Saturday, November 29, 2014

Opinion: Americans, let’s be thankful that U.S. oil is pulverizing OPEC

Mitchell is the pioneer of hydraulic fracking, the breakthrough that has increased U.S. crude oil production by 80% since 2008. Combined with more conservation, and growth hiccups of varying severity in emerging economies, all that oil has pushed the price of crude down nearly 30% since July even as U.S. economic growth picks up. 
That brings us to this week’s meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, and all the lousy regimes whose suffering it will lay bare. 
No such discussion would be complete without mentioning Vladimir Putin’s Russia, which Sen. John McCain has aptly described as a gas station masquerading as a superpower.  
Russia needs $101 crude to balance its budget, not the $79 Brent price on Tuesday, Goldman says. Russia’s finance minister recently said the crude crash is costing them $90 billion to $100 billion a year, and Western sanctions over Putin’s Ukraine adventurism cost another $40 billion.

Opinion: 5 countries that will be the biggest losers from oil’s slide

Oil is in a perfect storm: Too much new supply is coming on line just as demand is dropping because Europe is on the verge of a new recession while Japan is already there. 
China’s growth, which drove the much-hyped “commodities supercycle” of the 2000s, also has slowed a lot. 
Russia may be the biggest loser of all from falling oil prices. It needs crude of $100 a barrel to balance its budget and keep its citizens quiescent while President Vladimir Putin and his cronies line their pockets in Russia’s kleptocracy.  
Result: The Russian ruble has plummeted 30% this year, and Russia has already spent 15% of its foreign-currency reserves to prop up its faltering currency and economy. Moody’s recently downgraded its sovereign debt to two notches above junk, while Putin himself acknowledged that a “catastrophic” fall in oil prices was “entirely possible.” “I wouldn’t rule out a debt default crisis if the price of oil continues to fall,” wrote economist Ed Yardeni.

Oil, other commodities will be in the dumps for another decade

The current commodities supercycle ran from 1998 through 2011, said Driscoll — the same length as the last one. “We think of the peak in the commodities supercycle as roughly early April 2011,” he told me.  
That’s when copper topped $4.40 a pound; it’s barely above $3 now, a drop of more than 30%. Gold, which peaked around $1,900 an ounce that year, changed hands near $1,150 on Monday, almost 40% off its high. 
And Brent crude oil, trading just above $80 a barrel, is more than 40% below its July 2008 record high of $146. 
How low can prices go? Driscoll says oil may bottom out around $50 a barrel over the next 10 years, and gold at about $800. That’s more than three times the yellow metal’s lowest price from 1999 and around its peak in the previous supercycle.

Oil drop is big boon for global stock markets, if it lasts

Morgan Stanley said the over-supply in the global crude market is “vastly overstated”, and likely to reverse soon.

Tumbling oil prices are a bonanza for global stock markets, provided the chief cause is a surge in crude supply rather than a collapse in economic demand. 
HSCB says the index of world equities rose 25pc on average over the twelve months following a 30pc drop in oil prices, comparable to the latest slide. Equities rose 19pc in real terms. 
But it comes at a time when stocks are already high if measured by indicators of underlying value. The Schiller 10-year price earnings ratio is at nose-bleed levels above 27. Tobin’s Q, a gauge based on replacement costs, is stretched to near historic highs.
Much of the immediate glut is due to a supply surge of 800,000 barrels a day in Libya after export terminals were reopened over the early summer following a truce by tribal militias. This truce is already unravelling. Output has dropped by 400,000 barrels a day since September. 
“Libya is getting worse by the day,” said Alastair Newton, head of political risk at Nomura. “Iraq is producing at the top of its band, and Russia’s output always goes down in the winter for weather reasons. The 2m barrel surplus could disappear in no time.”
DYI 

Monday, November 24, 2014



John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
The upshot is this. Quantitative easing only “works” to the extent that default-free, low interest liquidity is viewed as an inferior holding. When investor psychology shifts toward increasing risk aversion – which we can reasonably measure through the uniformity or dispersion of market internals, the variation of credit spreads between risky and safe debt, and investor sponsorship as reflected in price-volume behavior – default-free, low-interest liquidity is no longer considered inferior. It’s actually desirable, so creating more of the stuff is not supportive to stock prices. We observed exactly that during the 2000-2002 and 2007-2009 plunges, which took the S&P 500 down by half in each episode, even as the Fed was easing persistently and aggressively. A shift toward increasing internal dispersion and widening credit spreads leaves risky, overvalued, overbought, overbullish markets extremely vulnerable to air-pockets, free-falls, and crashes.
As a side note, the reason I emphasize that the effect of QE is psychological is that one can calculate the impact that a given period of zero interest rates should have on the discounted value of future cash flows. I’ll say this again – if historically normal equity valuations and prospective returns are associated with short-term rates averaging, say, 4%, one can show with straightforward discounting arithmetic that the expectation of zero interest rates for 3-4 years will result in a justified 12-16% increase in valuations over and above historical norms. On valuation measures that are best correlated with actual subsequent S&P 500 total returns (and many popular measures are quite weak on that record), we presently estimate that the S&P 500 is about 115% above historical valuation norms.
Put another way, we estimate nominal total returns of less than 1.4% annually for the S&P 500 over the coming decade, with negative total returns over the next 8 years. So if one believes that zero interest rates are likely to persist for another 8 years, and that stocks should be priced with zero return or premium for risk, stocks are probably fairly valued. If one believes that zero interest rates are likely to persist for another three decades, but stocks should be priced with normal historical risk premiums over and above risk-free rates, stocks are also probably fairly valued. In every other universe, stocks are about double historically normal valuations, even adjusting for the likelihood of several more years of zero short-term rates.
DYI Comments:  If one is to believe in averages and markets regressing back to their mean (which DYI ardently believes in!) when they overshoot the U.S. market as measured using dividends is 130% above historical valuation norms not 115%.  The math is easy and straight forward:  (53 - 23) / 23 x 100 = 130%.....The 53 is our current price to dividends (1 / 1.87% dividend yield S&P 500) and 23 is the long term average since 1871 (4.42%) expressed as price to dividends as reported by Multpl.com.

Anyway you look at this market it has become nothing more than a speculators market who are buying in hope of selling at an even higher price to another speculator.  It is all fun and games until someone gets hurt and sentiment changes  to that southern direction.  In the meantime it is possible for the market to be pushed higher due to our lower oil prices.  If this occurs our sentiment indicator will go back to a secular top (year 2000) as once again the ten year estimated average annual return will be NEGATIVE!

Market Sentiment

Smart Money buys aggressively!
Capitulation
Despondency--Short Term Bonds
Max-Pessimism *Market Bottoms*MMF
Depression
Hope
Relief *Market returns to Mean* 

Smart Money buys the Dips!
Optimism--Gold
Media Attention
Enthusiasm

Smart Money - Sells the Rallies!
Thrill
Greed
Delusional---Long Term Bonds
Max-Optimism *Market Tops*--REITs
Denial of Problem--U.S. Stocks  YOU ARE HERE!
Anxiety
Fear
Desperation

Smart Money Buys Aggressively!

Capitulation

THE GREAT WAIT CONTINUES!

DYI 

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Gang of 10 yobs hassle pro boxer's wife - watch as he takes care of business


This is the moment three lecherous yobs paid the painful price for hassling a professional boxer's wife by trying to drag her into a VIP room of a Russian nightclub. 
Unfortunately for the trio, the woman's husband is none other than Nicolai Vlasenko, a 29-year-old professional boxer and martial arts expert. 
Vlasenko was in the toilets when the thugs were bothering his wife - and, unsurprisingly, he wasn't too pleased when he returned to find her in trouble. 
According to an eyewitness, one of the thugs, Leonti Yevdokimov, 33, - part of a gang blamed for a lot of petty crime in the area - had suggested the boxer might want to continue their discussion outside. 
Judging by the footage, he agreed.
DYI Comment:  Just click the headline to see the video.  Nice to see a man taking care of his wife!

DYI 

Thursday, November 20, 2014

The world economy is flying with only one engine

The global economy is like a jetliner that needs all of its engines operational to take off and steer clear of clouds and storms. Unfortunately, only one of its four engines is functioning properly: the Anglosphere (the United States and its close cousin, the United Kingdom). 
The second engine – the eurozone – has now stalled after an anaemic post-2008 restart. Indeed, Europe is one shock away from outright deflation and another bout of recession. Likewise, the third engine, Japan, is running out of fuel after a year of fiscal and monetary stimulus. And emerging markets (the fourth engine) are slowing sharply as decade-long global tailwinds – rapid Chinese growth, zero policy rates and quantitative easing by the US Federal Reserve, and a commodity super-cycle – become headwinds. 
Major emerging countries are also in trouble. Of the five Brics economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), three (Brazil, Russia, and South Africa) are close to recession. The biggest, China, is in the midst of a structural slowdown that will push its growth rate closer to 5% in the next two years, from above 7% now. At the same time, much-touted reforms to rebalance growth from fixed investment to consumption are being postponed until President Xi Jinping consolidates his power. China may avoid a hard landing, but a bumpy and rough one appears likely. 
Rather than boosting credit to the real economy, unconventional monetary policies have mostly lifted the wealth of the very rich – the main beneficiaries of asset reflation. But now reflation may be creating asset-price bubbles, and the hope that macro-prudential policies will prevent them from bursting is so far just that – a leap of faith.
DYI

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

UPDATED Ferocious U.S. snow blankets parts of New York, blamed for 7 deaths

A ferocious storm dumped massive piles of snow on parts of upstate New York, trapping residents in their homes and stranding motorists on roadways, as temperatures in all 50 states fell to freezing or below.

DYI Comment:  Excellent reporting by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) video is direct and to the point.

DYI 

Gold Stock Apocalypse Is Epic Buying Opportunity


Since their all-time record high in September 2011, gold stocks as measured by the HUI yardstick have lost a gut-wrenching 76.9% in 3.2 years. They had bottomed decisively in mid-2012, but then the US Federal Reserve started levitating general stock markets with its wildly-unprecedented third quantitative-easing campaign. So capital started to migrate out of alternative investments, a realm long dominated by gold. 
While gold stocks indeed should've been sold with gold weaker, the magnitude of selling they suffered was far beyond anything justifiable fundamentally. This ultimately culminated in the latest gold-stock capitulation where the HUI plunged to 11.3-year lows! Think about that a second. Gold stocks were just trading at prices not seen since July 2003. Pretty much the entire secular gold-stock bull had been fully erased. 
Do gold stocks deserve to trade today as if gold was at just $350? Heck no! Last week when gold stocks' latest capitulation low was carved, the gold price was up near $1150. That was 3.3x higher than the last time the gold stocks traded at recent levels! It makes no fundamental sense whatsoever for gold stocks to trade as if gold was at $350 when it was actually $1150. Their core fundamentals are now vastly better. 
Contrarians tough enough to fight the herd and buy low are going to multiply their fortunes, again. After the last time gold stocks traded at remotely-comparable lows in 2008's stock panic, they were destined to more than quadruple over the next several years. No sector moves in one direction forever, or remains disconnected from its underlying fundamentals forever. And this certainly includes the despised gold stocks.

DYI Comments:  No doubt the gold miners have been pummeled, thrashed, pounded into a peak to trough 77% decline!  For those of you who need to re-balance selling off shares of your high flying generalized stock fund or pulling a few dollars from your short term bond fund to buy shares of your favorite gold mining fund makes all the sense in the world. Markets can stay pounded down far longer than one can believe is possible despite the excellent value for this sector; when the up turn will occur DYI has no idea (nor does anyone else!).

The Dow to Gold Ratio is currently at 15 to 1 making gold (not the miners) a bit pricey in relationship to stocks.  This buying opportunity is "not an all in" but up to a maximum of 20% or less of one's portfolio is warranted.

Long term chart Dow to Gold Ratio.
  
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Here is where DYI stands today with our model portfolio.

AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO - ACTIVE ALLOCATION - 11/1/14

Active Allocation Bands (excluding cash) 0% to 60%
81% - Cash -Short Term Bond Index - VBIRX
17% -Gold- Precious Metals & Mining - VGPMX
 2% -Lt. Bonds- Long Term Bond Index - VBLTX
 0% -Stocks- Total Stock Market Index - VTSAX
 0%-REIT's- REIT Index Fund - VGSLX
[See Disclaimer]

 This blog site is not a registered financial advisor, broker or securities dealer and The Dividend Yield Investor is not responsible for what you do with your money.
This site strives for the highest standards of accuracy; however ERRORS AND OMISSIONS ARE ACCEPTED!
The Dividend Yield Investor is a blog site for entertainment and educational purposes ONLY.
The Dividend Yield Investor shall not be held liable for any loss and/or damages from the information herein.
Use this site at your own risk.

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS.

DYI

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Japan's economy makes surprise fall into recession

Tokyo store
Japan's economy unexpectedly shrank for the second consecutive quarter, leaving the world's third largest economy in technical recession. 
Gross domestic product (GDP) fell at an annualised 1.6% from July to September, compared with forecasts of a 2.1% rise. 
That followed a revised 7.3% contraction in the second quarter, which was the biggest fall since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Economists were expecting Japan's economy to grow by 2% in the third (most current) quarter, after having plunged a historic 7.6% in the second quarter. Instead, the GDP fell an additional 1.6% in the third quarter. And since the GDP has now fallen for two months in a row, Japan's economy is officially in a recession. The fall into recession is being blamed on a sales tax increase from 5% to 8% in April, which caused consumers to stop spending. 
Japan's prime minister Shinzo Abe will put any further planned tax increases on hold, and will dissolve the Lower House and hold a "snap election" in December. 
Japan's economy has been in a deflationary spiral since the early 1990s, following a huge real estate and stock market bubble in the 1980s, and a huge crash that began in January, 1990. In the spring of 2013, Shinzo Abe launched something called "Abenomics," involving a huge quantitative easing program. Japan's central bank "printed" hundreds of billions of dollars and used it to buy bonds. This is similar to America's recent quantitative easing program which, at its peak, put $85 billion per month into the banking system. 
The objective of Abenomics was to end deflation once and for all. But instead of stimulating spending, all the money just poured into the stock market, benefiting only a minority of rich people. The vast majority of Japanese people have incomes that are stagnant or falling. 
This has also been a criticism of America's quantitative easing program. In the U.S., the median income has been falling, but the stock market has been pushed up into bubble levels, with the S&P Price/Earnings ratio (stock valuations) close to 19, an astronomically high level, much higher than the historical average of 14.

DYI 

These Go to Eleven 
John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
The current market environment joins the full range of ingredients that have characterized the most extreme market peaks – and preceded the deepest market plunges – in more than a century of history.


On the basis of measures that are best correlated with actual subsequent market returns (and plenty of popular measures are not), we observe the richest market valuations in history with the exception of the 2000 peak.

Even then, current levels on the best performing measures are only about 15-20% below the 2000 extreme. Current valuations now exceed those observed in 1901, 1929, 1937, 1972, 1987, and 2007. The 5-year market advance from the 2009 low, encouraged by yield-seeking speculation, now places the S&P 500 at more than double the level that we would associate with historically normal returns. 
Put another way, we presently estimate S&P 500 prospective nominal total returns of just 1.4% annually over the coming decade, with zero or negative average total returns out to roughly 2022. 
These valuations are coupled with extremely overbought conditions and the most lopsided bullish sentiment since 1987. Bearish sentiment is now down to 14.8% (Investor’s Intelligence), close to the low of 13.3% reached in September. Prior to this year, the last two times sentiment was nearly as lopsided were the April 2011 peak (just before a near-20% dive), and the October 2007 peak.
DYI Comment:  Professor Hussman is in tune with our dividend yield model for estimating forward returns.

Estimated 10yr return on Stocks

Using 5.4% as the historical growth rate of dividends and 4.0% as the ending yield.

Starting Yield*---------return**
1.0%-----------------------(-5.7%)
1.5%-----------------------(-1.7%)
 
2.0%------------------------1.3% You are Here!
2.5%------------------------3.8%

3.0%------------------------5.9%
3.5%------------------------7.8%
4.0%------------------------9.4%
4.5%-----------------------10.9%

5.0%-----------------------12.3%
5.5%-----------------------13.6%
6.0%-----------------------14.8%
6.5%-----------------------15.9%

7.0%-----------------------17.0%
7.5%-----------------------18.0%
8.0%-----------------------19.0%

*Starting dividend yield of the S&P500-**10yr estimated average annual rate of return.

Anyone buying at these lofty levels are simply speculating in hope of selling  over priced merchandise (stocks) to another speculator who in turn desires to repeat the process until they run out of speculators (fools).  Two thirds of your return is based upon the compounding effect of dividends, the remaining one third is price change which can add or subtract from your total return. Current dividend yield is 1.89% which is at the very low end of the historical spectrum as yields normalize either through dividend increases (which would take decades at high growth to normalize) or PRICE DROPS.

 

Back to the Nineties

November 7, 2014 

From the perspective of my macro Credit analytical framework, history’s greatest Credit Bubble advances almost methodically toward the worst-case scenario. After more than two decades, the Bubble has gone to the heart of contemporary “money” and perceived safe government debt. The Bubble has fully encompassed the world – economies as well as securities and asset markets. And we now have the world’s major central banks all trapped in desperate “nuclear-option” “money”-printing operations. Moreover, serious cracks at the “periphery” of the global Bubble now feed “terminal phase” Bubble excess at the “core.” Indeed, “hot money” finance exits faltering periphery markets to play Bubbling king dollar securities markets. Euphoria reigns. In many ways, the Bubble that gathered powerful momentum in the Nineties (with king dollar) has come full circle.
Greenspan states that “everybody knew there was a Bubble in 2008.” As someone that studied, chronicled and warned of the Bubble, I recall things quite differently. Will everybody have known it was a Bubble in 2014? And, actually, wasn’t it perfectly rational to participate in stocks, bonds and asset markets – even on a leveraged basis – during the Nineties and right up to 2008, with the Fed (and Washington policymaking) manipulating, intervening and backstopping finance and the securities markets? 
Is it not similarly rational to speculate in stocks, bonds, corporate Credit and derivatives today? I would strongly argue that rational responses to government-induced market distortions are instrumental to major Bubbles. 
Meanwhile, U.S. equities bulls just love (Back to the Nineties) king dollar. Scoffing at global crisis dynamics, those seeing the U.S. as the only place to invest are further emboldened. 
And, no doubt about it, “hot money” flows could further inflate the U.S. Bubble. 
Speculative flows (underpinned by Kuroda and Draghi) have surely helped counter the removal of Federal Reserve stimulus. Yet this only increases systemic vulnerability to de-risking/de-leveraging dynamics. At the end of the day, it’s difficult for me to look ahead to 2015 and see how the household, corporate and governmental sectors generate sufficient Credit growth to keep U.S. asset prices levitated and the Bubble economy adequately financed. Perhaps this helps explain why - with stocks at record highs, the economy expanding and unemployment down to 5.8% - 10-year Treasury yields closed Friday at a lowly 2.30%. 
 

The U.S. Money Supply Decelerates in October, the Risk of an Economic Bust Just Went Up

The U.S. money supply as represented by TMS2 (True “Austrian” Money Supply), our broadest and preferred U.S. money supply aggregate, posted a year-over-year rate of growth of 7.7% in October, down from an 8.3% rate in September. Now down 880 basis points (53%) from the current boom-bust monetary inflation cycle high of 16.5% posted in November 2009, this is the lowest year-over-year rate of growth in TMS2 since the 6.9% rate seen in November 2008 (month 4 in this 75 month long and counting inflation cycle). As a result, although we are not yet ready to declare that the economy is staring at an imminent bust in the face, this decelerating trend in the rate of monetary inflation is bringing us ever so closer to one. To investors and speculators alike, we say time to be especially cautious.
TMS2 YoY 1

Regression to Trend: A Perspective on Long-Term Market Performance

The regression trendline drawn through the data clarifies the secular pattern of variance from the trend — those multi-year periods when the market trades above and below trend. That regression slope, incidentally, represents an annualized growth rate of 1.75%.
The peak in 2000 marked an unprecedented 148% overshooting of the trend — nearly double the overshoot in 1929. The index had been above trend for two decades, with one exception: it dipped about 13% below trend briefly in March of 2009. But at the beginning of November 2014, it is 82% above trend, down from 88% above trend the month before. 
In sharp contrast, the major troughs of the past saw declines in excess of 50% below the trend. If the current S&P 500 were sitting squarely on the regression, it would be around the 1062 level. 
If the index should decline over the next few years to a level comparable to previous major bottoms, it would fall to the low 500 range.
Click to View

Additional article(s) worth reading


John Hussman: The Stock Market Is Overvalued By 100%

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Meet the family business about to turn 500 years old

This Dorset-based butchers is run by the 25th generation of the original owners

RJ Balson & Son has been named the oldest family firm in the South West.The Dorset butchers was founded in 1515, and is now run by the 25th generation of the original family owners.The firm’s founder, John Balson, started with a market stall in the first half of the 16th century.Further research by the Institute for Family Business claims it is the oldest firm in the whole of Britain.
The top 10 oldest family businesses
RankingBusiness FoundedCounty Industry 
RJ Balson & Son 1515 Dorset Butchers 
GA Baker & Son 1741 GloucestershireJewellers 
Stewarts Garden Centres 1742 Dorset Garden centres 
Bradfords Building Supplies 1770 Somerset Building supplies 
Hall & Woodhouse 1777 Dorset Brewers 
Averys 1793 Bristol Wine merchants 
Palmers Brewery 1794 Dorset Brewers 
Waite & Sons 1804 GloucestershireJewellers 
Alfred Smith & Son 1811 Cornwall Furniture 
10 W Carter & Son 1817 Wiltshire Jewellers 
DYI 

Monday, November 10, 2014

Will this Market continue to Advance?? What about a discussion of RISK??? "THE GREAT WAIT CONTINUES!"

Why This Bull Market Will Keep Running
Jim Stack says this is no time to sell stocks.  Even though we’re more than 5½ years into a bull market, he believes low oil prices and low interest rates, along with rising consumer and business confidence, will power this bull market ahead for many months to come. In fact, he currently recommends that investors keep 83% of their assets in stocks.
DYI Comments:  As with all markets they can over or under shoot that can surprise even the most ardent value player.  No doubt with oil prices receding there is precedent for higher equity prices.

DYI's

The Oil Indicator

 11/1/14

Oil Prices:  11/1/13..... $100.13
                    10/24/14.......$82.71   DOWN 18%
 OIL INDICATOR POSITIVE

Oil prices are well known for their volatility in the short term, longer term due to dwindling reserves energy prices are in a secular bull market.  Technologies such as fracking will extend the life of oil fields but major new discoveries arrive at a snails pace far slower than the world's growth.  

As long as prices rise in a slow and orderly pace our economy can adjust to those changes, however if prices spike (international tensions, war etc.) high energy costs behave as a massive deflationary tax. This will send our economy tumbling down and very possibly the U.S. stock market.

If oil prices rise greater than 75% from one year-earlier level, investors at that time should shift their portfolio geared towards deflationary times.  This would be oil indicator as negative.

If oil prices rise from one year-earlier less than 10% or drop then the inflationary play is in effect; a positive for economic growth along with possible higher stock prices.

Where to find one year-earlier oil prices?  Alaska Department of Revenue    

                        Oil indicator positive                              Oil indicator negative
REIT's                          15%                                                           5%
Energy                          25%                                                         10%
P.M.'s                           20%                                                          10%
Small Caps                  40%                                                          10%
Lt. Gov't Bonds             0%                                                          65%


Are stocks nothing more than commodity driven speculations or are they companies expected to deliver cash flows into the hands of investors?  Here is what John Hussman has to say regarding valuations;  Do the Lessons of History No Longer Apply?
For example, every long-term security is fundamentally a claim on a very long-duration stream of cash flows that can be expected to be delivered into the hands of investors over time. 
For a given stream of expected cash flows and a given current price, we can quickly estimate the long-term rate of return that the security can be expected to achieve (assuming the cash flows are delivered as expected).  
Likewise, for a given stream of expected cash flows and a “required” long-term rate of return, we can calculate the current price that would be consistent with that long-term rate of return.  
The failure to understand the inverse relationship between current prices and future returns is why investors frequently argue that rich equity valuations are “justified” by low interest rates, without understanding that they are really saying that dismal future equity returns are perfectly acceptable.
DYI Continues:  My dividend model using historical averages and simple algebra has a 90% plus correlation for your future return.  For your risk, you are expecting an average annual return of 1.3% for stocks bought or held today for the next 10 years. Go to sleep like Rip Van Winkle and awake 10 years from now and your return (before fee's, trading costs, taxes and inflation) will be very close to 1.3%.  Of course you will be awake during those 10 years and you can expect one heck of a roller coaster ride.

Estimated 10yr return on Stocks

Using 5.4% as the historical growth rate of dividends and 4.0% as the ending yield.

Starting Yield*---------return**
1.0%-----------------------(-5.7%)
1.5%-----------------------(-1.7%) 

2.0%------------------------1.3%  YOU ARE HERE!

2.5%------------------------3.8%

3.0%------------------------5.9%
3.5%------------------------7.8%
4.0%------------------------9.4%
4.5%-----------------------10.9%

5.0%-----------------------12.3%
5.5%-----------------------13.6%
6.0%-----------------------14.8%
6.5%-----------------------15.9%

7.0%-----------------------17.0%
7.5%-----------------------18.0%
8.0%-----------------------19.0%

*Starting dividend yield of the S&P500-**10yr estimated average annual rate of return.

If Jim Stack is correct and this market powers up to even higher levels pushing down future returns negative DYI will move back up our sentiment indicator from Denial of Problem to MAX-OPTIMISM.  My market sentiment indicator is based upon long term returns (10 years of more) which is to say it is secular as opposed to cyclical time frame.  If this happens, this will mark a double secular top!

Market Sentiment

Smart Money buys aggressively!
Capitulation
Despondency--Short Term Bonds
Max-Pessimism *Market Bottoms*MMF
Depression
Hope
Relief *Market returns to Mean* 

Smart Money buys the Dips!
Optimism--Gold
Media Attention
Enthusiasm

Smart Money - Sells the Rallies!
Thrill
Greed
Delusional---Long Term Bonds
Max-Optimism *Market Tops*--REITs
Denial of Problem--U.S. Stocks
Anxiety
Fear
Desperation

Smart Money Buys Aggressively!
Capitulation

To Jim Stack's credit he concluded by saying:

Stack, however, is nothing if not flexible. He remains a nervous bull. “Bull markets do not last forever,” he says. He thinks we’re in the latter third of the bull market, and that sometime in the next two or three years the economy will fall into recession. Typically, bear markets begin three to six months before recessions start. 
What’s more, Stack expects the coming bear market to be a doozy. That’s because every bear market save one since 1950 has taken back at least half of the gains of the preceding bull market. He thinks the next bear market will subtract 35% or more from the major stock indexes. But that’s tomorrow’s worry. For now, the bull market looks strong and healthy.

DYI Concludes:  This blog's main purpose is to educate and hopefully be a bit entertaining. It's your money and what you do with it is your decision as for DYI I'm standing pat with our model portfolio.

AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO - ACTIVE ALLOCATION - 11/1/14

Active Allocation Bands (excluding cash) 0% to 60%
81% - Cash -Short Term Bond Index - VBIRX
17% -Gold- Precious Metals & Mining - VGPMX
 2% -Lt. Bonds- Long Term Bond Index - VBLTX
 0% -Stocks- Total Stock Market Index - VTSAX
 0%-REIT's- REIT Index Fund - VGSLX
[See Disclaimer]

J. Paul Getty Quote!

Stock Market - "For as long as I can remember, veteran businessmen and investors - I among them - have been warning about the dangers of irrational stock speculation and hammering away at the theme that stock certificates are deeds of ownership and not betting slips.

The professional investor has no choice but to sit by quietly while the mob has its day, until enthusiasm or panic of the speculators and non-professionals has been spent. He is not impatient, nor is he even in a very great hurry, for he is an investor, not a gambler or a speculator.  There are no safeguards that can protect the emotional investor from himself."

This blog site is not a registered financial advisor, broker or securities dealer and The Dividend Yield Investor is not responsible for what you do with your money.
This site strives for the highest standards of accuracy; however ERRORS AND OMISSIONS ARE ACCEPTED!
The Dividend Yield Investor is a blog site for entertainment and educational purposes ONLY.
The Dividend Yield Investor shall not be held liable for any loss and/or damages from the information herein.
Use this site at your own risk.

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS.

"THE GREAT WAIT CONTINUES!"

DYI