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The Q1 2009 Market Rush Review By Mark Rush [email protected] April 5th 2009 Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Preface Once again, it is once again time for my quarterly market review, where I examine world events and attempt to understand their implications on the market. This is my time to reflect on current events, portfolio performance, and event scenarios, and their subsequent implication on world equity markets and my investment strategies. As you read through this review, even if you don’t agree with my thoughts or analysis, please take the time to think about your financial choices and ways to improve your returns. It is my goal in life to have my money working for me instead of me working for my money. Please email me with your thoughts, questions, and insights on the opinions that I present. The purpose of my effort is to stimulate a dialogue around current events and their impact on the markets. This document may be distributed to anyone free of charge as long as it is provided in an unaltered form. I reserve all Intellectual Property Rights of this document. Regards, Mark Rush [email protected] Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Please read this important notice Disclaimers As you read this document keep in mind that I do not have any special insights into the markets nor do I have any type of training or experience in any kind of investments. I am not a financial advisor nor do I have a degree in economics or finance. Remember these facts as you read and ponder my unprofessional opinions. This document should not be construed as investment advice; you and your financial advisor are responsible for making your investment decisions. The purpose if this document is for me to “think out loud” and stimulate thoughts regarding my investment ideas for my portfolio. I am asking you for your feedback about my thoughts, strategies and conclusions. Nothing in this document should be construed as tax advice or estate planning. Tax laws are complicated and change often. I do not have the time to follow changes in tax codes; therefore, any thoughts I may have on the subject are very likely to be obsolete or, at the very least, dated. Before you attempt to implement any tax strategies you should consult a tax professional or financial advisor. All thoughts and strategies are based on the fact that I invest money from the United States using US dollars and pay US taxes. All comments and views are from my American investment perspective. Many of my strategies consider US tax implications and currency exchange rates that may not be valid when viewed from outside the US. The views and opinions in this report are strictly my own based on publicly available information. I do not have any special perspective into the markets. Opinions stated are my own and do not reflect the opinions from any current, past or future employer. I will/may change my strategy and investment ideas radically and suddenly between reports without notice to any receivers of this report. My own investment strategies can be extremely aggressive and my portfolio should not be replicated by anyone, including me. I am an amateur investor and this document is a hobby for me. Any thoughts and concepts should be treated as such. Please consult a professional financial advisor before you make any investment decisions regarding your investment ideas, goals, and strategies. Continue reading this document at your own risk… This report is subject to considerable error and the opinions can change without notice. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed constitutes a solicitation to buy or sell any securities or investments. Do NOT ever purchase any security or investment without doing your own and sufficient research. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Introduction This report is a bit shorter than my typical reports since it is that time of the year for me to bailout the government with my annual check on April 15th. The economy continued to shrink this past quarter and it is unlikely that anything that government has or is going to do will change much of anything at this point. The worldwide recession is bigger than just the United States and America alone will not be able to fix this disaster. Our trillion dollar stimulus is not large enough to revive a 45 trillion dollar world economy when more than 30 trillion dollars of value has been destroyed worldwide. If you think about the economy as a star athlete who has been in a terrible traffic accident you could visualize why a quick recovery is unrealistic. The world economy has suffered a staggering blow and is unlikely to run a marathon in the near future. The only thing we can do is apply triage and wait for the patient to heal. There is a point when the patient needs to leave the ER and head to the recovery room and I believe we are now at a point where world governments should stop intervening in the economy and let the patient heal. The economy will eventually get better and run that marathon again but there will be a several sleepless nights for those of us in the waiting room. If you think about it, much of the consumption that fuelled our world economy was unnecessary and wasteful. It seems to me most people bought new cars and houses not because they “needed” one but because they “wanted” one. A lot of the economy was based on producing a lot of stuff that people wanted but not necessarily needed nor afford. Most people have enough stuff to make do for next several years. The recovery may have to wait until things wear out and when people actually need things again. Just like in the late 1990’s when the speculation ran rampant at the end of the day get something for all the dot com disasters. We developed new business models, wired the country with broadband and made our economy more efficient via the internet. I would argue that we also sparked some dividends with this latest boom bust cycle that we created. We sparked globalization and international trade; just as we live with the benefits of the internet boom today the globalization benefits will continue on long after the bust becomes a distant memory. Regards, -Mark Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 1 The Basics How much has the government promised for the bailouts? This “new” debt equates to over $42,000 per person in the US or $168,000 for a family of four. The bailouts now essentially have every household in America on the hook the value of a house without receiving any benefit (unless you recklessly borrowed or lent). Thank goodness we a plan de jure involving borrowing and spending our way out of too much borrowing and spending! --- Amounts (Billions)--Limit Current =========================================================== Total $12,798.14 $4,169.71 ----------------------------------------------------------Federal Reserve Total $7,765.64 $1,678.71 Primary Credit Discount $110.74 $61.31 Secondary Credit $0.19 $1.00 Primary dealer and others $147.00 $20.18 ABCP Liquidity $152.11 $6.85 AIG Credit $60.00 $43.19 Net Portfolio CP Funding $1,800.00 $241.31 Maiden Lane (Bear Stearns) $29.50 $28.82 Maiden Lane II (AIG) $22.50 $18.54 Maiden Lane III (AIG) $30.00 $24.04 Term Securities Lending $250.00 $88.55 Term Auction Facility $900.00 $468.59 Securities lending overnight $10.00 $4.41 Term Asset-Backed Loan Facility $900.00 $4.71 Currency Swaps/Other Assets $606.00 $377.87 MMIFF $540.00 $0.00 GSE Debt Purchases $600.00 $50.39 GSE Mortgage-Backed Securities $1,000.00 $236.16 Citigroup Bailout Fed Portion $220.40 $0.00 Bank of America Bailout $87.20 $0.00 Commitment to Buy Treasuries $300.00 $7.50 ----------------------------------------------------------FDIC Total $2,038.50 $357.50 Public-Private Investment* $500.00 0.00 FDIC Liquidity Guarantees $1,400.00 $316.50 GE $126.00 $41.00 Citigroup Bailout FDIC $10.00 $0.00 Bank of America Bailout FDIC $2.50 $0.00 ----------------------------------------------------------Treasury Total $2,694.00 $1,833.50 TARP $700.00 $599.50 Tax Break for Banks $29.00 $29.00 Stimulus Package (Bush) $168.00 $168.00 Stimulus II (Obama)* $787.00* $787.00* Treasury Exchange Stabilization $50.00 $50.00 Student Loan Purchases $60.00 $0.00 Support for Fannie/Freddie $400.00 $200.00 Line of Credit for FDIC $500.00 $0.00 ----------------------------------------------------------HUD Total $300.00 $300.00 Hope for Homeowners FHA $300.00 $300.00 Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush 2009 Stimulus II or how to spend $787 billion Tax cuts Total: $288 billion Tax relief for individuals Total: $237 billion $116 billion: New payroll tax credit of $400 per worker and $800 per couple in 2009 and 2010. $70 billion: Alternative minimum tax: a one year increase in AMT floor to $70,950 for joint filers for 2009. $15 billion: Expansion of child tax credit: A $1,000 credit to more families (even those that do not make enough money to pay income taxes). $14 billion: Expanded college credit to provide a $2,500 expanded tax credit for college tuition and related expenses for 2009 and 2010. The credit is phased out for couples making more than $160,000. $6.6 billion: Homebuyer credit: $8,000 refundable credit for all homes bought between 1/1/2009 and 12/1/2009 and repayment provision repealed for homes purchased in 2009 and held more than three years. This only applies to first-time homebuyers. $4.7 billion: Excluding from taxation the first $2,400 a person receives in unemployment compensation benefits in 2009. $4.7 billion: Expanded earned income tax credit to increase the earned income tax credit — which provides money to low income workers — for families with at least three children. $4.3 billion: Home energy credit to provide an expanded credit to homeowners who make their homes more energy-efficient in 2009 and 2010. Homeowners could recoup 30 percent of the cost up to $1,500 of numerous projects, such as installing energy-efficient windows, doors, furnaces and air conditioners. $1.7 billion: for deduction of sales tax from car purchases, not interest payments phased out for incomes above $250,000. Tax relief for companies Total: $51 billion $15 billion: Allowing companies to use current losses to offset profits made in the previous five years, instead of two, making them eligible for tax refunds. $13 billion: to extend tax credits for renewable energy production (until 2014). $11 billion: Government contractors: Repeal a law that takes effect in 2012, requiring government agencies to withhold three percent of payments to contractors to help ensure they pay their tax bills. Repealing the law would cost $11 billion over 10 years, in part because the government could not earn interest by holding the money throughout the year. $7 billion: Repeal bank credit: Repeal a Treasury provision that allowed firms that buy money-losing banks to use more of the losses as tax credits to offset the profits of the merged banks for tax purposes. The change would increase taxes on the merged banks by $7 billion over 10 years. $5 billion: Bonus depreciation which extends a provision allowing businesses buying equipment such as computers to speed up its depreciation through 2009. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Healthcare More than 11% of the total bill is allocated to help states with Medicaid Total: $147.7 billion $86.6 billion for Medicaid $24.7 billion to provide a 65 percent subsidy of health care insurance premiums for the unemployed under the COBRA program $19 billion for health information technology $10 billion for health research and construction of National Institutes of Health facilities $1.3 billion for medical care for service members and their families (military) $1 billion for prevention and wellness $1 billion for the Veterans Health Administration $2 billion for Community Health Centers $1.1 billion to research the effectiveness of certain healthcare treatments $500 million to train healthcare personnel $500 million for healthcare services on Indian reservations Education Total: $90.9 billion $44.5 billion in aid to local school districts to prevent layoffs and cutbacks, with flexibility to use the funds for school modernization and repair (State Equalization Fund) $15.6 billion to increase Pell Grants from $4,731 to $5,350 $13 billion for low-income public schoolchildren $12.2 billion for IDEA special education $2.1 billion for Head Start $2 billion for childcare services $650 million for educational technology $300 million for increased teacher salaries $250 million for states to analyze student performance $200 million to support working college students $70 million for the education of homeless children Environment Total: $7.2 billion $4 billion for wastewater infrastructure $2 billion for drinking water infrastructure $600 million for hazardous waste cleanup at Superfund sites $300 million for reductions in emissions from diesel engines $200 million for cleanup of leaking Underground Storage Tanks $100 million for cleaning former industrial and commercial sites (Brownfields) Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Aid to low income workers, unemployed and retirees (including job training) Total: $82.5 billion $40 billion to provide extended unemployment benefits through Dec. 31, and increase them by $25 a week $19.9 billion for the Food Stamp Program $14.2 billion to give one-time $250 payments to Social Security recipients, people on Supplemental Security Income, and veterans receiving disability and pensions. $3.95 billion for job training $3 billion in temporary welfare payments $500 million for vocational training for the disabled $400 million for employment services $120 million for subsidized community service jobs for older Americans $150 million to help refill food banks $100 million for meals programs for seniors, such as Meals on Wheels $100 million for free school lunch programs Infrastructure Investment Total: $80.9 billion Highway construction Total: $51.2 billion $27.5 billion for highway and bridge construction projects $8 billion for intercity passenger rail projects and rail congestion grants, with priority for high-speed rail $6.9 billion for new equipment for public transportation projects (Federal Transit Administration) $6 billion for wastewater and drinking water infrastructure (Environmental Protection Agency) $1.3 billion for Amtrak $100 million to help public transit agencies $750 million for the construction of new public rail transportation systems and other fixed guideway systems. $750 million for the maintenance of existing public transportation systems Investment into government facilities and vehicle fleets Total: $29.5 billion $4.6 billion for the Army Corps of Engineers for environmental restoration, flood protection, hydropower, and navigation infrastructure projects $4.5 billion to the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) for energy efficiency and renewable energy. $4.2 billion to repair and modernize Defense Department facilities. $4 billion toward the establishment of an Office of Federal High-Performance Green Buildings within the GSA. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush $4 billion for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (wastewater treatment infrastructure improvements) $4 billion for public housing improvements and energy efficiency (Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). $2 billion for the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (drinking water infrastructure improvements) $890 million to improve housing for service members $300 million to acquire electric vehicles for the federal vehicle fleet $250 million to improve Job Corps training facilities $240 million for new child development centers $150 million for the construction of state extended-care facilities $100 million to improve facilities of the National Guard $240 million for the maintenance of United States Coast Guard facilities Supplemental investments Total: $15 billion $7.2 billion for complete broadband and wireless Internet access $1.5 billion for competitive grants to state and local governments for transportation investments $1.38 billion for rural drinking water and waste disposal projects $1 billion to the Bureau of Reclamation for drinking water projects for rural or drought-likely areas $750 million to the National Park Service $650 million to the Forest Service $515 million for wildfire prevention projects $500 million for Bureau of Indian Affairs infrastructure projects $340 million to the Natural Resources Conservation Service for watershed infrastructure projects $320 million to the Bureau of Land Management $280 million for National Wildlife Refuges $280 million for the National Fish Hatchery System $220 million to the International Boundary and Water Commission to repair flood control systems along the Rio Grande $220 million for other public lands management agencies $500 million to update the computer center at the Social Security Administration $290 million to upgrade IT platforms at the State Department $50 million for IT improvements at the Farm Service Agency Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Energy Loans and investments into green energy technology is a significant part of the final bill Total: $61.3 billion $11 billion funding for an electric smart grid $6.3 billion for state and local governments to make investments in energy efficiency $6 billion for renewable energy and electric transmission technologies loan guarantees $6 billion for the cleanup of radioactive waste (mostly nuclear power plant sites) $5 billion for weatherizing modest-income homes $4.5 billion for the Office of Electricity and Energy Reliability to modernize the nation's electrical grid and smart grid. $4.5 billion for state and local governments to increase energy efficiency in federal buildings $3.4 billion for carbon capture experiments $3.25 billion for the Western Area Power Administration for power transmission system upgrades. $2.5 billion for energy efficiency research $2 billion for manufacturing of advanced car battery (traction) systems and components. $3.2 billion toward Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grants. [32] $500 million for training of green-collar workers (by the Department of Labor) $400 million for electric vehicle technologies $300 million for federal vehicle fleets, to cover the cost of acquiring electric vehicles, including plug-in hybrid vehicles. $300 million to buy energy efficient appliances $300 million for reducing diesel fuel emissions $300 million for state and local governments to purchase energy efficient vehicles $250 million to increase energy efficiency in low-income housing $600 million to cleanup hazardous waste that threaten health and the environment $200 million to cleanup petroleum leaks from underground storage tanks $100 million to evaluate and cleanup brownfield land $400 million for the Geothermal Technologies Program Housing Total: $12.7 billion $4 billion to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for repairing and modernizing public housing, including increasing the energy efficiency of units. $2.25 billion in tax credits for financing low-income housing construction $2 billion for Section 8 housing rental assistance $2 billion to help communities purchase and repair foreclosed housing $1.5 billion for rental assistance and housing relocation $510 million for the rehabilitation of Native American housing $200 million for helping rural Americans buy homes $130 million for rural community facilities $100 million to help remove lead paint from public housing Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Scientific research NASA is among the research centers receiving additional funds under the Act Total: $8.9 billion $3 billion to the National Science Foundation $2 billion to the United States Department of Energy $1.3 billion for university research facilities $1 billion to NASA $600 million to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) $580 million to the National Institute of Standards and Technology $230 million for NOAA operations, research and facilities $140 million to the United States Geological Survey Other Total: $18.1 billion $8.8 billion: State Block Grants: in aid to states to defray budget cuts. $4 billion for state and local law enforcement agencies $1.1 billion for improving airport security $1 billion in preparation for the 2010 census $720 million for improving security at the border and ports of entry $750 million for DTV conversion coupons and DTV transition education $210 million to build and upgrade fire stations $150 million for the security of transit systems $250 million for the security of ports $26 million to improve security systems at the Department of Agriculture headquarters $150 million for an increase of claims processing military staff $150 million for VA general operating expenses $50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts to support artists $50 million for the National Cemetery Administration And to think this was only 6% of the total bailout/stimulus money. Your share for this 6% is only $2,500 ($10,000 for a family of four). Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 2 Market Dynamics Economic Projections It is time to review world events applying my “opinion” to the probability of the event occurring (0-100%) with my “opinion” of the market impact on a scale from 1 to 10. A “1” represents little to no impact on the markets; whereas, a “10” indicates that if the event occurs, I expect a widespread fundamental market directional change to occur. This is totally unscientific, based on my irrelevant opinions with absolutely no other basis other than my limited understanding of how the world works. The purpose of this section is to highlight current risks in the market. I will attempt to quickly try to explain my thought process behind each rating. US Economic Indicators (my view) US Gross National Product (GDP) Shrinks > 3% for 2009 Probability of Occurrence 50% Impact 7 The Economy has been falling over at a 6% annual rate during the past few months. I don’t believe that this rate will continue and we should begin to stabilize possibly in the next few months. I am starting to see signs of the economy stabilizing but this is not to be confused with recovering. The housing wealth effect has been eliminated and will dampen future consumption for many Americans for the foreseeable future. To add to the problem, we also have an economic slowdown in the third world, the world economy will continue to slow and this will dampen economic recovery in the US. On the bright side I believe the Chinese are taking positive steps to rebuild their economy by building infrastructure (instead of attempted stimulus via social programs) and lowering taxes across the board. I find it funny in a capitalist country like the US we are mostly using a socialist approach to revive our economy while at the same time the communist Chinese are taking more of a Regan approach to reviving their economy. Historically economic realism has always outperformed socioeconomic idealism, the Chinese economy will recover faster because of this and therefore a significant portion of my money is invested in that country. I believe the economy will continue to contract but most likely a depression has been adverted. The decline in US GDP should slow down for the remaining year but the economy is unlikely to recover any time soon. The economy is weakening but at a slower rate Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Unemployment of peak >10% by the end of 2009 Probability of Occurrence 50% Impact 7 We are currently at 8.5% while most economists were calling for 8-9% peak unemployment this year. I am sticking with 10% based on my estimates. I find this number very troubling but I hope unemployment has more or less peaked this year… My current prediction is certainly much higher than what I was expecting six months ago. If employment stays here or improves (back under 8% unemployment), I believe this will be the sign that the economic is improving. I believe unemployment will peak this year at recent historical levels and we will start to reduce unemployment in the future but for now this indicator is a big negative… Unemployment is high and is continuing to trend higher Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Federal Reserve raises interest rates 2009 Probability of Occurrence 90% for ‘09 Impact 6 Let’s see… Since the Fed funds rate is effectively zero… Therefore prediction of rate going up from zero is quite bold. Current low short term rates are very inflationary but I feel that it a necessary evil at this point. Longer term I expect these low rates will cause inflation, which is bad for the value of the US dollar. Hopefully the Fed will start being concerned about inflation at the end of next year therefore the Fed will raise rates in late 2009 or 2010. I find it odd that we created a crisis by having rates too low (near 1%) for too long and we are going to cure our problem by having rates at 0%. Low rates are good for the market… Inflation < -2% in 2009 Probability of Occurrence 50% Impact 7 I have been expecting severe deflation but so far I have been wrong. The current inflation rate is around +0.4%. I believe the main reason that we haven’t seen massive deflation is due to the vast amount of money the Federal Reserve has printed. Below is a chart of the total money supply. This is how the Fed is fighting deflation, in the past 9 months FTTM has jumped from $4 Trillion to $8 Trillion. The Fed has also released a plan of Quantitative Easing policy (printing money). Long term this is inflationary at best and hyperinflation or currency collapse at worst. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Currently we are not experiencing inflation or deflation but the increase money supply is worrisome Return of spending by US consumer in 2009 Probability of Occurrence 10% Impact 7 Clearly the housing ATM machine is broken and many people lost their house so they could fill it with more junk. Foreclosures will be higher than historical for the next 2-5 years; consumer spending will take years to recover since much of the spending was financed via fictitious housing values. This indicator is very weak but may be stabilizing S&P profits exceed of $40/share in 2009 Probability of Occurrence 50% Impact 6 I expect that corporate profits will fall until sometime in 2010. Corporations are financially stronger going into this down turn (except financial institutions) compared to other downturns but this one will be much deeper. I expect S&P 500 earnings growth to be down by more 33% form last year Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Real Estate prices drop greater than 10% in 2009 Probability of Occurrence 50% Impact 3 2008’s year over year drop in real estate prices in the top 20 cities was 19% while my prediction for 2008 was only 5-10%. Cleary I was too optimistic last year. On a brighter note the 30 year mortgage rate is down to 4.8%, and in the scheme of things makes borrowing very attractive. Currently, I don’t own a house and but I have started to shop for a cabin in northern Virginia/West Virginia and I expect to buy a place within the next 9 months. I expect housing prices to stabilize in 2010, not because of intrinsic value, but due to the new tax and spending scheme in place, higher inflation, and voter bias to have the tax base subsidize home ownership. I believe that real estate is a reasonable safe haven for capital, only if you can borrow the money at a tax subsidized fixed rate. The attractiveness of me owning a house isn’t the because of the house but it is the acquisition of the loan. I want to borrow money now and have never “wanted” to borrow money before in my life. I am going to borrow within my means, make a 20% down payment and keep some money free to make payments if I loose my job. I want to own physical things (houses) and want to owe paper (dollars). 30 Year Mortgage Rates Housing prices are falling; interest rates are falling Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush $2,000,000,000,000.00 (Trillion Dollars) budget deficit for FY 2009 (Sadly raised from 1,000,000,000,000.00 from the Q4 ’08 report) Probability of Occurrence 70% Impact 4 short term: 9 long term The rich are getting decimated and as they loose their jobs and/or income, their bonds and stocks have lost value and many won’t be paying taxes. For those of you who think that the “rich” in the country don’t pay most of the taxes the proof will be watching the tax revenues. The current budget wrongly predicts $2.7 trillion in revenues and that equates to $9,000 in taxes for each and every person in the US or $36,000/year for a family of four. Are you paying your share? Are you neighbors? I thought “W” was a spending fool but apparently he was a rank amateur. The Democrats have a propensity for uninhibited spending and with control of the White House and Congress they have very little to stand in their way. The party of big social programs (spending) has the biggest excuse to “invest” since the great depression. Congress is of the opinion that we need to bail anyone and everyone out. The problem is they only want to bail out failure and not success. Where is my reward for not buying a house? If I would have overspent I would be eligible for a reworking of my loan… since I didn’t what do I get? I get to pay more taxes… Government should pay down its debts and fix infrastructure when times are good and borrow when times are bad. Someday we will hit a point of “we can’t afford to do this” only when it is too late. I would rather send money out to the population in the form of checks to allow them to buy the things that are needed, not in the form of political patronage. “Government’s view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving subsidize it.” -Ronald Reagan 2010 Proposed Budget Total expected receipts Estimated receipts for fiscal year 2010 are $2.381 trillion, an increase of 8.9%. $1.061 trillion - Individual income taxes $940 billion - Social Security and other payroll tax $222 billion - Corporation income taxes $77 billion - Excise taxes $23 billion - Customs duties $20 billion - Estate and gift taxes $22 billion - Deposits of earnings $16 billion - Other Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Total spending President Obama's budget for 2010 totals $3.55 trillion in spending. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change compared to 2009. Mandatory spending: $2.184 trillion o o o o o o $695 billion (+4.9%) - Social Security $453 billion (+6.6%) - Medicare $290 billion (+12.0%) - Medicaid $11 billion (+275%) - Potential disaster costs $571 billion (-15.2%) - Other mandatory programs $164 billion (+18.0%) - Interest on National Debt Discretionary spending: $1.368 trillion (+7.0%) o $663.7 billion (+12.7%) - Department of Defense (including Overseas Contingency Operations) o $78.7 billion (-1.7%) - Department of Health and Human Services o $72.5 billion (+2.8%) - Department of Transportation o $52.5 billion (+10.3%) - Department of Veterans Affairs o $51.7 billion (+40.9%) - Department of State and Other International Programs o $47.5 billion (+18.5%) - Department of Housing and Urban Development o $46.7 billion (+12.8%) - Department of Education o $42.7 billion (+1.2%) - Department of Homeland Security o $26.3 billion (-0.4%) - Department of Energy o $26.0 billion (+8.8%) - Department of Agriculture o $23.9 billion (-6.3%) - Department of Justice o $18.7 billion (+5.1%) - National Aeronautics and Space Administration o $13.8 billion (+48.4%) - Department of Commerce o $13.3 billion (+4.7%) - Department of Labor o $13.3 billion (+4.7%) - Department of the Treasury o $12.0 billion (+6.2%) - Department of the Interior o $10.5 billion (+34.6%) - Environmental Protection Agency o $9.7 billion (+10.2%) - Social Security Administration o $7.0 billion (+1.4%) - National Science Foundation o $5.1 billion (-3.8%) - Corps of Engineers o $5.0 billion (+100%) - National Infrastructure Bank o $1.1 billion (+22.2%) - Corporation for National and Community Service o $0.7 billion (0.0%) - Small Business Administration o $0.6 billion (-14.3%) - General Services Administration o $19.8 billion (+3.7%) - Other Agencies o $105 billion - Other I have included an interesting video this time, different country universal theme. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94lW6Y4tBXs I believe thoughtless government overspending is harmful in the long run Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush International value of the US dollar declining >20% in next 5 years Probability of Occurrence 75% Impact 7 Long-term, I don’t believe the US can continue to support the current public and private debt burden. In the long term the dollar has no direction to go but down. The combination of poor education, poor fiscal discipline (public and private), and mass retirement only leads me to believe over the next 20 years it would be better to place a significant portion of your investments overseas to obtain better growth and to take advantage of the eventual currency devaluation and fall in local purchasing power. I have been using the Euro to show the relative strength or weakness of the dollar but with the current economic crisis I have decided to switch to a basket of currencies using the UUP that is an ETF that has a basket of currencies comprised of Euro, Japanese Yen, British Pound, Canadian Dollar, Swedish Krona and Swiss Franc From the chart below you can see before the crisis that the dollar was falling and once the crisis come to fruition the dollar rose. The dollar should eventually fall 10-20% to get back to the old values/trend. Oil and Gold would theoretically increase by 10-20% under these conditions. Long term bad for US investing; Good for Foreign investments and commodities Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Improved Liquidity in 2009 Probability of Occurrence 75% Impact 7 I started to talk about liquidity over a year ago and I have been pointing out the importance of this indicator. Liquidity became almost nonexistent for a few days a couple of in the past few months and the lack of liquidity could have caused a worldwide credit collapse… I still believe that the private credit market is and it will remain materially weaker for some time, although it should begin to improve with time. The below chart shows the TED (Treasury Euro-Dollar) spread. This shows the premium that banks must pay over Treasuries to get money. This is kind of like a fear index for the credit market. This indicator is weak but has improved significantly although isn’t anywhere near normal Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Technical Indicators Current values N/A Impact N/A Model Portfolio and other technical indicators (+100% strong buy -100% strong sell) US Stock SPY QQQQ IWM 12/31/08 4/3/09 0% 32% -24% 96% 0% 40% Foreign Stocks EFA 32% EEM 0% Bonds TLT SHY 72% +16% 40% 80% -48% -40% Gold/Euro/Yen/US Dollar GLD +80% -48% FXE +32% +64% FXY +56% -96% UUP -32% -48% Volatility VIX -64% -80% http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=SPY&what=opinion http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=qqqq&what=opinion http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=IWM&what=opinion http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=EFA&what=opinion http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=EEM&what=opinion http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=tlt&what=opinion http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=SHY&what=opinion http://quote.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=gld&code=BSTK http://quote.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=FXE&code=BSTK http://quote.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=FXy&code=BSTK http://quote.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=uup&code=BSTK http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=%24VIX&what=opinion Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush We have talked about the Volatility index (VIX) before as the stock market fear index and once again you should notice that it spiked after 9/11 and during the start of the Iraq war. It was just under 40 in the last report and closed out the year at 40. Last quarter as the VIX approached 40 going up I considered that a very ominous sign but since then it has hit 90 and has again approached 40. This time 40 looks like a positive for the market at least in the short term since volatility is falling. Bottom line is that these indicators are positive for risk taking and negative for risk aversion. These indicators have reversed positive for all stocks, negative for Government bonds (safe haven), positive for Euro, negative for Gold, Dollar and Yen (safe haven). This indictor is Bullish. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 3 The Plan Every trader reserves the right to make a more intelligent decision today than he made yesterday. - Sheldon Natenberg Housing Market I have been pointing out the up coming housing bear market since 2006; I think I have beat this to death and everyone now gets it. The three “acts” of the housing bear market are: Act I: Build and they will come! 2003-2006 Act II: I have to repay this loan? 2006-2008 Act III: Banks liquidate and crush housing prices… 2008-2010 I still want to make it clear that I don’t think housing “real” values will go up any time soon only gain modestly for the next 5-10 years after bottoming. I do want to buy a house but it’s not because I think houses are going up but because I can borrow subsidized money cheaply (tax deductions)… I believe mortgage rates eventually are going to go up to 8%-10% over the next 3-5 years and I want to get a subsidized loan before those rates go up. Also I believe that longer term we are going to experience serious inflation and owning a house (or gold) is a good hedge when combined with a large fixed price loan. Houses are not an investment they are places to live. This play is far from over but the remaining performance will be anticlimactic. Even though this has been a staple of this report for years this section will start to fade away. Did we hit bottom? Probably not… but maybe? I believe we may be approaching a crossroads in the stock market at this point and it is very hard to predict what will come next. The market may improve or it may get worst but the most likely outcome is we may just bounce around here for the next several months and possibly years. So the question is with the market showing recovery in the past few weeks is this the time to invest? That is the dilemma with being at a crossroad is that things are getting difficult to predict. We have two very large forces at work here the implosion of the economy causing deflation and central bank printing presses causing inflation. The outcome is uncertain and anyone who believes otherwise is foolish. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush On the positive side the economy isn’t falling off a cliff and mass bankruptcies of large corporations aren’t occurring (except in Autos). I believe the economy will stop imploding over the next 3-9 months. Stock market recoveries usually occur 6 months prior to the beginning of the recovery. In other words, it doesn’t look like a complete collapse of the economy is going to occur but the risks are still very high. On the negative side we still have substantial risks in the economy, what worries me it the prospect of thousands of little companies that aren’t “too big to fail” going under. After all, small business provide most of the jobs in the US and who is watching the little guy and offering loan guarantees if things go bad. Also overseas a vigilant eye is needed to watch over the UK, Ireland, Italy, and several Eastern European countries. Some of these countries are teetering and if the “experts” were concerned about AIG failing what would they think if the UK went Bankrupt? The government keeps distorting the market with all the bailouts and programs. What the economy needs is some certainty and changing the rules every few days isn’t good for market certainty. What was needed to be done has been done and we are now at the point that we need to sit back and let things mend themselves. In my opinion, if the members of the US Congress were to take a introductory economics class they would fail it yet they are the ones writing the rules for a $13 trillion economy. It’s like taking someone who has never seen an airplane before and making them chief designer at Boeing. The government needs to stop helping because it is not helping anymore… I have gotten a little less pessimistic not because things have gotten better but they haven’t continued to collapse. I still have a market bottom target of around 550 – 600 on the S&P 500 and this number is based on historical price/earnings multiples and previous bear market bottoms. I am only partially invested mostly long China, Australia and oil while being short the S&P 500 and the US Dollar and Yen. I expect to become a long term investor later in the year possible late Summer or Fall (or S&P 500 under 600). Where do we go from here? I wish I knew but I don’t. Based on what I have read and can think of, I have laid out some possible economic outcomes… Quick recover Quick and mild recession Deep and long recession Depression with deflation High inflation Hyperinflation Monetary system collapse “X” Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Based on my limited understanding of the world I personally believe without any justification whatsoever that the probability of each scenario is as such. Quick recovery Recession Long Recession Depression High inflation Hyperinflation Collapse X 12/31/08 10% 20% 30% 10% 15% 5% 2.5% 7.5% 4/3/09 5% 30% 30% 5% 15% 5% 1% 9% So more or less I suspect a 5% chance of a rapid return to economic growth, 60% chance of recession, 5% chance of a Depression, 20% chance of inflation and 10% of currency collapse or something else just as bad but yet to be determined. How I theoretically invest under these circumstances Based on the above probabilities I should have some aggressive stocks, value stocks, various bonds, cash, and a sprinkling of gold coins and other useful things. Talk about a diversified portfolio… 5% chance for a return to normal; investments should be made in aggressive stocks 60% chance for recession; High yield highly rated corporate bonds 5% chance for depression; Cash 20% chance for inflation; Gold and other commodities or short treasuries and short dollar 10% chance of some sort of collapse; gold coins and other useful material objects Theoretically if I had $10,000 to invest, based on this section I should own… $500 in aggressive stocks $6,000 in high yield safe corporate bonds $500 in cash $2,000 in gold and oil stocks or short US treasuries via owning the TBT fund $1,000 in useful physical objects in my home Deflation It seems to me that we were in a period of potential deflation but that possibility is fading fast as the Federal Reserve and Treasury has provided trillions of dollars of liquidity by lending and printing money. The Fed and other central banks have printed so much money that the risk of deflation is fading fast… I am was happy to sit in cash for the long haul but monetary policy has scared me into action for fear of loosing my remaining saving via falling dollar and/or hyperinflation. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Economy The economy is weak and is likely to remain weak through 2010, at the end of 2010 the Bush tax cuts expire and a large tax increase will be levied on the productive aspects of our economy staring in 2011. Currently a carbon tax is being proposed and implemented in 2012 that will tax everyone. So about the time the economy should recover we will tax significantly increase taxes on capital and production then the following year we will have a universally tax on consumption. It will take about 3 years to digest those tax increase so I don’t expect the US economy to return to 3% GDP growth until 2015. China and Europe will recover before the US this time. The Dollar and US Bonds (the next bubble to burst) I can’t emphasize this enough… Long term; I hate US government bonds… and by long term I say over the next 3-20 years. Short term they may have value but have been bid up to ridiculous values. The thirty year treasury is still relativity high yield of 3.6%. Would you be willing to loan money to the US (or anyone) for the next 30 years at a locked in rate of 3.6%???? If you are let me know because I am willing to pay 4.0%. This is why I am I buying a house. The only reason that the dollar is where it is now is because of a flight to some sort of “perceived” safety. Longer term, more rational minds are going to see that the value of the US Dollar is at risk and the resources of the US Government are not unlimited. Currently the US is at the highest risk for default since WWII. I will not buy nor shall I ever hold US Treasuries Bonds (except for TIPS). If anything I will short them when the time comes (via TBT). Yields are far too low for the risk being taken, the flight to “quality” has artificially driven rates low (bond prices high) and they will fall. The Federal Reserve will need to eventually raise rates and this will also cause bonds to fall. I fully expect that tax revenues will fall greatly this year. Add to this the looming Social Security issue and likely inflation. In the near term it is anyone’s guess how bonds will do. One observation regarding the market is that things tend to go on longer than anyone thinks. In other words I think bonds are overvalued and yields are too low but I thought that about housing before it ran up another 30%. In the short run if deflation continues to be in the driver’s seat and people are not willing to divest of bonds, then bonds will perform. If you look at my Model portfolio you will see that bonds outperformed the market last year substantially. If the chart on the next page doesn’t scare you then nothing will, and to make things better the source of this data is our U.S. Government Accountability Office. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Muni bonds Fundamentally, the housing market has given many cities, counties, states artificially high revenue streams due to property taxes and yet they felt the need to borrow more money backed by those heightened revenue streams. Well, as the housing market collapses and property taxes recede, many of these municipalities are or going to have trouble paying the interest on those bonds let alone returning the principle to their rightful owners. Based on this situation I will avoid many municipal bonds. But what do I think of bonds as an investment? What is abundantly clear is that the US Government isn’t going to let anyone fail, especially any state or local government. In fact I believe they may even encourage these entities to “simulate” the economy (this is merely a political code word for tax and spend without the tax part). I think that Muni bonds are safe as long as Treasuries are safe. If a true dollar crisis were to develop this issue would become disastrous. As a Capitalist, I hate these instruments; as a reluctant Keynesian, how could you not love them? The question isn’t will or will they not pay the loans back; the question is who will pay the loans back? If you don’t believe the previous section on US Bonds then this is the place to go… If you do then these are a time bomb. If the Federal government steps as I expect these bonds would be safe and have higher yields and better tax advantages than treasuries. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Corporate Bonds/convertible bonds/preferred shares As I have stated in previous sections I don’t like US Bonds because I believe they are too expensive and the yield is too low. What I do like is highly rated corporate bonds especially the ones being back by the government. The yields on these bonds beat US bonds and in terms of risk adjusted yields are high. I am parking some of my excess money here. I have also bought some funds that deal with convertible and preferred share. These are great little instruments that have high yields and substantially less risk than common shares. When inflation starts to appear, I would sell all these instruments quickly for bonds do horribly during inflationary time. Something one could consider is buy corporate bonds and selling (shorting) Treasuries. This would offer some protection from inflation and likely to yield a decent return under most circumstances. Financial stocks Right, most of these entities are virtually bankrupt. I trade them but owning them for the long haul isn’t a good idea since hope is not a legitimate investment strategy. As banks give back Tarp money and you get the government off their back, they may become a good investment. Gold This is another tough one that is very hard to call. No one knows if or how long we’ll be in a deflationary cycle and no one knows if or when an inflationary cycle will start. Once an inflationary cycle starts gold would be a good investment but for now I plan to stay away form in as an investment theme. I bought a small volume of physical gold and I have it in a safety deposit box just as a insurance. I am able buy physical gold and put it into a safety deposit box even when I think is going down by also selling short financial gold (GLD) via the stock market. This called a physical/financial spread and it allows you to own gold without worrying about the value of the stuff you own. This will open you up to all kinds of issues regarding taxes and margining… This is a nice way to own gold without have much exposure to actual gold prices. Oil/Energy Oil has been remarkably resilient. The funny part is that investment has fallen in new fields and if the economy ever recovered then oil would double fairly easy from current prices. Oil was high due to impending demand of the world economy, drilling has fallen and are likely to have severe shortages of oil in the next 2-5 years. Oil stock may be a good place to put a little money in this summer. If the dollar weakens and/or inflation takes hold these stocks will outperform. I own shares of BP for its high yield. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Domestic Stocks As long as we are in the deflationary part of this crisis stocks will continue to go down no matter how “cheap” they get. Deflation is bad for stocks, inflation is bad for stocks (but not as bad), and a crap economy is really bad for stocks. I said that I will invest again at DJIA 5500… Stock did get cheap and I started buying at around DJIA 7000 and lower. Stocks are cheap and most likely going to get cheaper this summer! Summary of Mark(et) US Economic Indicators GDP Growth – Negative Unemployment – Very High and increasing Federal Reserve Bias – Printing Money Inflation – Neutral Consumer Spending – Down but stabilizing Corporate profits Growth Rate – Falling Real Estate Market – Collapse Budget Deficit – Excessive Dollar – Weakening Volatility Index – High but improving Technical Indicators – Positive stock, negative bonds and reserve currencies/gold Liquidity – Poor but improving So… What is the Plan? I made the statement to sell everything by 1/20/09 and believe I got that one right but I thought the market sold off too fast and I started to buy stock heavily around DJIA 7000. I have made some of my money back that I had lost and have no intentions of loosing it again so I sold stocks a week before this report went out. We may hit DJIA of 9000 and I am effectively out of the market again and as we fall I will become short of the stock market once again. The problem with investors is they tend to be too optimistic, the current crisis is far from over and employment and the economy are still very week. I believe that it is still way too early to start investing heavily. The trick to this game is too have lots of money ready when the coast is clear and everyone else has lost interest in buying things. Do I think that we may hit 5500? Its possible but becoming more unlikely. The Fed action scared me out of cash (I was happy as a clam in cash until the Fed said they were going implement another trillion dollars of quantitative easing). The government is going to error deliberately on the side of inflation to prevent inflation. I expect the bottom of the stock market to occur this summer or fall. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush This is a chart of the S&P 500 since 1995 and I have drawn two red lines on this chart. I believe that it may be a long time before we break the upper red line but I am impressed on how well the market has behaved around the 800 level. It is possible that we my just meander for months or year just above that 800 on the S&P as long as nothing else bad happens. If something else bad happens (the “X” factor) then this level may hold until the economy recovers. But be forewarned that if this level doesn’t hold we will surly be on our way to 5500 on the DJIA. Longer term globalization has not and will not go away for the next 30 years. But the US has demonstrated its dependency on credit and if we add in the fact that we have a growing social security time bomb, it still brings me back to the same theme that I have had since the first issue of this report. With my long term view on global macroeconomics and my view of the US macroeconomics of the US debt markets, I have no choice but to invest outside of the US, minimizing my exposure to the US dollar and especially avoiding dollar denominated government bonds in the long run… I missed out of the explosive growth in China the first time; I won’t miss out a second. So where does that take us? Deflation, inflation, it might go up it might stay here, it may drop? Well, we are at the crossroads for the next 6 months and nothing is certain even holding cash… The next few months are going to be an extremely difficult investment environment. We are likely to go through several phases of boom, bust, deflation, inflation, bailouts and claw backs. One thing that’s for sure is that passive investing is a fool’s game now. Putting money in an investment and letting it sit unwatched for the next few years will only result in tears. Only strategies, action plans, and contingency plans will get me through this period. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 4 Domestic watch list for 2009 These instruments are cheap because any investments are risky at this time in our economic history, something to think about. iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend Index Symbol Sector Risk Return Complexity Time Horizon Tax implications Account(s) DVY Dividend paying stocks ETF moderate moderate simple Unknown Consult tax advisor (mostly at 15%) Taxed and IRA This is a diversified ETF with higher yielding large company stock with a current indicative yield just under 8% (assuming no more dividend cuts) iShares S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index Symbol PFF Sector Preferred shares ETF Risk Moderate Return High Complexity Simple Time Horizon Unknown Tax implications Consult tax advisor (not sure) Account(s) Taxed and IRA This is a diversified ETF with higher yielding large company preferred stock with a indicative yield over 14% (assuming no dividend cuts) PowerShares Financial Preferred (PGF) Symbol Sector Risk Return Complexity Time Horizon Tax implications Account(s) PGF Financial Company preferred shares ETF Higher Very High Simple Unknown Consult tax advisor (not sure) Taxed and IRA This is a diversified ETF with higher yielding large financial company preferred stock with a current indicative yield near 19% (assuming no dividend cuts) Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Debt Symbol Sector Risk Return Complexity Time Horizon Tax implications Account(s) HYG Corporate bond ETF lower Very high simple Unknown Consult tax advisor (Normal tax rate) IRA and Taxed This is a diversified ETF with higher yielding large company bonds with a current yield near 11% (assuming no dividend cuts) SPDR Lehman High Yield Bond (JNK) Symbol Sector Risk Return Complexity Time Horizon Tax implications Account(s) JNK Corporate junk bond ETF Very High Very High Simple Unknown Consult tax advisor (normal tax rates) IRA and Taxed This is a diversified ETF with higher yielding large company junk bonds (non investment grade) with a current yield near 14% (assuming no dividend cuts) iShares FTSE NAREIT Mortgage REITs (REM) Symbol Sector Risk Return Complexity Time Horizon Tax implications Account(s) REM Mortgage REITs ETF Extraordinary Extraordinary Simple Unknown Consult tax advisor (normal tax rate) IRA and Taxed This is a diversified ETF with exposure to mortgages with a current yield near 27% (assuming no dividend cuts). If you want exposure to the mortgage mess, here it is. This security is VERY speculative. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Gold Symbol Sector Risk Return Complexity Time Horizon Tax implications Account(s) GLD Precious Metal Moderate + Moderate Simple Medium term (3 months – 60 months) Long term capital gain rate of 15% does not apply to this ETF. Long term capital gains rate for this security is 28% IRA and Taxed What this ETF does is allows you to buy gold as if were a stock. Each share that you hold is equivalent to owning a 1/10th of an ounce of gold. The gold is stored in a bank vault in Great Britain. Gold has always been a currency of safety and I believe world demand for this metal is only going to go up as the world gets richer. Also as the US dollar falls gold will tend to go up and vise versa. UltraShort Lehman 20+ Trsy ProShares Symbol TBT Sector 2x leveraged short US long Bond EFT Risk Speculative Return high Complexity Simple Time Horizon Unknown Tax implications Consult tax advisor (normal) Account(s) IRA and Taxed The investment seeks daily investment results, before fees and expenses, which correspond to twice the inverse of the daily performance of the Lehman Brothers 20+ Year U.S. Treasury index. This is what I will use when I decide that I want to short the long bond. This ETF moves opposite direction and twice as fast as the 20-30 year bonds. iShares Lehman TIPS Bond Symbol TIP Sector Treasury Inflation Protected bond ETF Risk Lower Return Moderate Complexity Simple Time Horizon Unknown Tax implications Consult tax advisor (normal) Account(s) IRA and Taxed The investment seeks results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance of the inflation-protected sector of the United States Treasury market as defined by the Lehman Brothers U.S. TIPS index Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 5 International watch list 2009 2009 Consensuses GDP Growth Forecast by Country China India Russia Egypt Malaysia Indonesia Poland Pakistan 8.5% 6.8% 6.8% 6.7% 5.6% 5.5% 4.3% 4.2% Thailand Singapore Argentina Taiwan Brazil South Africa South Korea Chile 3.9% 3.8% 3.5% 3.4% 3.4% 3.3% 3.3% 3.3% Turkey Israel Venezuela Mexico Australia Hong Kong Canada Sweden 3.2% 2.8% 2.7% 2.5% 2.3% 2.1% 1.4% 1.0% France United States Germany Japan European Union Spain Italy United Kingdom Notice that the United States and Europe lag behind the rest of the world in expected GDP growth this year. China and India once again lead the pack in world growth; I don’t a lot of faith in these predictions but I hope the experts are right… International Investments to watch PowerShares Intl Dividend Achievers Symbol PID Sector International High dividend stock Risk Moderate Return Moderate+ Complexity Simple Time Horizon Long term (36 months – 60 months) Tax implications Consult tax advisor (unknown) Account(s) Taxed and IRA This is a diversified ETF with international higher yielding large company common stock with a current yield over 8% (assuming no dividend cuts). This also is paid in foreign currencies so you expect an increase with a weaker dollar. iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index Symbol EEM Sector Emerging Markets ETF Risk Moderate Return Moderate+ Complexity Simple Time Horizon Long term (36 months – 60 months) Tax implications Consult tax advisor (mostly at 15%) Account(s) Taxed and IRA This is a diversified one stop shop for getting your feet wet in emerging markets. I also like that fact that options are traded against this instrument. See the link below to find how diversified this instrument is. http://www.ishares.com/fund_info/holdings/holdings.jhtml?period=m&symbol=EEM Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush 0.7% 0.6% 0.6% 0.6% 0.6% 0.3% 0.3% 0.1% iShares MSCI “EAFA” Europe, Australia and Far East Index Fund Symbol EFA Sector International ETF Risk Low + Return Medium+ Complexity Simple Time Horizon Long term (36 months – 60 months) Tax implications Consult tax advisor (mostly at 15%) Account(s) Taxed and IRA This is one of my core holding and is a global stock fund, everyone should watch how this is performing. It is also part of my “model portfolio”. iShares MSCI Brazil Index Symbol EWZ Sector International ETF Risk Moderate Return Moderate + Time Horizon Long Term (36 months – 60 months) Account(s) Taxed and IRA With a 3.4% GDP growth expected, this is one way to get some exposure to South America. Morgan Stanley Capital International Australia Index Symbol EWA Sector International ETF Risk Medium Return Medium+ Complexity Simple Time Horizon Long term (36 months – 60 months) Tax implications Consult tax advisor (mostly at 15%) Account(s) Taxed and IRA I own this to invest in China and India indirectly; I believe that Australia is a place to invest because of its raw materials and the proximity to India and China. This ETF is traded in the US that matches the Australian stock market, which is a significant supplier of raw materials to Asia. This stock has also taken as commodity prices have fallen. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush iShares MSCI South Korea Index Symbol EWY Sector International ETF Risk Moderate + Return High Time Horizon Medium term (12 months – 24 months) Tax implications Dividends are taxed 15% rate Account(s) Taxed and IRA South Korea is another indirect play regarding china. One advantage is that their northern neighbor helps to keep these stocks cheap. Unfortunately they will remain cheap as long as Kim Jong Il stays in power. But given that I think that he just likes being the center of attention I don’t think war will break out. iShares FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index Symbol FXI Sector International ETF Risk High+ + + Return Extraordinary Time Horizon Very Long term (5 years – 10 years) Tax implications Consult tax advisor (mostly at 15%) Account(s) Taxed and IRA This ETF fell over 45% last year but when the economy recovers this will need to be a core holding for me. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 6 Mark’s Model ETF Portfolio Asset reallocation General profile for a several diversified portfolios Risk Adverse Balanced Growth 30% 40% US Large Cap: 20% 10% 20% US Small Cap: 10% 10% 20% 30% International: 35% 10% Fixed Income: 50% 10% 5% 0% Cash: Aggressive 30% 30% 40% 0% 0% US Large Cap: SPDR S&P Depository Receipts (SPY) 33% NASDAQ 100 Trust Shares (QQQQ) 33% Vanguard Value VIPERs (VTV) 33% US Small Cap: iShares Russell 2000 Index (IWM) 100% International: iShares MSCI “EAFA” Europe, Australia and Far East Index Fund (EFA) 50% iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (EEM) 50% Fixed Income (Bonds): iShares Lehman 20+ Year Treasury Bond (TLT) 25% iShares Lehman 7-10 Year Treasury Bond (IEF) 25% iShares Lehman Aggregate Bond (AGG) 25% iShares GS $ InvesTop Corp Bond (LQD) 25% Cash: iShares Lehman 1-3 Year Treasury bond (SHY) 100% Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Year to Date Returns Symbol Name SPDR S&P Depository Receipts NASDAQ 100 Trust Shares DIAMONDS Trust Vanguard Value VIPERs iShares Russell 2000 Index iShares MSCI “EAFA” iShares MSCI Emerging Markets iShares Lehman 20+ Year Treasury iShares Lehman 7-10 Year Treasury iShares Lehman Aggregate Bond iShares GS $ InvesTop Corp iShares Lehman 1-3 Year Treasury SPY QQQQ DIA VTV IWM EFA EEM TLT IEF AGG LQD SHY 12/31/07 Price $90.24 $29.74 $87.52 $41.16 $49.24 $44.86 $24.97 $119.35 $98.53 $104.20 $101.65 $84.66 12/31/08 Price $79.52 $30.32 $75.84 $33.86 $42.05 $37.59 $24.81 $105.71 $96.59 $101.47 $94.12 $84.32 YTD Gain % w/o Div -11.88% 1.95% -13.35% -17.74% -14.60% -16.21% -0.64% -11.43% -1.97% -2.62% -7.41% -0.40% YTD Gain % w/ Div -11.26% 2.11% -13.14% -16.82% -14.32% -16.21% -0.64% -10.95% -1.45% -1.95% -6.45% -0.08% As you can see, everything got hit except the Nasdaq. Emerging Markets and short term bonds held up ok. Clearly bonds are not a safe haven any longer. Results for the various “no brainer” portfolios ’09 Return (YTD) Risk Adverse Balanced Growth Aggressive -6.84% -7.87% -9.82% -10.60% -42.39% ’09 Return (implied)* -27.35% -31.50% -39.28% -8.18% -18.66% -33.90% -39.60% ’08 Return 7.82% 9.40% 10.04% 10.45% ’07 Return 9.72% 13.63% 19.09% 21.83% ’06 Return 5.49% 7.55% 9.73% 11.77% ’05 Return * If returns maintained their current pace for the rest of the year this would be the losses. If the current market conditions fail, bond holders/risk adverse portfolios could experience what the aggressive portfolio felt last year in terms of losses. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Chapter 7 Final Thoughts The Good Interest rates are low Low energy prices are pumping billions back into the world economy each day Commodity prices are cheap The risk of a massive depression has been greatly reduced by central banks China is implementing “real stimulus” Credit spreads and volatility indexes (fear indexes) are off their highs The Bad Housing prices are weak and still falling High unemployment and trending higher Falling Tax receipts due to financial turmoil Exploding Budget deficit due to increased spending Governments interfering/controlling free market values of goods and services Potential for hyperinflation Congress is full of economic idiots who think they can fix everything Higher Taxes in 2011 on capital/production Very regressive carbon tax or “consumption tax” staring in 2012 The Ugly Potential for a monetary collapse Recent action by the US Government has put the long term economy at risk Potential for national debt spiral both public and private The government has grown substantially and will continue to do so Potential for US bonds may be downgraded Potential for currency collapse Unforeseen events “X” Final thoughts: Mayhem reigned supreme in the markets during the past year, but it appears the risk of a complete and utter collapse of the financial system has been reduced significantly, but it has not been eliminated. The aggressive action by the world governments may have contained the damage but it may have only delayed the inevitable. The risk is that the US Government has probably saved the credit market but it has gambled with the credit rating of the United States of America in the process. We may have averted a depression but have raised the real possibility of a total collapse of the US dollar/world economy. Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush Helpfully we will move through this phase and it will most likely be followed by a period of inflation/high inflation/hyperinflation (no one knows for sure). For now any investment strategy is extremely risky including sitting on the sidelines in cash. No one knows what will come next and no one knows what the true value of anything is… I suspect by November of this year (or around Dow 6000) I will reverse directions and be long the market via Ultra funds, Ultra long gold, Ultra short Treasuries (TBT), and be long one house while short one 30 year fixed rate mortgage at ~4% as a defense against the anticipated inflation caused by all the money we have printed. This part of the plan could take months or years to pay off… Only the tea leaves know for sure. I still don’t own a house or much of anything “real” but have been buying “things”. In the strictest sense, I still have lots of little pieces of paper that lay claim to parts of businesses around the world. Even those pieces of paper aren’t even real and are only bits of scattered data strewn across the internet. When everyone was borrowing I was saving and now that the US savings rate is over 5% it is time for me borrow. Rarely in my life have I ever borrowed money but now I want to find ways to borrow paper (take out loans) and own physical objects. If the dollar becomes worthless sometime in the future I will still own the objects but can payback the loan with that worthless paper. I now believe that debt is an asset if used wisely. This is the conclusion of my report, I hope to get the next report out by July 5th 2009 and entertain you with my new thoughts and reflections. Please send any questions, comments or topic ideas for future issues to me via email. GOOD LUCK!!! Regards, Mark Rush [email protected] Copyright © 2009 by Mark A. Rush