A bubble developing in the stock market
Despite the benchmark S&P 500's recent decline, you've had to squint in order to see interesting market action over the past few weeks.
Traders are on summer vacation. Stock market volume is low. The S&P is near the level it sat at one month ago. At 2.72%, the yield on the 10-year Treasury is where it was one month ago. Gold has gained a few bucks over the past week.
But if you look under the hood, you see some amazing things... and the end of a predictable investment tragedy.
First among them is the developing bubble in Tesla Motors (TSLA).
Tesla is America's premier electric-car manufacturer. It was founded by the genius Elon Musk, who also founded online-payment firm PayPal (which was sold to eBay for more than $1 billion).
Driven by rising sales and hype over its new models, Tesla's stock has gone "parabolic" in 2013. Shares are up more than 400% this year. As you can see in the one-year chart below, shares have quadrupled since March. One analyst has called the company "the Apple of automotive."
Although Tesla delivered about 1% of Ford's sales in July, its market cap is $20 billion, compared with Ford's $64 billion market cap and GM's $48 billion market cap.
Tesla isn't turning a profit yet, so conventional price-to-earnings metrics aren't applicable here. However, Tesla is trading at an utterly absurd, dot-com-era valuation of 14 times trailing 12-month sales. Bloomberg reports the stock is trading for 260 times expected 2013 earnings.
Traders who attempt to profit from falling stocks – called short-sellers – have bet big on Tesla returning to a "less absurd" valuation. So far, they've been trampled. When you short a stock at $100 and it runs to $150, you suffer a 50% loss.
We have no doubt the Tesla bubble will suffer a gigantic correction. When it's finally pierced, Tesla will probably fall at least 50%. The problem for short-sellers is the timing.
Our resident trading expert, Jeff Clark, just analyzed the situation in Tesla... and details why a different stock is a better short-sale candidate right now. You can read Jeff's commentary in our free trading e-letter, Growth Stock Wire, right here.
Another impressive performance over the past few weeks comes from silver. Gold's more speculative, more volatile cousin has surged 28% in the past three weeks.
If you read and acted on our August 12 issue of the Growth Stock Wire, you weren't surprised by this move... and you've probably made huge short-term profits. You also probably realize why we urge every reader to become a "connoisseur of extremes"...
Like every investment and trading idea we're passionate about, we've published a short, useful, educational interview on being a "connoisseur of extremes." You can read it for free right here.
By saying you should become a "connoisseur of extremes," I'm saying you should always be on the hunt for situations where market conditions are in a drastically different state than normal.
By spotting these extreme states – and then betting on conditions heading in a normal direction – you can consistently make low-risk profits in any market. You can make a fortune trading extremes in stocks, commodities, currencies... anything.
Extremes can be fundamental in nature. For example, if a stock market's historical price-to-earnings multiple is 15, and a crash sends that market's price-to earnings multiple to just eight, you'd say that's an "extreme" situation... and you'd buy.
Extremes can also be related to price action. Jeff Clark regularly trades these extremes for short-term profits. And extremes can develop in sentiment readings, like surveys that monitor investor pessimism and optimism. You want to be bullish when the investment crowd is extremely bearish, and you want to be cautious when the investment crowd is extremely bullish.
In the August 12 Digest, we highlighted how speculative trading funds held an extreme position in silver... one that would resolve itself in a big short-term rally. As you can see from the chart below, that's exactly what happened. (Subscribers to DailyWealth Trader have made huge gains in our recommended silver trade.)
Finally, we note that fund manager Bill Ackman has liquidated an "extremely" bad investment. The media-darling manager has finally given up the ghost on his failed J.C. Penney venture...
We've detailed Ackman's position in J.C. Penney many times in the Digest (most recently here). Regular readers know we've always been very skeptical of Ackman's attempt to revive the struggling retailer...
In 2010, with J.C. Penney's business steadily declining, Ackman began building a huge position in the retailer. After gaining control of the company, Ackman fired the CEO and replaced him with Ron Johnson – a retail manager who achieved success with Apple.
As Porter and his research team reviewed the story in the August issue of Stansberry's Investment Advisory...
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Despite Ackman's best attempts, J.C. Penney lost more than $500 million in the fourth quarter of 2012 alone. It's still burning through mountains of cash every quarter. Shares have fallen from the $30 range to $13.75...
Yesterday, news that Ackman must finally agree with Porter's assessment hit the wires: Ackman just sold his entire J.C. Penney stake. Bloomberg estimates Ackman's loss is over $500 million.
New 52-week highs (as of 8/26/13): Chesapeake Energy (CHK) and Laredo Petroleum (LPI).
In today's mailbag, we take a break from piling on Robert Gifford. Send your notes to feedback@stansberryresearch.com.
"'Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt.' (Abraham Lincoln)'...
"For decades, whenever I heard or read this, it was attributed to Winston Churchill (except Winston just said speak not speak out). Then a few years ago someone attributed it to Mark Twain. Now I can add Abraham Lincoln. I'm wondering who will be next on the list. Perhaps Al Gore? After all he did invent the Internet." – Paid-up subscriber H. E. Erbes
"Even though I never really believed that a real economic recovery was taking place I held out hope that it was true. This past weekend I learned the truth at Bristol. You see the August Bristol, TN NASCAR race week is the most popular and well attended in all of NASCAR and during good years all the campgrounds and yards of close by homes are filled with campers and people needing parking spaces.
"This last week was even worse than last year which was worse than the previous 10 years. No camping area filled up and those campers that did show up came for a shorter amount of time and spent less than ever before. The parking areas did not even fill up. So no recovery yet. Maybe next year." – Paid-up subscriber M. Morin
Regards,
Brian Hunt
Delray Beach, Florida
August 27, 2013
