Navarro’s Market Rap
We've got the flatsies in a market where there is enough uncertainty as to make me market neutral. My version of that is to be short QQQQ and long a few positions -- ASTM and TWP from last week, which had a very nice week, thank you very much. I pulled the plug on DHB on some negative executive team news and took a nice little gain on AMKR.
My suggestion for this week is to read Davio carefully and check out several of his charts of the week.
One chart shows that inflation is likely being understated by the gremlins in the bureaucracy that changed how to calculate inflation -- ergo the push on gold and the continued insistence of central banks around the globe to push up interest rates.
A second chart compares 2000 to now and suggests that manias come in pairs.
Keep your powder dry and your assets liquid.
P.S. The big market mover this week could be the CPI. It's all about the core now. Substantially above 2%, and the market tanks and conversely.
Hedging Your Bets With Matt Davio
Valuation is rarely a sufficient reason to be long or short the market. Absurdity is like infinity. Twice infinity is still infinity. Twice absurd is still absurd. Absurd valuations, whether high or low, can become even more absurd if the expectations of market participants become momentum-based. Momentum investors do not care about valuation; they buy what is going up, and sell what is going down.
You'll know a market top is probably coming when:
Chart of the Week 1
Notice how the OEX and VIX is higher than we saw in the 2000 bubble. Is there a bubble now? You decide.
Chart of the Week 2
Yesterday I received the above illustration from Gillespie Research. The blue line shows how CPI would be calculated by measures used prior to the Clinton Administration. It suggests that contrary to the deflation dogmatists, inflation is alive and well, which may well help explain a bull market in gold. Perhaps this is also why most of the central banks of the world are raising rates to fight inflation.
Peter Navarro is a business professor at the University of California-Irvine, and can be contacted at pn@peternavarro.com. Matt Davio is a managing partner at the hedge fund, Red Rock Capital Fund, and be contacted for hedge fund services at redrock@peternavarro.com.
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