the election.
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
MachineGhost wrote:
Judgement day in regards to what?
It was another article about stocks being overvalued. I think the judgement meant people waking up and valuing stocks more accurately (i.e. lower). If course, there was another headline on the same page talking about how stocks are going to finish 2012 with a bang.
I'm actually comforted by conflicting headlines. It helps me to tune them all out, occasionally reading them for amusement purposes.
I would guess that the end of September or the end of April would be excellent times to rebalance as a rule if stocks are more plentiful in your portfolio than LTT's.
Reub wrote:
I would guess that the end of September or the end of April would be excellent times to rebalance as a rule if stocks are more plentiful in your portfolio than LTT's.
Why not just wait until you hit a rebalancing band?
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
I agree on waiting for your rebalance rule to hit.
I've been watching the "sell in may and go away" effect for a lot of years and have not been able to find a definitive pattern.
Some years you need to be out the first week in may. Other years you should hold on into June or even July.
This year I made about 5% by holding all the way thru that I would not have had if I had tried to buy back in the end of August, and made about 15% in September that I would have missed if I hadn't been in by then. (That ignores transaction costs that I did not have to pay because I sat tight.) If I had timed my in and out perfectly, I might have done better, but I have two positions that gained over 20% in the summer months this year that I would have missed so the calculation is hard. Plus I'm convinced I cannot do perfect timing so if that is required, I'm not interested.
edit: I would consider fudging just a bit on the rebalance band. There are seasonal doldrums for stocks (summer) and gold (spring thru mid-summer). They aren't strong or certain enough to bet big, but if I was just a bit shy of a rebalance anyway...
Last edited by AgAuMoney on Mon Oct 01, 2012 11:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I've done backtests using different times of the year for rebalancings, especially at the end of April or Oct and there really is no advantage with the PP. Everything is too hedged.
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Seems like the last couple of weeks my PP has been leaking pretty bad. That's just an impression, I don't have any hard numbers. Wish I did so I could put it in perspective. Feels like 3% down or so.
Oh, such a beautiful tarmac. Look how smooth it is. See how smooth it is? And it's warm, and it's hard. - Charley Boorman Long Way Round
Everything's been leaking in the last couple of weeks. If you're tracking your PP's performance, go ahead and check this month's change now. You'll be pleasantly surprised that it's not as bad as you think. I had that same fear in the spring, and was really surprised to find, for example, that in May the S&P 500 dropped over 6%, while my PP dropped 1.16%. The former is a scary amount to lose in one month, but 1% is manageable.
If you track the monthly returns for a while, you'll quickly notice that changes are slow and steady - not more than 1-2% in either direction, with the general trend being up. Of course there have been losing years so that can - and surely will - happen again, but it's rare.
"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch." -- Benjamin Franklin
Seems like the last couple of weeks my PP has been leaking pretty bad. That's just an impression, I don't have any hard numbers. Wish I did so I could put it in perspective. Feels like 3% down or so.
In the last 5 days it's down a little less than 1%. Over the last 3 months it's up a little. It looks like so far in October it's down about 1.7% or so.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
Thanks MT. I usually wouldn't fret, and I'm not really now. I had a nice round number goal, a very optimistic one, for my wife and I to reach by the end of the year. My projection was that we were actually going to pull it off. So a couple of weeks ago I excitedly shared this with my wife. I guess I get to share it with her again, sometime later.
Oh, such a beautiful tarmac. Look how smooth it is. See how smooth it is? And it's warm, and it's hard. - Charley Boorman Long Way Round
ZedThou wrote:
Thanks MT. I usually wouldn't fret, and I'm not really now. I had a nice round number goal, a very optimistic one, for my wife and I to reach by the end of the year. My projection was that we were actually going to pull it off. So a couple of weeks ago I excitedly shared this with my wife. I guess I get to share it with her again, sometime later.
The PP is like the watched pot that never boils.
Over time, though, it cooks:
melveyr put together this great chart.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”