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Posted
11/21/2002 |

The Speculator
Recent articles: • Forget the
news and follow your intuition, 11/14/2002 • Do comeback
kids keep going?, 11/7/2002 • Nothing pays
dividends like a new dividend, 10/31/2002 More...
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 | | The Speculator 7
stocks that bring out the animal in us The market's rapid recent
rise has rekindled the instinct to make a killing fast. Our studies
suggest there's no better time of the year to do it. Here's where
we'll start and why. By Victor
Niederhoffer and Laurel Kenner
"Every man has a wild animal in him." --
Frederick the Great in a 1759 letter to the French writer Voltaire.
"Give us some more stocks we can make a killing on.
Forget all that folderol you're always giving us about sociology,
the arts and baseball. We've got to get even."
That's the gist
of the message we're hearing more and more from our readers these
days. Especially now that their friends, or at least their
acquaintances, have made fantastic gains in the last 45 days or
so.
Yes, indeed. From the dusty badlands of the Dakotas to
the svelte corridors of Wall and Main, the animal spirits are
rising. Investors want to go all out and make money fast. The
Speculators themselves are suffused with these spirits and plan to
buy the following seven stocks:
Redback Networks (RBAK,
news,
msgs) Lucent
Technology (LU,
news,
msgs) ADC
Telecommunications (ADCT,
news,
msgs) American
Tower (AMT,
news,
msgs) Nortel
Networks (NT,
news,
msgs) Crown
Pacific Partners (CRO,
news,
msgs) Oak
Technologies (OAKT,
news,
msgs) As
with most things, however, the road is much better than the inn
itself, and therefore we invite you to travel and learn along with
us as we describe our journey.
A
bullish time of year Whether it be the last month of the
year, or the last week of the year as a precursor to the January
effect, it is hard to deny that the season of bullishness is
imminent.
The Speculators took out pencil and envelope to
ascertain exactly what the year-end tendencies are regarding
animalistic spirits for the last 10 years. The results show two
distinct patterns:
- The S&P 500 ($INX)
index has closed up nine times out of 10 in December over
November. The Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX)
doesn't climb as often -- just 67% of the time -- but, when it's
up, it climbs with greater ferocity. In January, the roles seem to
be reversed -- while the S&P 500 index is up over December an
appreciable 78% of the time, the Nasdaq is up a more consistent
83% of the time -- and with higher returns to boot.
- The first week of January shows real optimism, with investors
sending the Nasdaq 100 ($NDX.X)
up by an average of 1.25% -- more than three times the rate of the
S&P 500 index. It would seem that as the slates are wiped
clean, investors are willing to give risk a chance and a sense of
optimism yields a spring in the step in the middle of
winter.
The results suggest that a pairs trade long the
Nasdaq 100 and short the S&P 500 would be appropriate as of the
end of November. But the Speculators eschew a pairs trade as an
equivalent to betting on a favorite to show in a horse
race.
Right time for taking
risks As far as we can see, there are two major reasons
for the return of the animal spirits. First, from Oct. 9 to Nov. 15
-- that is, within the last seven weeks -- there has been a
profusion of incredible rises in individual stocks. More than 65 of
the stocks in the S&P 600 Small Cap Index ($SML.X)
have gone up at least 50% in that period, and only about 100 of them
are down anything at all.
Here are the 10 biggest gainers,
all up 100% or more:
| S&P Small Cap 600's top 10
gainers |
| Name |
Ticker |
10/09/02 |
11/15/02 |
% Chg |
| S&P 600 Index |
$SML.X |
170.73 |
197.04 |
15.4% |
|
|
| Rainbow Technologies |
RNBO |
2.91 |
7.92 |
172.2% |
| Artesyn Technologies |
ATSN |
1.18 |
3.17 |
168.6% |
| Bell Microproducts |
BELM |
3.61 |
8.12 |
124.9% |
| Harmonic |
HLIT |
1.03 |
2.29 |
122.3% |
| Skyworks Solutions |
SWKS |
4.16 |
9.039 |
117.3% |
| Kopin |
KOPN |
2.51 |
5.36 |
113.5% |
| Mesa Air Group |
MESA |
2.93 |
6.18 |
110.9% |
| Advanced Energy Industries |
AEIS |
6.18 |
13 |
110.4% |
| Kulicke and Soffa Industries |
KLIC |
1.95 |
4.01 |
105.6% |
| Manhattan Associates |
MANH |
12.94 |
26.43 |
104.3% | | Source: Bloomberg LP
The other
reason is widespread knowledge concerning the January effect -- the
tendency in us for increased risk-taking near the end of the year.
The one effect that is most clearly documented in this regard is the
January effect. As the great sages, the keepers of the flame, the
scorekeepers, the authors of the best book on investments ever,
"Triumph of the Optimists," Elroy Dimson, Mike Staunton and Paul
Marsh clearly document: "Small-cap stocks in January in the United
States go up on average some 6% more than the market averages. These
results however, are not for all countries and
seasons."
Professor Dimson kindly updated his work on small
caps as follows in an e-mail interview:
"Our evidence is that
seasonality in the small-cap premium is an effect observed in the
United States but not universally. Tech stock performance has
strongly influenced the effect in both the small cap and big cap
sector."
Our own research on price as a predictor of
subsequent performance was reported in our June 21, 2001, article
"5
high-priced stocks ready to shoot skyward." Based on an
enumeration of 20,000 company years over a 15-year period using data
from Value Line, we found that the correlation between the price of
a stock at the end of a calendar year and the stock's price
appreciation in the first quarter of the next year was a
significantly negative 0.09. In other words, the lower the stock
price by Dec. 31, the better the subsequent performance by the end
of the first quarter in the next year.
Academic research on
the relation between current price level and price appreciation is
scant. The best we saw after an extensive search was the paper
"January Effect -- A Re-examination" by Honghui Chen and Vijay
Singal. Taking account of the tax regime change affected in 1986
under President Reagan, they study the potential for tax-loss
selling for each year from 1987 through 1998. They conclude that the
January effect is caused by tax-related selling in December as
investors sell those stocks with capital losses as an offset to
those with capital gains. In January, the losers earn high returns
because the selling pressure has ceased.
In particular, they
find that the stocks in the highest quartile of those having
potential for tax-related selling earn 6 percentage points less in
the last 5 days of December than in the first 5 days of
January.
Our friend, the erudite statistician and reader
Martin Knight, augments this explanation:
"Tax-loss selling
in December is mostly done by individuals (institutions do it in
October) and so is concentrated in small-cap stocks, particularly
value, so general indexes like the S&P 500 are not a good
measure. It's an excellent strategy in some years (like December
2000) but not last year and I would doubt this year
either.
"For a truly profitable tax-loss season you need some
combination of three factors:
- Gains in some stocks elsewhere to motivate the tax-selling in
the first place."
- Total despondency in a sector if not the general market, a
feeling that the shares might never come back."
- Moderate success of the strategy in the recent past otherwise
too much money will be there buying to cancel out the
selling.
"At the end of 2000 we got the first one and the
other two to an extent, while in 2001 we got none of them. You could
say that 2001's December was in September for an obvious
reason."
Practical
animals The greatest practical forecaster of all time, Sam
Eisenstadt, Value Line's chairman of research for the last 50 years,
has another explanation for what's happening. We spoke standing at
the corner before the Blue Hill Troupe's magnificent performance of
"The Most Happy Fella" last Saturday, and he opined: "The strong
performance of animal spirit stocks recently is anticipation of the
January effect. If December continues to display this
characteristic, it'll move into November. Indeed, it seems to have
moved into as early as October this year. This is normal behavior
for a seasonal that everyone is aware of. I suspect in time it will
disappear altogether."
The Speculators are always happy to
stand on the shoulders of grandmasters like Dimson and Eisenstadt.
However, they are not immune from certain animalistic passions of
their own: They like to count and speculate themselves. Along these
lines, they have over and over again made big profits by buying
low-priced stocks at propitious occasions. Perhaps their best foray
here came when they bought and recommended a basked of beaten-down
Internet stocks in early 2001 and sold them after a month for an
average triple-digit actual gain. (Their purchases of low-priced
biotechs in the last year, however, have been a
disaster.)
They were helped mightily in the successful
Internet stock prediction, and similar ones they made in early 2001
and 2002, by the fantastic rise in low-priced stocks in recent
years. During the first five months of 2001, for example, the lowest
priced decile of Value Line stocks went up an average of 82%. Over
time, the low-priced stocks in Value Line's universe have gone up
much more than the average. However, because of the seasonality of
these returns, their large variability, the possibility of a small
survival bias and the absence of dividend calculations, this is not
by any means a sure way to riches.
Inspired by the desire to
make a profit and at the same time to provide scientific explanation
to this phenomenon, The Speculators examined the relation between
price level and subsequent performance in the companies that make up
today's S&P 500.
We measured the change in price from the
end of November to the end of January for each company for each of
the last five years. The results show that the companies whose
stocks have memberships in the Bottom 5, the Bottom 10, and the
Bottom 20, ranked by price, clearly outperformed the Top 5, Top 10
and Top 20 member stocks and the S&P 500 index itself.
| Price appreciation from Nov. to Jan,
ranked by price level of stocks |
|
Group of 5 |
Group of 10 |
Group of 20 |
S&P |
| 11/30/98 to 01/29/99 |
|
|
|
|
| Lowest-priced stocks |
12.67% |
3.10% |
14.31% |
|
| Highest-priced stocks |
23.00% |
20.06% |
14.74% |
9.97% |
|
|
|
|
|
| 11/30/99 to 1/31/00 |
|
|
|
|
| Lowest-priced stocks |
-2.50% |
-2.97% |
4.10% |
|
| Highest-priced stocks |
44.48% |
28.12% |
18.63% |
0.40% |
|
|
|
|
|
| 11/30/00 to 1/31/01 |
|
|
|
|
| Lowest-priced stocks |
54.03% |
49.98% |
39.14% |
|
| Highest-priced stocks |
-7.83% |
-5.31% |
-4.53% |
3.88% |
|
|
|
|
|
| 11/30/01 to 1/31/02 |
|
|
|
|
| Lowest-priced stocks |
15.74% |
4.62% |
0.33% |
|
| Highest-priced stocks |
-1.24% |
0.79% |
0.49% |
-0.81% |
|
|
|
|
|
| November to January summary: |
|
|
|
|
| Average price return per year low priced: |
18.64% |
12.61% |
12.51% |
|
| Average price return per year high priced: |
12.64% |
8.92% |
6.19% |
3.21% |
|
|
|
|
|
| Superior returns per year over 5 years |
|
|
|
|
| Low priced over high priced |
6.00% |
3.69% |
6.32% |
|
| Low priced over S&P |
15.43% |
9.40% |
9.31% |
|
| High priced over S&P |
9.43% |
5.71% |
2.98% |
| | Sample: From today's S&P members, the 5, 10
and 20 stocks that had the lowest and the highest sticker prices
on the start dates listed above in each November. Source:
Niederhoffer Management LLC, Bloomberg LP.
The excess
return of the five lowest-priced members of the S&P 500 index,
of over 15% a year, was particularly striking in this
regard.
But this is not the path to easy riches, either.
There is just too much variability involved.
A study of the
performance of Value Line stocks classified by price at the
beginning of year gives the following sobering results:
Stocks below $5 on 12/31/01: Average = +9% Std
Dev = 62%
Stocks below $10: Average =
-15.3% Std Dev = 52%
Stocks above $100 Average
= +11.2% Std Dev = 31%
The whole group:
Average = -16.2% Std Dev = 32.5% Clawing our way deeper What's obviously
required is something that combines all these disparate results.
Something that takes account of the seasonality of the animal
spirits, the tendency for those volatile low-priced stocks to
outperform on average, with a high uncertainty. What we felt was in
order was to take the 25 lowest-priced Value Line stocks as of Nov.
15, and then to further filter them by something that signaled to us
that the companies themselves had some confidence in the stock, and
whose financials did not have excessive
accruals.
Fortuitously our recent columns gave some guidance
in this regard. We wrote on Sept. 19 that "Empty shelves
signal a rising stock"; on Sept. 26 suggesting that investors
"Count on a
company's cold, hard cash flow"; and more recently on Oct. 24
identifying "5 genuine buys
on a Street of impostors".
We filtered the 25
lowest-priced companies through the prism of signaling reductions in
inventory, improvements in accounts receivable and net insider
buying. We put them all together and came up with a long list of
stocks, the seven best of which we intend to buy at a propitious
occasion in the future when the market takes an appropriate squall.
(For us, 2% - 4% from a recent high is an appropriate
squall).
We list below 24 stocks with the details on changes
in accounts receivables and inventory for the most recently reported
quarter of 2002 over the matching periods in 2001; and net insider
activity for 2002 updated through Nov. 15, 2002. The seven stocks we
will be buying are at the top of the list.
| Bottom 25 priced stocks on 12/31/01,
filtered by fundamentals & insider
activity |
| Company |
Symbol |
Change in receivables |
Receivables rank |
Change in inventory |
Inventory rank |
Inventory + receivables rank |
Net insider activity |
| Redback |
RBAK |
-73.2% |
2 |
-73.5% |
3 |
5 |
Buyers |
| Lucent |
LU |
-64.1% |
4 |
-70.8% |
4 |
8 |
Buyers |
| ADC Telecom |
ADCT |
-66.8% |
3 |
-48.9% |
6 |
9 |
Buyers |
| American Tower |
AMT |
-39.0% |
8 |
-60.0% |
5 |
13 |
Buyers |
| Nortel |
NT |
-48.0% |
6 |
-43.1% |
7 |
13 |
Buyers |
| Crown Pacific |
CRO |
-36.1% |
9 |
-26.0% |
10 |
19 |
Buyers |
| Oak Tech |
OAKT |
-41.1% |
7 |
-16.8% |
12 |
19 |
Buyers |
| Vitesse |
VTSS |
-30.9% |
12 |
-35.4% |
8 |
20 |
Buyers |
| Digital Lightwave |
DIGL |
-80.1% |
1 |
4.9% |
23 |
24 |
Buyers |
| Priceline |
PCLN |
-36.0% |
10 |
0.0% |
19 |
29 |
Buyers |
| Foster-Wheeler |
FWC |
-5.7% |
18 |
-15.3% |
13 |
31 |
Buyers |
| Rite-Aid |
RAD |
10.2% |
23 |
-12.1% |
15 |
38 |
Buyers |
| Sirius Satellite |
SIRI |
0.0% |
22 |
0.0% |
22 |
44 |
Buyers |
| Extended Systems |
XTND |
-30.2% |
13 |
-100.0% |
2 |
15 |
None |
| Amcast Industrial |
AIZ |
-4.6% |
19 |
-26.7% |
9 |
28 |
None |
| Sapient |
SAPE |
-51.0% |
5 |
31.8% |
24 |
29 |
None |
| Kmart |
KM |
0.0% |
21 |
-23.1% |
11 |
32 |
None |
| OpenTv |
OPTV |
-25.5% |
14 |
0.0% |
20 |
34 |
None |
| Art Technology |
ARTG |
-34.0% |
11 |
-100.0% |
1 |
12 |
Sellers |
| AES |
AES |
-18.5% |
15 |
-14.6% |
14 |
29 |
Sellers |
| Atmel |
ATML |
-13.5% |
17 |
-10.9% |
16 |
33 |
Sellers |
| Openwave |
OPWV |
-16.8% |
16 |
0.0% |
21 |
37 |
Sellers |
| Safeguard Scientific |
SFE |
0.0% |
20 |
-6.9% |
18 |
38 |
Sellers |
| Recoton |
RCOT |
14.7% |
24 |
-8.9% |
17 |
41 |
Sellers | | Source: Bloomberg LP, Niederhoffer Management LLC,
Thomson Financial
Be sure to realize that probably
three of these seven are going to fall rather dramatically; that
there is considerable uncertainty concerning our speculations and
the statistical and practical validity of the results reported
above.
Nevertheless, the animal spirits exist in The
Speculators as well as in our readers at this time of the year, and
we plan to swing for the home runs to get even, or possibly a little
bit more.
Final note We
have available a list of the 100 lowest priced Value Line stocks and
the 20 lowest priced S&P 500 Index stocks ready for our readers'
perusal at our Web
site. Furthermore, we have the usual erudite comments of our
readers and mentors, those with knowledge of time and place on this
subject also available. For readers who wish to critique, augment,
or praise our work, kindly e-mails us and we will send
you the inventory, accounts receivable and insider trading analysis
of these groups.
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