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This week we are going to do something a little different. I am in Bermuda
taking a little weekend R&R after a speech, as well as working on my book.
There is not the time for the usual letter this week, but I have asked Barry
Ritholtz to write about his new trading program, FusionIQ, for reasons I will
talk about below.
But first, and quickly, if you are planning on attending my Strategic Investment
Conference this April 2-4 you need to act soon. You can get more details at
the end of the letter. And the first of the "Conversations with John Mauldin" is
up. We recorded it this week, with Ed Easterling and Dr. Lacy Hunt. I thought
it went very well for an inaugural talk. The transcript is there already. For
those who have subscribed, you should have received an email and be able to
log in and listen or read the transcript. And I welcome feedback as we launch
this new service. And I want to thank Tiffani, Ryan, and Anne in my office,
who have worked long hours getting this ready. There is a lot of back-room
work that has to be done to make something like this available, and I am happy
to have their support.
Warning: This e-letter is about a new trading platform that I think is interesting.
While not trying to be promotional, it will offer you a product at the end.
As I write below, there is reason to think about what tools other are using
when you are trading against them; but for those of you who are looking for
economic analysis, skip this and wait till next week, when I am back in the
office. For the rest of us, let's jump right in.
Trading With the Big Boys
Tough market!
That's something I hear in the office every day -- from professional traders,
money managers, and hedge funds. These markets have been brutal, and the competition
has been relentless.
For the individual investor, it is important to understand who your opponents
are on the field of battle. Sports and war metaphors abound, because they are
consistent with what you are going up against each day. In addition to always
battling Mr. Market, as tough an opponent as there is, your rivals are also
anyone else buying or selling stocks. They, too, are looking for ways to produce
positive returns.
Consider what Charles Ellis, who helps oversee the $15-billion endowment fund
at Yale University, said:
"Watch a pro football game, and it's obvious the guys on the field are far
faster, stronger and more willing to bear and inflict pain than you are.
Surely you would say, 'I don't want to play against those guys!'
Well, 90% of stock market volume is done by institutions, and half of that
is done by the world's 50 largest investment firms, deeply committed, vastly
well prepared -- the smartest sons of bitches in the world working their
tails off all day long. You know what? I don't want to play against those
guys either."
That's a brutal and very honest observation. The institutions Ellis refers
to are mutual funds, hedge funds, and program traders -- and all of their professional
staff, mathematicians, and researchers. The pros are deploying every possible
tool to give them whatever edge they can get. And even they can have a hard
time, as most of them will testify to the difficulty of trading in 2008.
Despite this daunting opposition, many individuals unhesitatingly step onto
the playing field with the pros. To carry the sports metaphor further, they
end up receiving season-ending injuries to their investment and retirement
accounts.
My "day job" is finding money managers for clients. It is fair to say I have
looked at many hundreds of managers and funds over the last 20 years. I have
also talked with countless people who want to break into the investment management
business. I must admit I am not always the most encouraging, as my experience
says it is a tough world. But there are those who do indeed make it. Some very
successful traders are small shops, while others grow into large management
businesses.
But they do have one thing in common. They have an edge. Somewhere, somehow,
they have developed an edge which gives them the ability to eke out profits,
whether from trading stocks or commodities or currencies.
That's why it is so important to be prepared -- mentally, physically, and
with the right equipment. It's not just guns and ammo, but intel and recon
tools as well. The explosion of cheap PC power and web-based market data may
have given everyone similar technology, but it did not grant them an equal
ability to use them. Just as picking up a 5 iron doesn't make you Tiger Woods,
sitting in front of a PC doesn't make you Jim Simons (Renaissance Technologies).
There is a huge difference between accessing data and the knowledge of how
to use it.
I have asked Barry Ritholtz (you may know him through his blog The Big
Picture and appearances on CNBC) to write today about his new trading
and statistical platform, FusionIQ. Barry is a successful, no-nonsense, take-no-prisoners
type of trader. His rather blunt manner that you see on TV is what you get
in real life. We have become good friends. I have watched him develop this
software for the last few years, and I like it, as it marries fundamental
and technical analysis. This is what Barron's had to say about the
software:
"FUSIONIQ'S MODELS blend fundamental and technical metrics to determine
the strength of some 8,000 publicly traded equities. They identify the most
tradable issues and sectors with the lowest component of risk. FusionIQ also
finds issues with unusual short-term strength or weakness, issuing Buy and
Sell signals accordingly. In general, FusionIQ recommends subscribers hold
a rolling portfolio of 15 to 20 issues for the intermediate term.
"Beyond that, it identifies trading opportunities. FusionIQ models pinpoint
highly ranked issues whose prices suddenly gap up 5% or more on high volume
(and other conditions). They also issue alerts when analysts with good track
records offer earnings forecasts outside peer estimates, and when short squeezes
are in the offing -- that is, when a highly shorted issue exhibits enough
relative strength to force short sellers to cover their positions and boost
the price further."
There are three reasons I am bringing this to your attention today. First,
there are tens of thousands of investment professionals out there who have
lost their jobs in recent months. I was told last month that the number of
people sitting for the CFA exams is the highest on record. The explosion of
young people coming out of school looking for a job in the financial world
is at an all-time high. I get calls and letters from them all the time asking
for advice.
I feel somewhat uncomfortable with myself when asked what to do. I know the
odds, as the financial world is down-sizing, and there are some really capable
and experienced people on the street today. There are just going to be fewer
jobs. That is the reality. But I also know that if you can make it, it can
be a very rewarding and fascinating career, with some of the most exciting
and switched-on people anywhere. I am literally having more fun than I ever
have. And telling someone not to chase his dream? I don't want to do that,
but I do want to be honest.
So, if you want to be a trader, listen up to what Barry is talking about,
and know that you are dealing with people who AT A MINIMUM are armed with technology
like this. I have been on some of the largest trading floors in the world.
The tech at their disposal, the data they can call up, the research they can
marshal, is impressive. Barry and his partners have spent literally millions.
The big trading houses have spent tens of millions. It is not as easy as those
commercials on TV make it sound. These pros spend hours learning their systems
in front of a screen.
Second, Tiffani and I have been interviewing millionaires for our new book.
I can't tell you how many have ridden this market down. The size of their portfolios
does not make them better money managers. They or their managers had no discipline
for selling. Seriously, buy and hold in a secular bear market like we are in
is a losing strategy. On an inflation-adjusted basis, you are down if your
holding period has been 30 years! Most of us would think that 30 years is the
long run! On a nominal basis, you are about where you were ten years ago, if
you are in a broad index.
Even if you are a value investor, you have gotten creamed in this market.
(Some great value investors are down 60%. Their experience of buying and holding
solid companies, which had worked so well for so long, needs to be married
with some risk discipline.) You need a sell discipline. Barry's system, or
others like it, can at least get you thinking about selling rather than riding
a stock all the way to the bottom and hoping it comes back. Hope is not a viable
investment strategy.
I don't know much personally about trading. My stomach won't allow me to trade,
although I have watched and met with the best. But I do know this. The best
traders and managers have risk controls and sell disciplines and they stick
to them. Period. They don't fall in love with a stock or a commodity position.
If you are going to manage your own portfolio, and there is nothing wrong
with that if you will spend the time to do it right, then you have to learn
to manage your risk. And while simple systems are better than nothing, a little
sophistication here will pay for itself.
Third, a small set of you in the professional world will find FusionIQ something
that you should use. As a professional tool, it is relatively cheap.
Finally, for the regular investor, realize that you are trading against thousands
of people and funds who have tools like this -- and many have far better tools.
This is just one version. If you or your manager are not getting the results
you need, maybe you need to figure out how you get your stock and fund "tips." Maybe
you should find a manager who "get's it."
FusionIQ is one of several very good analysis programs, and my allowing Barry
to write about it is not saying this is the best. But it appears to me to be
one of the better platforms I have seen. Now, let's let Barry talk about how
long it took and how much it cost to develop this platform.
Do you really want to put on your pads and get out on that field? If so, then
make sure you are ready to play!
FusionIQ
By Barry Ritholtz
As professionals who have been trading these markets for a collective 50 years,
we have long been interested in the ways we can apply technology to tilt the
odds in our favor. All the big proprietary trading desks -- banks like Goldman
Sachs, huge hedge funds like Pequot and SAC -- spend tens of millions of dollars
to assist their decision making.
We decided some time ago that if we wanted to compete on this playing field,
we needed something to even up the odds.
During the tech wreck and dot com collapse of 2000-03, my partner Kevin Lane
came up with an idea. What if we could create a database to track various indicators
for stocks and markets? The idea was to pull only the most important stock
factors into one location. Not to merely screen the market, but to actually
rank all of the most popular stocks from worst to best, based on both earnings
and ownership metrics, as well as the charts. This way, we would have a timely
method to measure important technical AND fundamental metrics.
After years of brainstorming, we selected and, more importantly, eliminated
a variety of stock metrics. Lots of back-testing went into the final product.
We performed variable testing -- something called fractal analysis -- that
would make your brain explode if you saw the mathematics of it (I know mine
did!).
We found ourselves using the tool more and more. Kevin had famously recommended
shorting both Enron and Tyco during the dot com crash, and the tool had a lot
to do with that. (See this Business Week article: "Analysts Who Get
It" http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/02_50/b3812104.htm)
With the goal of making smarter, more informed trading decisions, we sought
ways to create better returns with less risk. By combining good fundamentals
and strong technical momentum characteristics, we found we could identify not
only what to buy or sell, but when.
The results with the product were impressive enough that we decided to spin
it out as a web-based software product for investors. We procured pricing data
and fundamental feeds, hired a programming team and designers. It took almost
six months to create all of the algorithms, and over the latter half of 2002
and into 2003 we did the programming, web front-end displays, database, and
back-end architecture. Then came more testing and refinement. Our venture and
equity partners spent over $1 million in development costs alone, hiring a
development staff of programmers and market analysts to continually test and
refine the software. From 2004 to 2005, the program underwent significant beta
testing and renewed analysis of the variables that create the ranking system.
In 2006, we formed Fusion Analytics Investment Partners LLC. Since then, we
have poured in close to another $1 million in refinements. We developed new
algorithms, and beta tested everything throughout 2007. The software was launched
at the current site in late 2007.
How Does FusionIQ Work? The software uses our unique combination of fundamental
and technical indicators to rank over 8000 stocks, ETFs, and closed-end funds.
The rankings range from 0 (worst) to 100 (best). These provide insight into
stocks that are more likely to outperform, as well as identifying what stocks
should be avoided. From there, we apply our proprietary algorithms, generating
BUY, SELL, and NEUTRAL signals. For more aggressive traders, the system identifies
breakouts and breakdowns, buy and sell signals, short squeezes, and other trading
opportunities.
For long-term investors, we developed a way to help manage risk in your holdings
by creating a Portfolio Watchlist. This allows you to enter all of your current
holdings, which are automatically ranked and monitored. You can easily keep
tabs on your portfolio holdings as their FusionIQ rankings change. Stocks ranked
70 and higher are candidates to keep, while lower-rated stocks should be reviewed
for removal from a portfolio. For investors who do not like the buy & hold
mantra, you can trim your portfolio using our BUY, SELL, and NEUTRAL signals.
These signals are generated when specific conditions are met. It is both objective
and neutral.
In 2008, the sell signals helped us avoid a lot of trouble. We recommended
selling or shorting Bear Stearns when it was over $100. We very publicly said
the same about AIG in early 2008 (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=avZEKuMTaGME).
We told readers to sell Fannie Mae (over $40) and Lehman Brothers (over $30).
While we caught some grief for these calls early on from fans of the companies,
in the end our clients and investors thanked us. All of these calls were made
via using the FusionIQ system.
Here are some recent signals and rankings from the FusionIQ software:
General Motors (GM)
Back in November, 2008, we looked again at General Motors, as it was under
pressure, with liquidity concerns. The only hope seemed to be a big-time government
bailout, or perhaps consolidation with another automobile/truck manufacturer.
We also noted that, once again, the large bulge-bracket research analysts
were not exactly showing they were "value added" to investors or the investment
community. Deutsche Bank's analyst cut GM from a hold to a sell with a price
target of zero. We are not saying they were completely wrong, but where had
they been? DB had a buy on GM until 2/25/08 at $31, then they had a hold on
the stock all the way to $3.66, before they threw in the towel. (It is now
marginally lower.)
We don't want to pick on only Deutsche Bank, as most of the analysts were
using old earnings assumptions, and all seemed to come to the same conclusions
... and too late to do anything about it.
Using Fusion IQ screens, however, kept us ahead of the curve. As seen below
on this yearly GM chart, our unbiased screening system has had GM ranked extremely
low (an 18 Master, 10 Technical out of 100 as of that November date) with multiple
sell Triggers. These sell alerts would have woken an investor up that something
was wrong with the underlying firm. That is something that will not show in
the earnings or conference calls until it's too late.
GM CHART
November 10, 2008

Even more shocking than the GM chart is the AIG yearly chart. In addition
to our ranking and timing indicators (see all the sells), Fusion Analytics
published a sell on AIG for our institutional clients on 2/13/2008 at $46.14.
The first government bailout of AIG was not good enough, so they had to try,
try again. In November, the US government announced that they would sweeten
the pot in another attempt to save the firm. Hey, at least the taxpayers got
an additional 2% stake in the firm!
AIG CHART

It's not only the sells -- we find many buys this way too.
My partners and I are all chart watchers. We are always perusing FusionIQ
for stocks in the trading screens section of the site. I look at all the breakouts/breakdowns
and stocks that have had a recent short squeeze, looking for just the right
technical setup before I try to ferret out a fundamental catalyst.
I also have charts that for some reason or another have caught my eye. When
this occurs I place them in my FusionIQ watch list. This way, if the ranking
improves, or a buy signal gets generated, I can see it right away. If I really
like a chart, I will set a FusionIQ email alert to notify me when my trade
conditions are met.
Recently Netflix Corp. (NFLX) caught our eye. As the chart below shows, NFLX
had a new FusionIQ timing BUY signal in mid-December. Since then, despite the
market's overall softness, there was technical strength in the stock. As seen
below, NFLX shot up almost 30% since that buy signal.
NFLX CHART

More-active traders can use Fusion IQ's short-term trading signals. These
are mostly technically based, as opposed to the Fusion of technical and fundamental
data used to arrive at our scoring system. However, institutional clients geared
towards fundamental research have found these to be a strong supplement to
their basic research.
These trading signals can be used as a wakeup call that something may be changing
and your analysts need to dig deeper. Also, many clients use these signals
as a way to trade around their core holdings (adding alpha).
These charts that follow ... if you were long these names in your portfolio,
do you think these heads-up might have helped?
These names have all come off long Sells, too. Perhaps it's time to relook
at them!
ALCOA CHART

SEPRACOR CHART

MOSIAC CHART

If you would like to know more or get a subscription, the price to John's
readers is $39.95 a month, and you will get
the full professional system as part of this introductory offer.
La Jolla, New York, and Las Vegas
As I mentioned at the beginning of this letter, along with my partners Altegris
Investments I will be co-hosting our 6th annual Strategic Investment Conference
in La Jolla, California, April 2-4. I have invited some of the top economic
minds in the country to come and address us, giving us their views on what
seems to be a continuing crisis. It will be a mix of economic theory and practical
investment advice.
Already committed to speak are Martin Barnes, Woody Brock, Dennis Gartman,
Louis Gave, George Friedman (of Stratfor), and Paul McCulley. I anticipate
adding another stellar name or two. This is as strong a lineup as we have ever
had, and on par with any conference I know of anywhere. And as a special bonus,
we have invited Fredrik Haren from Sweden. I heard him speak at a conference
in Stockholm last year and was blown away. You can click on the link below
to learn more about the speakers.
Due to securities regulations, attendance is limited to qualified high-net-worth
investors and/or institutional investors, because we will be showcasing a select
number of commodity fund managers and other alternative strategies. Early registrants
will get a discount. Last year we had to close registration, and I anticipate
we will run out of room again, so I would not procrastinate. Click this link
to find out more and register: https://hedge-fund-conference.com/register.aspx.
And if you cut and paste this link, make sure you copy the "https:" so you
go to the secure site.
I am going to be in New York in the middle of March and then fly to Las Vegas
to be with good friends Doug Casey, David Galland, and the crew for a weekend
where I get to be the resident "bull" for a change. I will get you information
on his conference next week, and hope to see you there.
It has been a few years since I have been to Bermuda, and it is as beautiful
as I remember it. It really is, as Mark Twain said, a little bit of heaven
on earth. And I want to thank Bill and Bini Yit for hosting us Tucker's Point.
It is one of the more beautiful golf courses in the world, and they were so
gracious.
It is time to hit the send button, as the restaurants will not stay open on
my schedule. Have a great weekend.
Your didn't lose a ball today (we celebrate small triumphs) analyst,
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