Below is a chart of Corn from 2001 to 2023, reflecting Price Momentum data.
Below are the downside targets for the Russell 2000 Index applying Dow’s Theory. Continue reading
Below is a chart of the Russell 2000 Index from 1989-2023, reflecting Price Momentum data.
Although we’re not out of the woods yet, a recent article in The Straits Times reminds of what we’ve been through since last year and what was said at the time.
Many items stand out in the article above and we’ll address the most salient. The very first item is the issue of European economic meltdown. As noted above:
“The danger of a complete economic meltdown, a core meltdown of European industry, has – as far as we can see – been averted…”
Prior to averting economic meltdown, there was a lot alarm over the European energy situation, as noted below:
At the time, it was believed that the energy crisis in Europe would last for a decade, at least that was the claim. Our claim at the time was that we had seen this type of situation before and that potentially there would be a reversal of the crisis environment.
Prices don’t usually go parabolic and then plateau. The exceptions being in instances where a company is acquired by another company and the acquisition is completed. Otherwise, price spikes quickly revert to the prior starting point before gradually ascending.
The second issue of interest in the article is the point about Russian energy supplies to Europe. The article says:
"The European Union is no longer importing coal and crude oil from Russia, and gas deliveries have been significantly curtailed."
This is a point that we addressed when we said that Gazprom seems to go through a cycle of throttling their customers and then end up paying the ultimate price for such action.
At present, there is a real risk that Gazprom and other Russian energy suppliers have a significantly diminished market for their merchandise. This could set the stage for bailouts and bankruptcies if conditions do not materially improve. Like when Enron throttled California, the state lost in the short-term but Enron lost in the long term. Normally, re-emerging from a pandemic is the hoped for condition for improvement. However, the initial reading is that Russia will be among the last to benefit from a global recovery.
Adding insult to injury, Germany has significantly increased their storage of energy as seen below:
"In Germany, storage facilities are about 91 per cent full, compared with 54 per cent a year ago..."
Markets are a restless beast. They don’t tolerate imbalances for very long.
Germany’s actions are the natural workaround to a condition that was always going to be temporary. This makes it surprising that there could be an energy crisis of a decade. Accelerating the alternatives and workaround process was the LNG flotilla.
The parade of ships attempting to supply Europe with LNG had the expected outcome:
"The dynamic has shifted to such an extent that there is now too much LNG arriving..."
These are basis economic principles that shouldn’t need further explanation.
"Germany, once the biggest buyer of Russian gas, is opening three terminals this winter, and Europe's largest economy expects it new LNG facilities to cover about a third of its previous requirements."
The workarounds being applied by many nations in Europe may have a long term effect on energy prices.
Finally, it was thought that because winter was approaching there was a level of certainty in the demand for energy and therefore prices must increase. Unfortunately, for European natural gas prices, that was not the case.
A mild winter (for now) has only exaggerated a dramatic oversupply of energy for European nations. Regarding Russia, as we’ve continually said in the past, energy throttlers typically pay the price for their actions in the worst way.
On May 4, 2022, we said the following:
Below is a review of our work from January 8, 2021.
Our commentary on the 10-Year Treasury on January 8, 2021:
“Following a similar decrease of -40%, the 10-Year Treasury had an increase of at least an annualized increase of 24% over the following 2 year period with a high level of probability.”
The market rallied in the first week of trading. Below is the first watch list for the year. Continue reading
Posted in Dividend Achiever Watch List, Dividend Achievers, Dividend Watch List
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Below is the Dogs of the TSX 60 for 2023 with the breakdown of the other categories that we track. Continue reading
Below is the Dogs of the Dow for 2023 with the breakdown of the other categories that we track. Continue reading
Below are the books that we’ve read cover-to-cover from January 2022 to December 2022. Don’t forget to check out our 2021, 2020, 2018, 2017, 2016 and the Dow Theory Letters book lists.
| Title | Author | |
| Revolution That Wasn't, The | by | Spencer Jakab |
| Panic! | by | Michael Lewis |
| Warren Buffett's Ground Rules | by | Jeremy C. Miller |
| Great Quake, The | by | Henry Fountain |
| Pacific | by | Simon Winchester |
| How to Tell a Story | by | Aristotle |
| African Founders | by | David Hackett Fischer |
| How the Hippies Saved Physics | by | David Kaiser |
| Music Is History | by | Questlove |
| Coal | by | Barbara Freese |
| Titans of History | by | Simon Sebag Montefiore |
| A Brief History of Motion | by | Tom Standage |
| Ascent of Money, The | by | Niall Ferguson |
| Mark Inside, The | by | Amy Reading |
| Plagues Upon the Earth | by | Kyle Harper |
| Mutiny on the Rising Sun | by | Jared Ross Hardesty |
| A Brief History of Korea | by | Michael J. Seth |
| Money | by | Jacob Goldstein |
| Story Paradox, The | by | Jonathan Gottschall |
| Boom and Bust | by | William Quinn |
| Players Ball, The | by | David Kushner |
| Unseen Body, The | by | Jonathan Reisman |
| Things are Never So Bad That They Can't Get Worse | by | William Neuman |
| Body, The | by | Bill Bryson |
| Icepick Surgeon, The | by | Sam Kean |
| Why You Like The Science & Culture of Musical Taste | by | Nolan Gasser |
| Reason for the Darkness of the Night: Edgar Allan Poe and the Forging of American Science, The | by | John Tresch |
| A (Very) Short History of Life on Earth | by | Henry Gee |
| In the Shadow of Liberty | by | Kenneth C. Davis |
| Prisoners of Geography | by | Tim Marshall |
| Joy of Sweat, The | by | Sarah Everts |
| Forgetting: The Benefits of Not Remembering | by | Scott A. Small |
| Spinning Magnet, The | by | Alanna Mitchell |
| Midnight in Chernobyl | by | Adam Higginbothham |
| Science of James Smithson, The | by | Steven Turner |
| Knowledge Machine, The | by | Michael Strevens |
| Breathe | by | James Nestor |
| Lithium | by | Walter A. Brown |
| Genetics in the Madhouse | by | Theodore M. Porter |
| An Elegant Defense | by | Matt Richtel |
Below is a chart of the performance of the Dogs of the TSX 60 from December 31, 2021 to December 31, 2022. Continue reading
Posted in Dogs of the TSX
In our January 2, 2022 posting on the Dogs of the Dow, we said the following:
Posted in Dogs of the Dow
Major indexes ended the year down -10% to -30% for the year. Tables below shows the historical market return and what occurred in the subsequent year. Hopefully this provides some framework of what to expect in 2023. Continue reading
Below is a chart of Tesla Inc. (TSLA) from 2012 to 2022, reflecting Price Momentum data.