Short Interest and Short Selling

Short interest provides investors a sense of the degree to which investors are betting on the decline of company’s stock price.

It’s easy for investors to understand that you can make money after buying shares of a stock when the stock price increases (going long).

Traders can also profit from a declining market by using a strategy called shorting stock.

Short selling is when a trader sells shares of a company they do not own, with the hope that the price will fall. Traders make money from short selling if the price of the stock falls and they lose if it rises.

Shorting a stock first involves borrowing the stock you wish to sell at a market-determined interest rate and then selling the borrowed equities to take advantage of a future market decline.

You profit by selling the borrowed stock at a higher price and subsequently buying it back at a lower price if the stock price falls.

The profit consists of the difference between the price at which the trader sold the stock and the price they buy it back at less any borrowing and transaction costs.

To successfully short sell, you need to identify stocks that are likely to decrease in value. Look for companies with weak financials, negative news, or a downtrend in their stock price.

When short selling, market timing is crucial. You want to enter the trade when the stock price is likely to decrease, and exit before it rebounds. Pay attention to technical indicators and price action to make informed decisions.

Why Short Interest Matters

Short interest is the number of shares that have been sold short but have not yet been covered or closed out.

Short interest is important to track because it can act as an indicator of market sentiment towards a particular stock. An increase in short interest can signal that investors have become more bearish, while a decrease in short interest can signal they have become more bullish.


Source:

  1.  https://www.benzinga.com/insights/short-sellers/24/03/38010258/pypl-analyzing-paypal-holdingss-short-interest
  2. https://www.benzinga.com/money/how-to-short-a-stock

Microsoft’s Stock Market Value Higher Than Apple’s

Microsoft’s stock market value closed higher than Apple’s for the first time since 2021, making it the world’s most valuable company based on market capitalization.

While both technology companies were part of the so-called Magnificent 7’s powerful rally in 2023, their fortunes have diverged year. Microsoft has risen 3.3%, while Apple has dropped 3.4%.

Microsoft has incorporated OpenAI’s technology across its suite of productivity software, a move that helped spark a rebound in its cloud-computing business.

Apple, meanwhile, has been grappling with tepid demand, including for the iPhone, its cash cow. Demand in China, a major market, has slumped as the country’s economy makes a slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and a resurgent Huawei erodes its market share.

Both tech stocks look relatively expensive in terms of price to their expected earnings, a common method of valuing publicly listed companies.

Apple is trading at a forward PE of 28, well above its average of 19 over the past 10 years. Microsoft is trading around 32 times forward earnings, above its 10-year average of 24.

Source: Noel Randewich,  Microsoft edges out Apple as world’s most valuable company, Reuters, January 12, 2024. https://www.yahoo.com/tech/microsoft-edges-apple-worlds-most-232740340.html

Repurchasing a Company’s Outstanding Shares

“When you are told that all repurchases are harmful to shareholders or to the country, or particularly beneficial to CEOs, you are listening to either an economic illiterate or a silver-tongued demagogue (characters that are not mutually exclusive).”  ~ Warren Buffet, Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s 2022 Annual Report

A very minor gain in per-share intrinsic value took place in 2022 through Berkshire Hathaway’s share repurchases.

Regarding share repurchases or buybacks, when the share count goes down, shareholder’s interest in Berkshire Hathaway’s many businesses goes up. Every small bit helps if repurchases are made at value-accretive prices, writes Warren E. Buffett, Chairman and CEO, Berkshire Hathaway.

On the other hand, when a company overpays for repurchases, the continuing shareholders lose. At such times, gains flow only to the selling shareholders and to the friendly, but expensive, investment banker who recommended the foolish purchases, states Buffett in the 2022 Annual Letter to shareholders.

Gains from value-accretive repurchases, it should be emphasized, benefit all owners – in every respect.

Imagine, if you will, three fully-informed shareholders of a local auto dealership, one of whom manages the business. Imagine, further, that one of the passive owners wishes to sell his interest back to the company at a price attractive to the two continuing shareholders. When completed, has this transaction harmed anyone? Is the manager somehow favored over the continuing passive owners? Has the public been hurt?

Yet, Washington politicians either knowingly miss state the truth or whom are “economic Illiterate”, imply otherwise


References:

  1. Warren E. Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2022 Annual Report, February 25, 2023, pg. 6. https://berkshirehathaway.com/2022ar/2022ar.pdf

Top Investing Rules

The number one rule of investing is: Don’t lose money. In other words, preservation of capital and management of risk are most important for investors than maximizing returns and income.

What follows are 10 proven rules of investing to make you a more successful — and hopefully to build wealth — investor.

Rule No. 1 – Never lose money

Legendary investor Warren Buffett stated that “Rule No. 1 is never lose money. Rule No. 2 is never forget Rule No. 1.” The Oracle of Omaha’s advice stresses the importance of avoiding loss in your portfolio. When you have more money in your portfolio, you can make more money on it. So, a loss hurts your future earning power.

What Buffett’s rule essentially means is don’t become enchanted with an investment’s potential gains. Instead, focus on downside investment risks and preservation of capital. If you don’t get enough upside for the risks you’re taking, the investment may not be worth it. Focus on the downside risk first, counsels Buffett.

Rule No. 2 – Think like an owner

Think like an owner. Remember that you are buying fractional ownership of companies, not just stocks.

While many investors treat stocks like gambling, real businesses stand behind those stocks. Stocks are a fractional ownership interest in a business, and as the business performs well or poorly over time, the company’s stock is likely to follow the direction of its profitability.

Investing involves an analysis of fundamentals, valuation, and an opinion about how the business will perform and produce cash in the future.

Rule No. 3 – Stick to your process

The best investors develop a process that is consistent and successful over many market cycles. Be discipline and don’t deviate from your process because of short-term challenges and market volatility.

One of the best strategies for investors: a long-term buy-and-hold approach. You can buy stock funds regularly in a 401(k), for example, and then hold on for decades. But it can be easy when the market gets volatile to deviate from your plan because you’re temporarily losing money. Don’t do it.

Rule No. 4 – Buy when everyone is fearful

When the market is down, investors often sell or simply quit paying attention to it. But that’s when the bargains are out in droves. It’s true: the stock market is the only market where the goods go on sale and everyone is too afraid to buy. As Buffett has famously said, “Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.”

The good news if you’re a 401(k) investor is that once you set up your account you don’t have to do anything else to continue buying in. This structure keeps your emotions out of the game.

Rule No. 5 – Keep your investing discipline

It’s important that investors continue to save over time, in rough climates and good, even if they can put away only a little. By continuing to invest regularly, you’ll get in the habit of living below your means even as you build up a nest egg of assets in your portfolio over time.

The 401(k) is an ideal vehicle for this discipline, because it takes money from your paycheck automatically without you having to decide to do so. It’s also important to pick your investments skillfully – here’s how to select your 401(k) investments.

Rule No. 6 – Stay diversified

Keeping your portfolio diversified is important for reducing risk. Having your portfolio in only one or two stocks is unsafe, no matter how well they’ve performed for you. So experts advise spreading your investments around in a diversified portfolio.

“If I had to choose one strategy to keep in mind when investing, it would be diversification,” says Mindy Yu, former director of investments at Stash. “Diversification can help you better weather the stock market’s ups and downs.”

The good news: diversification can be easy to achieve. An investment in a Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fund, which holds hundreds of investments in America’s top companies, provides immediate diversification for a portfolio. If you want to diversify more, you can add a bond fund or other choices such as a real estate fund that may perform differently in various economic climates.

Rule No. 7 – Avoid timing the market

Experts routinely advise clients to avoid trying to time the market, that is, trying to buy or sell at the right time. “Time in the market is more important than timing the market.” The idea here is that you need to stay invested to get compounding returns and avoid jumping in and out of the market.

And that’s what Veronica Willis, an investment strategy analyst at Wells Fargo Investment Institute recommends: “The best and worst days are typically close together and occur when markets are at their most volatile, during a bear market or economic recession. An investor would need expert precision to be in the market one day, out of the market the next day and back in again the following day.”

Experts typically advise buying regularly to take advantage of dollar-cost averaging.

Rule No. 8 – Understand everything you invest in

“Don’t invest in a product you don’t understand and ensure the risks have been clearly disclosed to you before investing,” says Chris Rawley, founder and CEO at Harvest Returns, a fintech marketplace for investing in agriculture.

Whatever you’re investing in, you need to understand how it works. If you’re buying a stock, you need to know why it makes sense to do so and when the stock is likely to profit. If you’re buying a fund, you want to understand its track record and costs, among other things. If you’re buying an annuity, it’s vital to understand how the annuity works and what your rights are.

Rule No. 9 – Review your investing plan and goals regularly

While it can be a good idea to set up a solid investing plan and then only tinker with it, it’s advisable to review your plan regularly to see if it still fits your needs. You could do this whenever you check your accounts for tax purposes.

“Remember, though, your first financial plan won’t be your last,” says Kevin Driscoll, vice president of advisory services at Navy Federal Financial Group in the Pensacola area. “You can take a look at your plan and should review it at least annually – particularly when you reach milestones like starting a family, moving, or changing jobs.”

Rule No. 10 – Stay in the game, have an emergency fund

It’s absolutely vital that you have an emergency fund, not only to tide you over during tough times, but also so that you can stay invested long term.

“Keep 5 percent of your assets in cash, because challenges happen in life,” says Craig Kirsner, president of retirement planning services at Stuart Estate Planning Wealth Advisors in Pompano Beach, Florida. He adds: “It makes sense to have at least six months of expenses in your savings account.”

If you must sell some of your investments during a rough spot, it’s often likely to be when they are down. An emergency fund can help you stay in the investing game longer. Money that you might need in the short term (less than three years) needs to stay in cash.

Investing is effectively about doing the right things and about avoiding the wrong things. And, it’s important to manage your temperament (emotions) so that you’re focused and disciplined to do the right things even as they may feel risky, scary or unsafe.

References:

https://www.bankrate.com/investing/golden-rules-of-investing/

Federal Reserve Policy and the Stock Market

“Don’t Fight the Fed” is an old market cliché that was very applicable during the longest bull market in US history. It is also very applicable currently as the Fed implemented policies to slow the economy by raising interest rates and selling assets from its balance sheet. ~ Chris Vermeulen, Seeking Alpha

In 1977, the US Congress officially gave the Federal Reserve a multi-part mandate to maximize employment, maintain prices near an acceptable inflation target of around 2%, and moderate long-term interest rates. In general terms, Fed policies are supposed to stimulate the economy when it’s weak and cool it when it’s too hot.

The adage highlights the strong correlation between Federal Reserve policy and the direction of the stock market.

“Don’t Fight the Fed” embodied the sentiment that if the Fed was stimulating the economy with accommodative policies, it made little sense to bet against the market’s bullish trend. Effectively, when the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy is loose, markets tend to move higher, volatility is subdued, and investors’ risk is limited, so it makes sense to stay invested and ride the wave. Why “fight the Fed” by selling stocks when it’s on your side?

The Fed held interest rates near zero and instituted a policy called quantitative easing—where it bought mortgage-backed securities and U.S. Treasuries to increase the money supply in hopes of spurring lending and capital investment.

When the Federal Reserve is on a mission to slow the economy down in order to tap down inflation, technology and growth stocks are generally hurt as the cost of capital and borrowing money increases. Thus, the old adage, “Don’t fight the Fed” becomes an important one for investors to abide.

With inflation being persistent in the U.S., Fed officials have taken a new monetary stance that is far less appealing for investors.

The Fed is in Quantitative Tightening mode and has raised interest rates and sold assets from its balance sheet. This calendar year, the Fed has raised interest rates four times and has begun shrinking its balance sheet after years of quantitative easing pushed its holdings to nearly $9 trillion. Its intent is to cool the economy and reduce inflation.

The adage, “Don’t fight the Fed”, is a warning to avoid stocks, or at least to take a more conservative approach to investing.

As a result, investors should take a more cautious approach in this tightening environment and prioritize defensive stocks with pristine balance sheets and steady revenue growth that can survive inflationary pressure.

Inflationary economies tend to punish unprofitable technology and growth companies, despite their potential. Without profits or cash flow, it’s simply too hard to improve quarter over quarter at a time when money becomes more expensive to borrow.


References:

  1. https://www.fortunebuilders.com/best-stocks-to-buy/
  2. https://fortune.com/2022/09/14/dont-fight-the-fed-new-meaning-inflation-economy-dan-niles-satori-fund/amp/
  3. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4544537-dont-fight-the-fed

Inflation Hits Disney’s Magic Kingdom…Ticket Prices Increase

Walt Disney World is raising the range of prices for some of its single-day, single-park tickets at Magic Kingdom, Epcot, and Hollywood Studios in Orlando, FL ~ Janet H. Cho

Families will have to splurge more for their Walt Disney World vacations starting December 8, 2022, because some single-day, single-park ticket prices at Disney’s Magic Kingdom, Epcot, and Hollywood Studios in Orlando could cost as much as $189 a person during the nine-day peak period around Christmas and New Year’s Day.

  • Single-day ticket prices to Disney’s Magic Kingdom Park are increasing to between $124 and $189 a person. The $189 ticket price is specifically for that peak holiday season around Christmas and the new year, and not all year, the Disney spokesperson told Barron’s.
  • Single-day tickets to Disney’s Animal Kingdom are staying at the current $109 to $159 range for visitors ages 10 and up.
  • Single-day tickets to Epcot are increasing to a range of $114 to $179; and
  • Single-day tickets to Hollywood Studios are increasing to $124 to $179.
  • Instead of the current system, which lets visitors make their theme park reservations only after buying their tickets, the new single-day tickets automatically include theme park reservations. The price of the Park Hopper option that lets people visit a second park the same day for $65 more is also changing.

What’s Next: Except for renewals by current annual pass holders, Disney has paused new sales of all but its Pixie Dust annual passes, available to FL residents only, which are staying at $399 a person. It is raising the price of its other annual passes, including the Incredi-Pass, which is going up to $1,399.

Under a separate program, discounted multiday tickets for active or retired members of the U.S. military, their families and friends, are increasing by $20 to $369 plus tax a person for the five-day ticket package plus Park Hopper, or $349 plus tax a person for the four-day package.

Disney also added more blackout dates when military tickets aren’t eligible, including around Christmas and New Year’s this year, and around spring break and Thanksgiving next year.


References:

  1. https://www.barrons.com/articles/disney-visits-will-cost-more-in-florida-51668627930

The Impact of Increasing Interest Rates on the Economy and Investing

The Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) implements monetary policy that has a broad impact on the US economy. One of the ways the Fed impacts its dual mandate of managing unemployment and inflation is to periodically raise or lower interest rates.

The Federal Reserve in November 2022 raised interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point — or 75 basis points — for the fourth time in the calendar year, bringing its key benchmark borrowing rate that rules all other interest rates in the economy up to a target range of 3.75-5 percent, where it hasn’t been since early 2008, according to a Bankrate.

The fed funds rate matters because it has ripple effects on every aspect of consumers’ financial lives, from how much they’re charged to borrow to how much they earn in interest when they save. And, changing interest rates is one of the main tools that the Fed can use to cool down inflation.  

Inflation is the increase in the prices of goods and services over time and occurs when the demand for those goods and services exceeds supply. Inflation also represents a loss of purchasing power.

Typically, the Fed raises interest rates in times of economic expansion and does so to prevent the economy from overheating. The opposite is true when interest rates are cut, which typically occurs when the economy is in a down trend. 

To raise interest rates, the Fed changes the overnight rates at which it lends money to banks. That sets off a chain reaction that impacts the rates banks charge to businesses and individuals. When rates rise, the impact on the economy includes:

  • Borrowing costs rise for businesses, which can reduce investments in new plants, equipment, marketing, and physical expansion.
  • Borrowing costs rise for consumers, which reduces consumer spending, home buying, and investing.
  • Savings accounts and other low-risk investments earn more interest, making investing in low-risk instruments more attractive.

Markets adjust, with fixed income securities generally reducing in value and equities reacting in a mixed fashion depending on how much a rate rise is expected to affect specific types of businesses.

The U.S. Interest Rate Historical Timeline

The chart below shows the history of Fed Funds Rates going back to 1954.

The U.S. Interest Rate Historical Timeline The chart below shows the history of Fed Funds Rates going back to 1954.

Chart of Fed Funds Rate (Macrotrends)

Rising interest rates impact investing in several ways, some of which are fundamental and some of which are perceptual.

Adding to the dilemma for many investors is the inflation outlook and the question of how transitory or persistent that inflation will be. From a rate perspective alone, rising rates can be expected to have the following impact:

  • Prices of bonds and other fixed-income investments will weaken with rising rates, especially the longer-term instruments.
  • Rates offered on new bonds will rise, making them somewhat more competitive with equities.
  • Rates should rise in bank products such as CDs, bringing them back on the radar for investors.
  • When rates rise, stocks tend to fall — when rates fall, stocks rise.

Equity market reactions will be mixed, depending on the effects of higher rates on different companies and industries. Companies that are more leveraged will incur higher costs. Companies with high-ticket products that rely on consumer credit may weaken. On the whole, rising rates should also dampen enthusiasm to speculate, given higher borrowing costs.

“When interest rates are low, companies can assume debt at a low cost, which they may use to add team members or expand into new ventures,” says Brenton Harrison, CFP® professional based in Nashville, TN. “When rates rise, it’s harder for companies to borrow and more costly to manage what debt they already have, which impacts their ability to grow,” he adds. These higher costs may result in lower revenues, thus negatively impacting the value of the company.

Also keep in mind that as rates fall on savings accounts and certificates of deposit, investors generally seek out higher paying investments like stocks and are generally seen as a catalyst for growth in the market; in a rising rate environment investors tend to shift away from stock to places with less risk and safer returns. 

The specter of rising rates can also change the behavior of investors, many of whom may decide to put off purchases on credit or sell stocks that were purchased on margin, based more on their expectations than on near-term reality.

“Central banks tend to focus on fighting the last war,” says Scott Sumner, monetary policy chair at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. “If you have a lot of inflation, you get a more hawkish stance. If you’ve undershot your inflation target, then the Fed thinks, ‘Well, maybe we should’ve been more expansionary.’”


References:

  1. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4503025-federal-reserve-interest-rate-history
  2. https://www.bankrate.com/banking/federal-reserve/history-of-federal-funds-rate/
  3. https://www.businessinsider.com/personal-finance/how-do-interest-rates-affect-the-stock-market

Intro to Stock Options

“Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy; profit from folly rather than participate in it.” ~ Warren Buffett

Options are financial contracts whose values are tied to another underlying asset.

Options trading can be an appealing way to build wealth or manage risk, especially if you’re looking beyond just investing in stocks, bonds, and other assets in your portfolio.

But options trading can be a complex and challenging endeavor. The key to success in options trading is understanding the basics, including knowing what options are and the risks and rewards involved.

Options Basics

Options are contracts giving the purchaser the right to buy or sell a security, like a company stock or exchange-traded fund (ETF), at a fixed price within a specific period of time.

Options holders can buy or sell by a certain date at a set price, while sellers have to deliver the underlying asset. Investors can use options if they think an asset’s price will go up or down or to offset risk elsewhere in their portfolio.

Options are financial derivatives because they’re tied to an underlying asset. Other types of derivatives include futures, swaps, and forwards. Options that exist for futures contracts, such as S&P 500 or oil futures, are also popular among traders and investors.

A stock option typically represents 100 shares of the underlying stock. Stock options are common examples and are tied to shares of a single company. Meanwhile, ETF options give the right to buy or sell shares of an exchange-traded fund.

An option is a contract between the holder and the writer. The holder (buyer of the contract) pays the writer (seller of the contract) a price – the premium – for the right to buy or sell the underlying asset.

Option holders can buy or sell the underlying security by a specific date (called expiration date) at a set price (called the strike price). If the option holder exercises the contract on or before the expiration date, the option writers must deliver the underlying asset.

Many investors get interested in options trading because it can be a way to generate income, speculate on the price movements of securities, as well as a way to hedge against losses. However, with these possibilities, they are downsides to options trading too.

Before diving into the world of options contracts and options trading, it’s essential to understand the benefits and risks of this investment strategy.

Some of the main advantages of options trading are:

  • Options give you the chance to make money whether the market is going up, down, or sideways.
  • Options may be an inexpensive way to participate in the market without tying up as many funds as stock or bond trading requires.
  • Options provide investors with leverage, which can help magnify returns.

Some of the main drawbacks of options are:

  • Options trading is a complex and risky strategy and one that requires a great deal of knowledge and experience to succeed.
  • Options involve a great deal of leverage, which can amplify losses if the trade goes against the trader.
  • Options contracts are not always as liquid as other securities, making them harder to buy and sell.

Options are a complex, risky market and may not be suitable for everyone.

“Successful trading depends on the 3M`s – Mind, Method and Money. Beginners focus on analysis, but professionals operate in a three dimensional space. They are aware of trading psychology their own feelings and the mass psychology of the markets. Each trader needs to have a method for choosing specific stocks, options or futures as well as firm rules for pulling the trigger – deciding when to buy and sell. Money refers to how you manage your trading capital.” ~ Alexander Elder


References:

  1. https://www.sofi.com/options-trading-101/
  2. https://www.sofi.com/learn/content/how-to-trade-options/