Non confirming markets

Both the US stock market and Treasury market are seeing non-confirmations in the most recent moves lower.

US stock market:

Advance / Decline line is not confirming the move lower as the average stock is not falling with the market indices.

New Lows: The number of new lows continues to shrink when compared to the two other times we’ve been this low in the past month.

VIX: The VIX which is a measure of volatility which peaked in this cycle at 45 in May closed yesterday at 34.

Sentimentrader.com’s Intermediate Term model has moved to excessive pessimism once again. Generally a good time to increase long exposure.

In the Treasury market:

Investor Sentiment is at the highest since December 2008, not one of the better times to be buying bonds. Plus we have to be concerned with the thought of worldwide investment managers buying US Treasuries to look good for their clients in light of the decline in Euro bonds, otherwise known as “Window Dressing”.

Lastly, the decline in US Treasury yields is not confirmed by the bonds of other G-7 nations.

The Tesla IPO has gained a great deal of attention but it has to be time to ring the register. There will be other times to buy this if it can deliver something other than losses. I just read the battery for the car costs $30,000 and does not work in cold weather. Well, that pretty much kills the potential for a Tesla at 8000 feet in Colorado.

No positions

Solar stocks bounce……for now at least.

Over the past few months we’ve spent a fair amount of time determining what value this blog could add to its readers.  We’ve essentially boiled down our conclusions to the point where we could identify with many outstanding financial blogs that espoused old school investing in regards to value, balance sheets and growth, we could not find any that merged with the ideals of socially responsible or green investing.  That is when the light bulb turned on as this is the type of analysis performed daily.

Being an investment adviser in the Boulder Colorado area would seem ideal since the area is chock full of alternative energy companies but with 20 years in the industry we also are very aware that the vast majority of these firms will not exist in their current form in just 3 or 5 years from now.   As a rule of thumb the strength of their balance sheet in light of sales or a weak economy (and weak fossil fuel prices) will determine their inevitable success or failure, not sales, hype or even great technology.

Case in point regarding solar stocks:  Reuters is reporting that a parliamentary mediation solution in Germany may reduce the amount of subsidy cuts in solar.  Solar has been weak across the board with the expected cuts coming from Europe due to their financial crisis.  Hence, why we’ve been avoiding the sector for over a year with the understanding that if a company cannot generate its own revenues without subsidies despite the lofty projections for worldwide revenue estimates, then the investment will likely be a loser.

In the interim we’re assembling a list of solar stocks and searching for those falling to extreme values (Price to Net current asset value) where risk should be minimal.

Ultimately, we think that the European mess will get worse and the domino effect of proposed subsidy cuts are inevitable hence solar stocks with significant European exposure are trades not investments at this juncture.

Markets are quite overbought in the short term and we don’t believe now is a good time to be adding new money to equities as the window of opportunity appears closed for the near term.   The ideal time would have been a couple of weeks ago when fear approached extreme levels not seen since last March.

On the bright side, the weak Philly Fed data would have poleaxed the markets had it been released 2-3 weeks ago, whereas today it only creates mild selling.  This leads me to suggest that a slowing economy is now baked in the cake.