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    February 03, 2015

    Mid Cap and Large Cap Growth Remain in Favor

    There are no changes to the recommendations from Northlake’ Market Cap and Style models for February. Mid Cap and Large Cap Growth remain the favored themes. As a result, client positions following Northlake’s models will remain invested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) for at least another month.

    Underlying movement was in the direction of large cap and growth, suggesting the possibility that the Mid Cap signal could shift to Large Cap next month. This possibility plus the even stronger growth signal makes it unlikely that the Large Cap Growth signal from the Style model shifts for March.

    Within the Market Cap model, the shift toward large cap was concentrated in the internal composite. Specifically, the weak stock market in January was accompanied by deterioration in breadth (# of advancing vs. # of declining stocks) that led the Stocks Above 50-Day Moving Average and Percent of New Highs indicators to shift to large cap signals.

    The Style model saw two indicators move from value to growth, while just one went in the other direction. January’s market decline as driven by worries over the collapse in oil prices and unusual volatility in foreign currencies accompanied by strength in the U.S. dollar. This led investors to question the sustainability of global economic growth and whether the U.S. economy could continue its solid growth path if international economies weaken. This mixture of events favors growth stocks, which are viewed as less cyclical and economically sensitive than value stocks.

    The updated Market Cap and Style models have been in use for two months and so far the signals have been accurate. Large Cap Growth has produced a small gain, while all of the value alternatives are in the red. All three Market Cap options are down since December 1st but Mid Cap has held up best, declining less than 1% against a drop of more than 3% for the benchmark S&P 500. Model holding periods average four to six months, so it is early to judge the latest signals, but we are pleased that the revised models are off to a good start.

    MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:08 AM

    November 04, 2014

    Tweaking the Models and Switching from Value to Growth

    Over the past couple of months I have been working with Ned Davis Research on updates to Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models. Ned Davis originally developed these models about 20 years ago and I began using them around 1999. During this time, I have periodically worked with Ned Davis to analyze the models.

    The update to the models has led to some changes in the underlying factors and the potential outputs. However, the basic theory behind the models is unchanged. The models are designed to capture incremental returns by investing in the best performing themes based on company size (Market Cap) and type of company (Style). While the models have been updated, I consider the current changes to be incremental.

    The goal of the current updates is to improve the accuracy of the model signals and enhance performance in client accounts. Beyond using some new inputs, the biggest change is that the Style model will now have three possible outcomes: growth, value, or neutral. Neutral will lead to portfolio positons in value being evenly divided between the growth and value ETFs.

    I will provide a lengthier update on the changes in the models later this month. I will be able to see the old models through March to help keep a check on how the changes are working out.

    For November, the Style model has shifted from value to growth. The Market Cap model is still recommending large cap. As a result of the new signals, client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) have been sold and proceeds reinvested in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). With no change in the Market Cap model, client holdings in the S&P 500 (SPY) will be held.

    SPY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:14 AM

    October 01, 2014

    Large Caps and Value Remain Favored Themes

    There are no changes to the recommendations from Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models for October. The Market Cap model is recommending large caps for the second consecutive month. The Style model is sticking with value, which was first recommended in April. With no changes to the favored themes for October, client portfolios using the models will continue to hold the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    The Market Cap signal looks pretty firm at large cap. None of the underlying factors shifted from September to October. Large cap seems like a good place to be with the stock market pulling back in September and lots of issues that are worrying investors. Large cap stocks are less volatile than small cap stocks and should hold up better if a larger correction is underway. Key to performance of the model will be to make a timely move back into mid or small caps to capture the next move up in the market. So far this year, there has been a sharp divergence in the performance of small and large cap stocks. The S&P 500 has gained about 6% through September, while the primary small cap index, the Russell 2000, is down more than 4%. Small caps are not the only volatile sector suffering this year as Emerging Market and non-U.S. Developed market indices are down at least as much the Russell 2000.

    Although it is still recommending value, the Style model has undergone a gradual shift toward growth over the past two months. The first shift occurred in August after the current value signal reached its strongest level at the end of July. September saw another shift in favor of value and the model now sits at a spot where a growth signal could occur for November. Recent strength in growth stocks relative to value stocks has shifted the heavily weighted trend indicators to favoring growth. Insider activity has also shifted to growth over the past two months. The only indicator moving toward value has been the U.S. dollar. Dollar strength historically has led to better relative performance for value stocks as growth stocks produce a greater degree of revenues abroad.

    As an aside, the strength in the dollar has been one of the issues pressuring the stock market with a lot of programmatic trading set to avoid risk (as in sell stocks) when the dollar is strong. Dollar strength of late is due to a rush to safety from geopolitical issues, the Fed gradually taking its foot off the accelerator when the European Central Bank is easing further, and the emerging weakness in European economies at least partially due to the tense situation with Russia over Ukraine. The Ebola epidemic in Africa could even be supporting the dollar as it is another reason to move to what is perceived as the world’s safe haven security.

    The Market Cap model did its job last month as it saved client’s money in a down month. The S&P 500 fell -1.4% last month, holding up much better than -4.7% and -6.1% decline for mid and small caps. The Style model did not fare as well. IWD declined by -2.5% last month, more than the -1.7% decline for the major growth index. Both models have struggled this year, producing appreciation of about 4% vs. more than 6% for the benchmark S&P 500.

    SPY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:34 AM

    September 02, 2014

    Large Cap and Value Favored for September

    There are no changes to the recommendations from Northlake’s models for September. The Market Cap model favors large cap for the second consecutive month. The Style model is recommending value as it has since February. As a result of the latest model readings, there will be no changes to Northlake client holdings that follow the models. The large cap S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be held for at least another month.

    There was some underlying movement in the models. The Market Cap model shifted a bit toward mid cap as the dollar strengthened against most foreign currencies. A stronger dollar generally favors smaller companies that have less to the translation and pricing impact of dollar strength. The Style model made its first movement in sometime in toward a growth signal. Last month, the value reading was the strongest yet on this particular signal. Insider activity and the trend indicators both shifted toward value reflecting recent corporate insider activity and a good month for growth stocks in August.

    August was a below average month for each model. The new large cap signal produced a gain of almost 4% but mid cap and small cap alternatives were up about 5%. Value also gained almost 4% but trailed the gain in growth by nearly 1%. On a year-to-date basis, each model trails the return of the benchmark S&P 500 by approximately 2%.

    SPY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:44 AM

    August 04, 2014

    Shifting to Large Cap

    After an eight month run favoring mid cap, Northlake’s Market Cap model shifted to large cap for August. As a result of this shift, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) have been sold and proceeds reinvested into the S&P 500 (MDY). There was no change this month to the Style mod, which is recommending value for the fifth straight month. Client position is the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be maintained for at least another month. Typical holding periods for Northlake’s models are around four to six months so the latest signals are consistent with historical experience.

    The shift to large cap is primarily the result of the technical indicators flipping over completely from small cap to large cap. Small caps have really struggled this year even as the S&P 500 has produced a mid-single digit gain and set all-time highs. The Market Cap model appeared poised to shift to large cap over the past few months but small caps rallied in May and June. July, however, saw a terrible month for small caps which flipped the final technical and trend indicators. Beyond technical indicators, the model is favoring large caps due to valuation, foreign exchange, and yield curve factors.

    There was little changed in the factors driving the Style model’s latest value signal. This signal remains quite strong with over 70% of the indicators favoring value.

    The just closed mid cap signal was nicely profitable, gaining over 4%. Relative to alternatives, it was a mixed performance. The large cap S&P 500 benchmark gained over 6% during the holding period but the small cap Russell 2000 fell approximately 2%. The current value signal has been a push so far with both growth and value up a bit over 2% since the latest signal was initiated on April 1st.

    SPY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov. SPY a net short position in the Entermedia Funds purely as a hedge. Entermedia is a long/short equity hedge fund focused on media, communications, leisure, and related technologies. Steve Birenberg is the portfolio manager of Entermedia, has personal monies invested in the funds, and controls Entermedia’s General Partners.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:47 AM

    July 01, 2014

    Mid Cap and Value Remain in Favor

    There are no changes to Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models for July. The favored themes remain Mid Cap and Value for at least another month. Given the strength of the current signals, I think that Mid Cap and Value probably will last at least two more months but given volatile economic data and 2014’s sharp thematic market rotations anything is possible. With no changes for July, Northlake client positions invested with the models will continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    The models were quite stable this month. Both signals got slightly stronger but that was due more to the two month smoothing process than to changes in the underlying indicators. The Mid Cap signal strengthened the most due to the rebound in the technical indicators thanks to the two month rally in small and mid cap stocks. Small and mid cap stocks struggled early in the year, producing negative returns through April even as the large cap S&P 500 rallied. These sectors caught up in May and June and improved the technical indicators in the model relative to the end of April. With the end of April data dropping out of the two month average this month, the Mid Cap signal got a little stronger.

    Performance of the models was good in June with value out performing growth and mid caps easily outperforming large caps. So far in 2014, the Market Cap Model is ahead of the S&P 500 but the Style model is trailing the benchmark.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:46 AM

    June 02, 2014

    Another Month for Mid Cap and Value

    There are no changes to the recommendations of Northlake’s models for June. The Market Cap model continues to recommend mid cap and the Style model still favors value. As a result of the latest signals, Northlake client investments in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be held for at least another month.

    There was little underlying movement in the models. The only individual factor to changes was a shift toward growth for the insider buying indicator in the Style model. This is interesting given that growth stocks were pummeled in March and April. At least relative to management teams at value companies, it appears that insiders at growth companies saw their stock price declines as buying opportunities.

    Overall, the Style model remains quite firmly in value territory with twice as many of its indicators favoring value as growth. The Market Cap model has slowly edged toward a large cap signal over last few months. Both models are reflecting the recent trends in the market and the mixed economic data over the first part of the year.

    Recent performance of the models has been below average. During April, the mid cap signal was OK, gaining 169 basis points against a rise of just 79 basis points for small caps. However, large caps gained 210 points. Year to date, the Market cap model has gained just shy of 3% versus an increase of just over 4% for the S&P 500. The Style model gained 141 basis points last month, trailing both the S&P 500 and the growth index that gained 304 basis points. A good question is whether this represents a dead cat bounce for growth following the April and May shellacking. Year to date, the Style model has gained just over 2%.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:34 AM

    May 02, 2014

    Value and Mid Caps Still in Favor

    There were no changes in Northlake’s Market Cap or Style models for May. The Market Cap model continues to recommend mid cap and the Style model still favors value. With no changes for May, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be held for at least another month.

    The Market Cap model saw some movement toward large cap as the trend indicators moved from a neutral reading to favoring large cap. This is no surprise as small and mid caps fell last month, while large caps had a small gain. The trend indicators measure recent performance and widely used by used by short-term traders. In the model, they are present to add timeliness and provide balance against the economic indicators which look at monthly data over longer time frames. Overall, the indicators in the Market Cap model are mixed but trending toward large cap. The conflict is between indicators that are picking up a good and possibly firming economy and trend and technical indicators reflecting the rotation in the market away from small cap and growth stocks.

    The Style model has moved to a stronger value signal even though no underlying indicators shifted for May. Please recall that in April the indicators shifted sharply in favor of value. Those indicators remain deeply in value territory this month. The Style model is picking up generally improved economic and the stock market’s rotation from growth to value. Another way to think about it is that the stock market and the model are shifting toward later cycle views.

    Last month the models put in a mixed performance. The Market Cap model’s mid cap signal held up a lot better than small caps but still produced a loss with the S&P 500 in positive territory. The style model did well gaining about 1%, ahead of the S&P 500 and the flat performance for the Russell 1000 Growth index. To get a better gauge of the rotation in the market, small cap growth fell 5% last month. Year to date both models are in positive territory but trail the appreciation in the S&P 500 by approximately 1%.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:22 AM

    April 01, 2014

    Back to Value After a False Start with Growth

    Northlake’s Style model shifted from growth to value for April. As a result, client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth index (IWF) have been sold with proceeds reinvested in the Russell 1000 Value index (IWD). There is no change in the recommendation from the Market Cap model which continues to recommend mid cap. Client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap index will be held for at least another month.

    The shift back to value in the Style model came after just one month. It was driven mostly by the trend indicators which moved from growth to value following material outperformance by value during March. From March 7th thru month end, growth stocks pulled back sharply as investors rotated to recently lagging industry sectors and booked profits in the big winners from 2013 and early 2014. Also supporting the shift to value was insider trading activity. This factor actually is picking remarkably low net insider buying, something that in the past has accompanied periods of large gains for value stocks and large losses for growth stocks. The overall model seems likely to stay in value mode for more than a month given a rather shift across the underlying factors.

    The Market Cap model saw a lot less movement in its underlying factors. The recommendation stayed at mid cap but the shift of the bond momentum factor from large cap to small cap leaves the overall model close to recommending small caps. Bond momentum measures the three month rate of change in long-term interest rates. Rates have been falling recently as fears surrounding tapering of the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing policy have receded. Lower interest rates are very favorable for small cap stocks which generally do not have as easy access to capital as their larger counterparts.

    Last month’s signals were mixed. The one month stop at growth was ill-timed for the Style model, producing negative returns during a period in which the stock market rose slightly. The mid cap signal also lagged the market but did produce a positive return. So far this year, the Style model is trailing the overall market but this is offset by good performance for the Market Cap model.

    MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:36 PM

    March 03, 2014

    Style Model Shifts to Growth

    Northlake’s Style model is now recommending Growth. As a result, client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) have been sold and proceeds reinvested in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). The Value signal had been in place since January 1st. During this time, IWD returned about 35 basis points vs. 171 basis points for IWF, so the latest call by the Style model was a little below average.

    There was no change in the Mid Cap recommendation coming from the Market Cap model, so current client holdings in the S&P 400 Mid Cap will be held for at least another month. So far this year, the Mid Cap call has worked well. MDY is up 2.5% through February, comfortably ahead of the benchmark S&P 500 which has gained 60 basis points.

    Two underlying factors influenced the shift from value to growth. First, as mentioned above growth has been performing well relative to value over the last few months. This has shifted the trend indicators in favor of growth. The trend indicators combine a look at performance over two, nine, and twelve month time frames. The second factor to shift in favor of growth is U.S. Dollar momentum. Recent weakness in the trade-weighted-dollar is favorable for growth companies. A weak dollar makes products and services sold abroad by U.S. technology, consumer, and health care companies more competitive. These industries are major components of growth indices making up

    The new growth is just barely across the line from value based on the two-month smoothing used in the Style model. However, the one month reading for March is in pretty solidly in growth territory.

    IWF is widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:13 PM

    February 03, 2014

    Models Unchanged for February: Still Like Mid Cap and Value

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models for February. The Market Cap model continues to favor mid cap and the Style model still recommends value. With no changes to the signals for this month, Northlake client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be held for at least another month.

    Underlying movement in each model was modest. The Market Cap model remains on a somewhat weak mid cap signal. It is a little stronger this month as the advisory service sentiment indicator shifted toward large cap. This occurred because bullish sentiment reversed slightly from extreme levels. A reversal from extremes often indicates a shift in market momentum. In this case, coming off very bullish levels is a bearish signal, so the advisory service indicator shifted to less volatile large caps.

    The value signal on the Style model strengthened this month as the U.S. dollar indicator shifted to value. The dollar has strengthened vs. most currencies over the past month due to turmoil in emerging markets. Value stocks are less sensitive to dollar movements than growth stocks as growth stocks are more reliant on overseas growth and thus get hurt when the dollar strengthens in terms of competitiveness and currency translation.

    During January, the models put in a decent performance. Mid cap was a good call as MDY fell just over 2% while the S&P 500 fell over 3%. Value/IWD did slightly worse than growth last month but performed in line with the S&P 500.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:43 AM

    January 02, 2014

    2014 Kicks Off With a Shift to Value

    Northlake’s models start 2014 with a switch from growth to value in the Style model. This change occurs after three months on the growth signal during which growth outperformed value by a little less than 1%. As a result of this fresh signal, all client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) were sold and proceeds were reinvested in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD). The Market Cap model saw no change to is Mid Cap signal, now beginnings its second month. The S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) will be held for at least another month.

    Looking below the hood, the shift to value was it a little more than it seemed. I have explained several times recently that the signals from both models have been on the weak side as far as favoring one theme over another. What this really means is that the “score” which determines the recommendation is right on the border between two possible signals. This has been the case for much of this year and reflects two factors. First, there has been slow but steady growth in the U.S. economy. Second, the stock market rose steadily with little volatility and pretty much all sectors of the market rose in unison – the proverbial rising tide lifts all boats.

    This environment for the economy and stock market makes it difficult for the models to provide excess return. However, it also means the models returns will closely match the market. In a year in which the stock market rises 30% that is certainly an acceptable outcome. In fact, during 2013, each model produced a return almost exactly in line with the gain in the benchmark U.S. stock index, the S&P 500.

    Should volatility in economic growth or the stock market pick up, it is likely that variation in returns among growth and value and small, mid, and large cap stocks will also pick up. Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models have a good long-term record of capturing excess return in these environments, so as economic and market conditions normalize, Northlake’s models should reassert themselves and probably see less volatility in the signals on a month-to-month basis.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:24 PM

    December 02, 2013

    Model Volatility Continues as Mid Cap Gains Favro

    Northlake’s Market Cap model shifted back to Mid Cap after a brief, one month stop at large cap in November. As a result of the new signal, client positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) were sold and the proceeds were reinvested in the S&P 400 mid Cap (MDY). There was no change to the Style model, which continues to recommend Growth over Value. Client holdings in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be held for at least another month.

    Over much of this year I have mentioned that the models have been giving borderline recommendations and performance variance among the market cap and value themes has been low. The December swap from small cap to mid cap is another example as it took only a shift in one of the technical indicators measuring market breadth to cause the Market Cap model’s recommendation to shift. Overall, both models are reflecting a steadily trending market and sluggish but consistent growth in the domestic economy. This environment does not lead to a lot of variance among stocks whether it be Northlake’s themes or specific sectors or industries.

    The one month stop at small cap did prove profitable as IWM gained almost 4% ahead of the 3% gain for the S&P 500 and a gain of only 1% for MDY. In the Style category, both growth and value kept up with the broad market and gained 3% for the month.

    Results for both models on a year to date basis are very closely tracking the benchmark S&P 500. Given that both models have had their signals bounce around, this is indicative of the market environment mentioned above where a rising tide has lifted all boats about equally.

    MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:20 AM

    November 01, 2013

    Small Cap and Growth Favored for November

    Northlake’s Market Cap model shifted from Mid Cap to Small Cap for November. As a result, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) have been swapped into the Russell 2000 (IWM). There was not change in the Style model, which is recommending Growth for the second consecutive month after a long run at value.

    To be honest, I am a little wary of a shift to small cap after huge outperformance for this segment so far this year. The Russell 2000 is up 28% this year, ahead of the 23% gain in the S&P 500. October was the first month in a while where small cap lagged most of the other major averages. However, if you are going to use a model you cannot second guess it. The whole point of using models is to impose discipline. Furthermore, there are reasons to believe small cap can continue to lead, especially if the market follows its normal seasonality and rallies into year end. Northlake’s model is picking up the excellent breadth on this rally and a sustained high level of bullish sentiment that occurred after a period of bearish sentiment. These technical factors plus continued growth in the economy historically have favored small caps.

    The new signal is a weak one, just barely over the line from mid cap. Ultimately, I think the big call until yearend is small or mid cap vs. large cap. Small and mid cap tend to correlate more highly with each other than either does with large cap.

    The new growth signal initiated in October looks a little stronger this month. Growth is favored due to trend indicators, recent action in foreign exchange markets, and attractive relative valuation of growth stocks vs. value stocks.

    Last month, the mid cap signal outperformed small cap but slightly lagged large cap. Growth and value produced almost identical returns in October, each matching the S&P 500. So far this year, the Style model has matched the S&P 500, while the Market Cap model slightly trails the benchmark.

    IWF and IWM are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:48 PM

    October 01, 2013

    Style Model Shifts From Value to Growth

    Northlake’s Style model shifted from value to growth for October. As a result, all client positions invested in this model have been shifted from the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) to the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). The Market Cap model remains on a mid cap signal for October, so current client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) will be maintained for at least another month.

    The shift in the Style model to growth was primarily the result of the technical and trend indicators. These indicators picked up recent relative performance favoring growth stocks. The purpose of the technical and trend indicators is to add a dose of timeliness to the broader model, which relies more heavily on monthly indicators of economic activity. Stocks and themes often begin to move before the underlying data, making technical and trend indicators valuable in keeping the model signals timely.

    The value signal had been in place since April 1st. Over the six month period, this proved to be an inaccurate signal as IWD gained just 10.0% against an increase of 13.3% for IWF. Most of the performance advantage for growth came in the last two months. This is what the technical and trend indicators are picking up.

    The Market Cap model has performed better recently as MDY has produced a materially better return than the market. Last month, MDY was up more than 5% while the S&P 500 gained around 3%. For the just completed third quarter, MDY was up almost 8% versus a gain of just under 5% for the S&P 500. The Market Cap model could have done better as small cap was the best performing theme in the third quarter.

    MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:53 PM

    September 03, 2013

    Despite Market and Model Volatility, Mid Cap and Value Still Favored

    Despite a number of changes in the underlying indicators and a volatile month of trading for the market in August, here were no changes to the signals from Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models for September. As a result, client positions following the models will again be held in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD). The underlying movement, without a change in the favored theme, are a good example of the “weight of the evidence” approach used by Northlake’s models.

    Within the Market Cap model, three indicators shifted in favor of large cap, while one moved toward small cap. Last month, the model was teetering toward small cap so despite the underlying shifts in favor of large cap, there was not enough movement to shift the entire model. The three indicators shifting toward large cap were advisory service sentiment, NYSE Breadth, and the trend indicators. All three indicators reflect the peaking momentum in the market after it reached all-time highs in July. The technical indicators look for turning points after major moves and while there is no way to know if a peak has been reached, the decline since mid-July suggests momentum has been broken and moving to less volatile large caps makes sense. The indicator moving in favor of small cap is the U.S. Dollar. The dollar remains a fairly strong to the advantage of small caps that have lower international exposure and thus less issues with their products and services losing competitiveness and the negative translation impact on the financial statements.

    The Style model saw two indicators move in favor of the still working value signal and one moved in favor of growth. The consumer/cyclical ratio and coincident indicators moved from growth to value signals and the trend indicators from value to growth. The consumer/cyclical ratio reflects a rough month for consumer stocks as numerous retailers reported weaker than expected sales and indicated concern about the back-to-school season. Consumer stocks are mostly in the growth category so this relative performance helps value. Coincident indicators show the economy is still moving along in its recovery. This is good for more cyclical stocks that make up value. The trend indicators are responding to a month when technology stocks, the largest component of growth, performed very well. For example, the technology heavy NASDAQ was down less than 1% last month while the S&P 500 fell more than 3%.

    Last month was slightly negative for the models performance. Both mid cap and value fell slightly more than the 3% decline in the S&P decline. This differential was small, however. The bigger shortfall was missing the outperformance of growth stocks which would have limited overall portfolio declines. Fortunately, cash reserves and good performance from a number of Northlake’s media, entertainment, and technology stocks helped client portfolio’s in August.

    IWD and MDY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov..

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:03 PM

    August 01, 2013

    Mid Cap and Value Get Another Month to Shine

    There were no changes to Northlake’s models for August. The Market Cap model continues to recommend Mid Cap and the Style model still favors Value. As a result, client assets dedicated to these models will be maintained in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    The Market Cap model had little underlying movement in its indicators and remains solidly in mid cap territory. This means that the interest rate, economic, and stock market technical indicators are pretty much split between favoring small cap and large cap.

    The Style model had some slight movement toward growth with one factor changing in each direction. The consumer vs. cyclical factor, a stock market indicator, shifted from value to growth reflecting improved relative performance of consumer stocks over the past seven months. On the flip side, the yield curve factor, an interest rate indicator, moved from growth to value as the yield curve steepened with 10 year Treasury rates rising while short-term interest rates remained stable. The model factors also consider their own level even when their particular recommendation remains this same. Slight movement on this front led to the weaker value signal for August.

    After struggling for much of this year, the Market Cap model performed better in July. MDY gained 6.7%, better than the 5% gain for the S&P 500. Strong performance for mid caps is expected in a bullish environment. The Style model matched the market with IWD, the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF), and the S&P 500 all rising about 5%. The Market Cap model and some nice gains in individual stocks like Apple, Comcast, Liberty Media and Liberty Global, contributed to a good month for Northlake client portfolios relative to the market.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Northlake’s regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:31 PM

    July 02, 2013

    Mid Cap and Value Remain the Favored Themes for July

    There were no changes to Northlake’s Market Cap and Style model for July. The Market Cap model continues to recommend Mid Cap (MDY) and the Style model still favors Value (IWD). As a result of the new signals, client assets invested with the models will continue to maintain holdings in MDY and IWD.

    The indicators underlying the Market Cap model were pretty stable for July. Only trend and technical indicators had new signals including Advisory Service Sentiment, NYSE Breadth, and the momentum indicators.

    Advisory Service Sentiment moved from a neutral reading to favoring large cap as the percentage of bulls declined sharply. This indicator is designed to capture trend changes. The recent drop in bulls from an extreme triggered a shift toward the presumably safer large caps.

    Another trend indicator, NYSE Breadth also moved in favor large caps. This indicator measures advancing vs. declining issues based on monthly averages. The decline in the market since the mid-May all-time high indicates a degree of caution is warranted. As a result, the less volatile large caps are now favored.

    The momentum indicators use shorter time horizons with emphasis on the last six months. Since small caps did pretty well in this period this indicator actually moved in favor of small caps, somewhat balancing out the other trend and technical indicators and leaving the Market Cap signal unchanged at Mid Cap.

    There was minimal movement in the Style indicators wit the only change being a shift in the insider activity from value to neutral. This indicator measures insider trading activity among company management and Board of Directors. The value signal that has been in place now for five months has weakened a little but barring a major change I anticipate it holds for at least another month.

    With another quarter in the books, it is time to look at the latest quarter and year-to-date performance of the models. Overall, the results are mixed to slightly negative with good results in the Style model unable to overcome poor performance by the Market Cap model.

    In the latest quarter, the Style model gained over 3.2% vs. a gain of 2.3% for the S&P 500. The model spent the entire quarter on a value signal, which proved accurate. Year-to-date, the Style model is up over 15.3%, compared 12.6% for the S&P 500. The model has been in value all year except for February when it shifted to growth.

    Unfortunately, the Market Cap model was well off target in the second quarter producing a loss of approximately -1.2%. The model favored small cap in April and mid cap in May and June. In each month, the signal was incorrect, favoring the weakest of the three options (small, mid, large). Adding this poor performance to an average result for the Market Cap model in the first, quarter, on a year-to-date basis, the model is lagging the S&P 500, gaining just under 9% vs. the 12.3% gain for the benchmark.

    The unusually high volatility in signals emanating from the Market Cap model vs. the stability in the Style model might be instructive. I believe the Market Cap volatility shows confusion in an environment where markets are volatile and economic data are mixed. Both models are constructed using the same theory, so I have every reason to believe that the Market Cap model will prove accurate once again, especially if the slowly improving U.S economy can be maintained as the Federal Reserve begins to back off its most aggressive monetary policy.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 07:46 AM

    June 03, 2013

    Another Month of Mid Cap and Value

    There are no changes to the recommendations from Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models for June. The favored signals remain mid cap and value. As a result, all client positions tracking the models will be maintained for at least another month. Mid cap and value are represented in portfolios by the S&P 400 (MDY) and Russell 1000 Value (IWD), respectively.

    There was some underlying movement in the factors that compose the models. In the Market Cap model two indicators moved in favor of small cap, while in the Style model one factor shifted toward value while another moved toward growth.

    Advisory Service Sentiment and the Shape of the Yield Curve moved in favor of small capo in the Market Cap model. Advisory Service Sentiment reflects rising bullish sentiment among Wall Street forecasters. Rising bullishness is usually a leading indicator for small stock outperformance. This indicator shifts toward large caps if sentiment reaches an extreme and reverses. This might be something to watch if the recent downturn in the market continues through June.

    The yield curve steepened in May as intermediate and long-term interest rates rose sharply to their highest level in many months. A steep yield curve (long-term rates higher than short-term rates) historically favors small caps as it is often an indicator of normalized economic growth. It will be interesting to see if that relationship holds this cycle given the extraordinary actions the Federal has taken that allow them to completely control short-term rates and keep them near 0%. This creates a natural bias toward yield curve steeping if long-term rates rise.

    In the Style model, Insider Activity moved in favor of value, while the U.S. Dollar shifted toward growth. Insider Activity measures aggregate demand of insiders. Recently it has been falling and has now moved to a very low reading that coincides with better performance for value stocks. While the U.S. Dollar has recently been strong, the Style model measures it over a 12 month period. The dollar is less than 2% stronger than a year ago, a condition that historically favors growth stocks. A stable euro despite all the problems in Europe has kept the trade-weighted dollar form strengthening too much.

    Last month the models put in a mixed performance. The new mid cap signal produced a rerun of approximately 1.8%, trialing the 2% gain for the S&P 500 and the 3% plus return for the Russell 2000. The Style model performed well with IWD up 2.7% better than S&P 500 and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF), which gained 1.9%.

    So far this year, the Style model is ahead of the S&P 500 producing a gain of about 16% against 14% for the market. The Market Cap model has struggled in 2013, up just 12%. As noted previously, the big gains in 2013 have not lead to the usual outperformance for small and mid cap stocks that is usually seen.

    MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:56 AM

    May 05, 2013

    Market Cap Model Volatility Continues with Mid Cap Back in Favor

    Due primarily to trend and technical indicators, Northlake’s Market Cap model shifted from small cap to mid cap for May. As a result, all client positions following the model previously invested in the Russell 2000 (IWM) have been sold and proceeds reinvested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY).

    This change continues an unusually volatile period for Northlake’s models which seem to be struggling with inconsistent data on the economy, abnormally low interest rates, and a stock market that continues steadily higher even when the news flow is mixed. The Style model has held its own this year, matching the market’s big gains, even with higher than normal rotation between growth and value. The Market Cap has not performed as well, especially last month when the IWM actually fell even as the rally continued and the S&P 500 gained almost 2%. Small caps are more volatile and usually lead the market in either direction. If you had told me the S&P 500 would be up 2% in April and the Market Cap model was signaling small cap, I would have been excited, expecting a big gain in small gains as the benefit of their added volatility kicked in. Instead, the caution on the part of investors reflected in lots of disbelief in the market’s rally was reflected with buying concentrated in the perceived safer large cap stocks. As a result of April’s misfire on small caps, the Market Cap model trails the S&P 500 by approximately 2% so far in 2013.

    There were few changes in the underlying indicators of either model for May. The shift to mid cap emanated from the technical and trend indicators which are heavily influenced by the actual movement in the indices. Since small caps lagged in April, they became less attractive from a chart perspective and that was enough to move the model to mid cap. Over in the Style model, there was very slight movement toward growth as insider trading activity is now neutral between growth and value after previously favoring value. The Style model reading is still pretty strongly favoring value and I would expect June’s reading to again to be value.

    IWD and MDY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov..

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:46 AM

    April 01, 2013

    Models Stabilize Favoring Small Cap and Value

    After several months with one or both models changing signals, the April signals showed stability. For the second consecutive month, the Market Cap model is recommending small cap and the Style model is recommending value. The small cap signal remains borderline but the value signal has moved into strong territory. This suggests that value will hold firm for a few more months, returning to the usual 4-6 month holding period for new signals, while the small cap signal could change. As a result of the updated models, Northlake clients positions dedicated to the models will be maintained in the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    Last month I mentioned that volatility in the model signals reflected the sub par U.S. economic recovery off the 2008/09 crisis lows. Economic statistics released in the past month show some promise for development of a more normal economic recovery. It is too soon to conclude anything but the models may be reflecting the transition to a normal economic recovery. I am wary, however, as issues in Europe, China, and the U.S. remain volatile and hard to predict.

    Last month the then new signals worked well. Small caps outperformed large caps by over 1% and both growth and value matched the market's gains. So far this year, the Style model has produced a return in excess of the S&P 500 and the Market Cap model has matched the market's big, early year gains.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:15 AM

    February 03, 2013

    Both Models Shift!!! Mid Cap and Growth Now in Favor.

    For the first time in many years, both of Northlake’s models changed their recommendations in the same month. For February, the Market model shifted from large cap to mid cap and the Style model shifted from value to growth. As a result of these changes, all client positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 100 Value (IWD) were swapped into the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). Some clients may continue to own SPY as a core holding.

    I would not read anything special into the fact that both models shifted in the same month. However, I do think it shows that the fundamental backdrop for the economy (interest rates, GDP growth, trading technical) is unusual. GDP is growing but only modestly, interest rates have begun to tick higher but remain unusually low, and the stock market continues its steady move upward but with less correlation among individual stocks, economic sectors, and industries that it has had since 2007 before the economic crisis began.

    With few economic or stock market statistics registering extremes and correlations declining, the models are not giving off strong signals. This leads to greater volatility on a month to month basis in the signals.

    The current shift to Mid Cap was driven primarily by technical trading indicators. The steady rally in the market, which accelerated in January, has been led by small caps, improving the small cap technical indicators, particularly those based on trend. In addition, some weakening in coincident indicators of economic growth amid general growth in the economy has set up a contrarian call to favor small caps. In essence, the market and economic indicators appear to be calling for acceleration in the economic recovery. Historically, this is a good time to own small and mid caps. The Market cap model usually works in stair step fashion with the first step away from large caps to mid caps.

    The new growth signal is more a function of relative valuation between growth and value. Growth stocks have really lagged, with technology indices holding back growth. Apple is actually impacting the model as its pullback and the lagging performance in the many stocks that provide products to Apple’s supply chain, has been causing technology and growth to underperform the market and value indices. Valuations are no stretched to the point that growth stocks trade at lower price-earnings ratios than value stocks. This is an unusual occurrence as investors normally pay up for growth investments.

    The value signal has been in place since the beginning of August. During this time IWD has gained over 13% against a rise of less than 7% for IWF. This large discrepancy in favor of value is a main reason why the valuation indicators shifted to growth, bringing the entire model along. Northlake’s Style model made the correct call for the last six months.

    The large cap signal emanating from the Market Cap model for the last two months proved less rewarding. SPY tracks the S&P 500, the benchmark U.S. stock market index. This index rose over 5% for the past two months when large cap was favored. Nothing wrong with gaining 5% plus in 60 days! However, both mid cap and small cap indices did better with MDY up 9% and the small cap index (IWM) up almost 8%. The latest signal from Northlake’s Market Cap model was inaccurate.

    MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. SPY is held by selected clients of Northlake. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:19 AM

    January 02, 2013

    Large Cap and Value to Start 2013; Models Put in Mixed 2012 Performance

    There are no changes to the signals from Northlake’s models for January. For the second consecutive month, the Market Cap model favors large caps. The Style model remains on a Value signal, as it has since August 2012. As a result of this month’s signals, there will be no changes to client investments based on the models. Positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) and Russell 1000 Value will be maintained (IWD).

    January will mark the fifth month in the last six that the Market Cap model has recommended large caps. This follows a long period where the model rarely favored large caps. In fact, since an 11 month run for large caps to finish 2007, the Market Cap model has only favored large caps in two other months prior to the recent shift. While you should never outguess your model, I believe this could be the start of a period where large cap remains in favor. The economy and monetary policy have stabilized along with the markets. GDP growth is slow but consistent and interest rate and inflation look set to remain low for several years. In addition, the dollar has weakened somewhat especially relative to the euro as the European Central Bank has taken steps that have defused the sovereign debt crisis. This backdrop favors large caps which can easily finance their balance sheets, grow modestly, and take advantage of scale in global markets. As an aside, I still see lots of potential potholes in the market outlook that could create the quick, sharp, short drops we have often seen these last few years. I like being in mode stable large caps when volatility is high.

    The Style model changed little for January and remains with a strong value signal. There was a small shift toward growth as the U.S. dollar is now down slightly on a year-over-year basis. Growth companies, particularly those in technology, do a lot of business outside the U.S. and benefit from increased competitiveness and currency translation when the dollar is falling.

    The models put in a mixed performance in the fourth quarter and 2012. The Style model did well in both periods. For the fourth quarter, the value signal gained approximately 1.5% against a loss of one half of one percent for growth and 1% for the S&P 500. For 2012, the Style model earned over 15%, about 2% ahead of the S&P 500.

    The Market Cap model matched the market in the fourth quarter but lagged for 2012, gaining over 10% but trailing the S&P 500 by about 3%. Most of the miss occurred in the second quarter when mid caps lagged the June rally that followed the worst month of the market, a decline of 6% in May.

    SPY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Filings can be found at www.sec.gov. SPY is short position in the Entermedia Funds, serving as a hedge against long positions. Steve is the portfolio manager of the Entermedia Funds, owns a majority stake in the Funds investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:21 PM | Comments (2)

    December 03, 2012

    Back to Large Cap

    For the month of December, Northlake's Market Cap model shifted back to large cap. As a result, client positions dedicated to the Market Cap model sold their holdings in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and reinvested the proceeds in to the S&P 500 (SPY). The Style model continues to favor value, so client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be held at least another month.

    This marks the third month in the last four that large cap has been favored by the Market Cap model. November saw a one month stay at Mid Cap. As a reminder, when the models are in transition, there is often more volatility in the monthly signals. When the model shifted to large cap in September, it was the first time in that mode since December 2009 and only the third time since the end of 2007.

    After such a long run favoring small and mid caps, the model does seem to be suggesting that the run for higher risk, smaller market cap companies could be coming to an end. This makes sense given a long period of sub par but positive economic growth, interest rates that can't go any lower, and general aversion to risk by investors given the ongoing worries about global economic growth prospects. Time will tell if the shift to large caps is the start of a new major trend. In the meantime, with the fiscal cliff approaching and the politicians still bickering, I like the idea of spending the last month of the year in the lower risk large cap index.

    November's one month stay at mid cap was profitable by a little less than 1% but added minimal value compared to the S&P 500 and Russell 2000, which were also up a little less than 1%. In the Style model, the value signal was inaccurate in November as IWD was declined very slightly for the month, while the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) rose 1.75%. Despite the miss in November, the value signal has been a good one since it first appeared for August 2012. Since then, IWD is up 4% vs. a gain of 2.75% for IWF. November's performance reflected a bounce back in large cap tech stocks, which led the market lower during the October/November correction.

    Disclosure: SPY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole propreitor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:15 AM

    November 02, 2012

    Back to Mid Cap...But Will It Last?

    After spending two months at large cap, Northlake’s Market Cap model shifted to mid cap for November. There were no significant changes in the underlying factors in the models. Rather, there was just movement within each model that led to a small change in the overall model reading. Since the large cap signal was not a strong one, the small changes due to fresh data from a month of economic reports and stock market trading was enough to change the signal to mid cap.

    As I have explained in the past, volatility in the model signals often picks up when a larger trend is underway. I think a larger trend favoring large caps might be coming after a run of almost twelve years for small and mid cap since the dotcom bubble burst. The idea behind this switch is that the sluggish, post financial crisis, global economy is easier to navigate for larger companies. In addition, investors would gravitate to the perceived safety, stability, and predictability of larger companies. It is not yet clear that a major large cap trend is underway but conceptually, it makes a lot of sense.

    The Style model was unchanged, registering its fourth consecutive month at value. The value signal got a little stronger this month as recent dollar strength favors value. Growth stocks tend to have more international exposure and do better when the dollar is weak.

    As a result of this month’s signals, client positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) were sold with the proceeds reinvested into the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). The prior large cap signal was not a difference maker as for the two month period it was in place the S&P 500, S&P 400, and Russell 2000 each less than 1%. The relatively new value signal is performing well, with the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) up over 4% versus a gain of over 1% for the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) since the value signal was triggered at the start of August.

    Disclosure: IWD and MDY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. SPY is held in selected Northlake-managed accounts. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:21 AM

    October 01, 2012

    Large Cap and Value Still Favored for October

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models for October. The new large cap signal remains in place for a second month and the value signal is now entering its fourth month. With no changes for October, clients will continue to own the S&P 500 (SPY) representing large cap and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) representing value.

    The underlying indicators in the Market Cap model shifted in favor of small caps based on the latest data but not far enough to change the signal. However, another similar month in October would move the model back to mid cap territory. The main shift in favor of small cap occurred in the trend indicators which picked up a better month for small and mid caps during September’s market rally.

    A similar situation exists in the Style model. There was a shift toward growth from value but not enough to cause the overall model to change for October. Once again, if the model were unchanged in in October, the following month would see a change. In the Style model, the U.S. dollar indicator moved from value to growth reflecting the weak performance of the dollar in September a the Euroe rallied strongly.

    Overall, the models indicate that the economy is growing slowly and the market is trending consistently with a high degree of correlation among various market themes. This type of environment often sees more volatility in the model signals as has been the cause in recent months.

    During October, the shift form mid cap to large cap worked well. Mid cap, as represented by the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) rose just 1.9% while the S&P 500 (SPY) gained 2.3%. The Style model also had a good month with Value gaining 2.5% against just 1.1% for Growth. For all of 2012, the Market Cap model has struggled and lags the benchmark S&P 500, while the Style model is beating the market. The Market Cap model has struggled with an environment that historically has favored small caps while investors focused on large caps instead. I think the many risks apparent in the investment landscape have bullish investors looking at presumably safer large companies.

    Disclosure: IWD and SPY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. MDY is held in selected Northlake-managed accounts. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 03:32 PM | Comments (2)

    September 04, 2012

    Large Cap Favored for First Time Since 2009

    After five months favoring Mid Cap, Northlake’s Market Cap model switched to a Large Cap signal for September. As a result of the switch, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) have been sold and the proceeds reinvested into the S&P 500 (SPY). The Style model is recommending Value for the second consecutive month. All Northlake client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be maintained. This is the first time the Market Cap model has recommended large cap since 2009.

    The shift to large cap has been underway over the past few months as the economy has cooled and investors have been looking to reduce risk. Small cap stocks lagged the summer rally, shifting the technical trend indicators in the model to large cap. Rising interest rates, albeit still at extremely low levels, was the tipping point that led to the switch to large cap. Rates are up modestly since the European Central Bank indicated it would aggressively buy European sovereign debt to ease the funding crisis in Spain and Italy. Rising interest rates hurt small companies more than large companies as multinational corporations generally have easier access to credit.

    The latest monthly signal is pretty firmly into large cap territory so I expect this change to hold for a while. Given the fragile nature of the global economy, still significant risk in Europe, the upcoming U.S. election, and the “fiscal cliff,” I am comfortable with a shift to large caps, which are usually less volatile and hold up better in weaker market environments. I am not predicting a weak market but I do not mind carrying less risk into the fall given the many looming issues.

    The value signal issued by the Style model last month for the first time remains borderline. Two more indicators shifted toward value for September, insider activity and relative valuation. I still see the shift from growth to value as a relative valuation call. Growth has outperformed value this year and while the economy is weak, it is still growing. An economic tailwind is good for value stocks. It appears that value stocks are finally cheap enough to warrant investment.

    The recently expired Mid Cap signal proved inaccurate. Since it went into place on April 1st, MDY returned -5.23% against -2.20% for the S&P 500. As noted above, small and mid cap stocks lagged the summer rally. Small and mid cap stocks usually lead rallies. The action this summer reveals how wary investors remain even as the market has risen.

    The first month of the new value signal also was off target. IWD did rise 1.94%, matching the S&P 500 during August. However, growth led the way in August with the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) rising 2.88%. Apple and Google rose sharply in August, leading growth stocks higher. Fortunately, both of these stocks are in Northlake’s individual stock portfolio.

    Disclosure: SPY, IWD, AAPL, and GOOG are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC. MDY is held in select Northlake client accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an Illinois-registered investment advisor. Filings can be found at www.sec.gov. AAPL and GOOG are net long positions in the Entermedia Funds. SPY is a net short position in the Entermedia Funds. Entermedia is a long/short equity hedge fund focused on media, communications, and related technologies. Steve is co-portfolio manager of Entermedia, owns a stake in the funds’ investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:20 AM | Comments (1)

    August 02, 2012

    Switching to Value

    After twelve months favoring growth, Northlake's Style model shifted to value for August. As a result, all client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) have been sold and the proceeds reinvested in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD). The Market Cap model is still recommending Mid Cap, so all client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) will be held for at least another month.

    The shift toward value has been underway for several months as several of the Style model's underlying indicators moved from a growth signal to a value signal. As is usually the case, the initial power of a new signal is not too strong. The models are designed to move gradually, capturing big trends, and avoiding a lot of back and forth. The key changes in the model that led to the new value are signal are (1) improved valuation for value stocks, and (2) better performance by value stocks.

    The models often shift as the economic and stock market cycles change, In this case, I think it is more of a relative value call. Value has lagged growth as the economy has been stuck in slow growth mode. However, the economy is still growing despite awful headlines. Value stocks need a little help of the economy. Presently, a little help is all they are getting but with value stocks looking relatively cheaper that is enough to shift the signal.

    The prior growth signal, in place beginning in August 2011, worked pretty well. Over the past year, IWF gained 5.16%, ahead of a 3.99% gain for IWD. A little over 1% might not seem like much but in a low return environment that is not bad.

    There is nothing unusual in the reiterated mid cap signal. It is a little weaker and not far from changing to large cap. Large cap is usually favored when the economy slows as smaller companies need the tailwind of stronger economic growth. Investors appear to recognize this as over the past few months small caps have really struggled, including a decline of 1.5% last month when mid cap was unchanged and large caps were up over 1%.

    Disclosure: IWD and MDY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an Illinois-registered investment advisor. Regulatory filings can be found at www. sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 07:59 PM

    July 05, 2012

    Mid Cap and Growth Survive for Another Month

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style model signals for June. Mid Cap and Growth continue to be favored. As a result, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 100 Growth (IWF) will be maintained for at least another month.

    It does appear likely that the growth signal that has been place all year could shift to value for July. Weak performance by growth stocks last month shifted the trend indicators to value. Along with weakening growth signals from a few other indicators, the one month only reading of the Style model is in value territory. The models use a two month smoothing to determine the final reading so barring a quick shift back in favor of growth emanating from July data inputs it seems that a value signal may be in the cards for July.

    Growth stocks are dominated by technology companies many of which are multinational. Technology has no language or cultural barriers. Several technology companies have noted weak demand from Europe which is being multiplied on the income statement by the weak Euro. A softening in the domestic economy is also at work impacting the indicators.

    In May the models were off target as Mid Cap rose almost 2% but lagged the 3% plus gains in large cap and small cap. As noted, technology dragged down growth indices in May leading to a gain of just over 2% against an almost 5% gain for value stocks. With half the year done, the Style model -- growth all year -- has matched the S&P 500 return of over 9%. The Market Cap model is lagging the S&P 500, up 6%, as investors have been cautious about taking on the added risk of small and mid cap stocks with the Europe crisis simmering and slowing GDP growth in China and the US.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an Illinois-registered investment advisor. Regulatory and disclousre filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:20 AM

    June 04, 2012

    Despite Volatility Models Still Favor Mid Cap and Growth

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style model for May. The Market Cap model still favors Mid Cap and the Style model continues to recommend Growth. Client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be maintained until at least July.

    The models reflect a sluggish U.S. and global economic outlook. Low interest rates and easy monetary policy provide an offset to slower economic data and the concerns emanating from Europe. Growth stocks, in particular, look better in this environment as investors seek shelter in companies able to grow their businesses against economic headwinds.

    Given market volatility and many economic data releases varying form expectations, the underlying indicators composing the models had a number of changes last month. In the Market Cap model, the lousy market shifted the technical indicator tracking market breadth to more conservative large caps. However, as noted above, the sharp decline in interest rates created an offset with the bond momentum indicator moving in favor of more aggressive small caps. Low interest rates eventually lead to outperformance from small caps which benefit from easy access to credit. The Style model shifted slightly further into growth territory reflecting slower economic growth.

    The models provided little value added in May against the market's sharp decline. One characteristic of May was that all markets fell about the same. Large, mid, and small cap indices each fell between 6% and 7%. Similarly, growth and value indices both fell around 6%. Given that mid caps are modestly aggressive and often volatile technology stocks are a significant component of growth indices, the models held up OK on a relative basis. However, that is little solace when account values are dropping sharply.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, inlcuding in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve Birenberg is sol proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor with the State of Illinois. Filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:58 AM | Comments (3)

    May 01, 2012

    Sticking with Mid Cap and Growth

    There were no changes to the April signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. The Market Cap model continues to recommend Mid Cap (MDY) and the Style model still prefers Growth (IWF). As a result, client positions in MDY and IWF will be held for at least another month.

    There was minimal movement in the underlying indicators for both models. The growth signal did get a little weaker but remains solidly in growth mode. The model's stability reflects a flattish stock market performance in March with little disparity among the returns for the S&P 500, the S&P 400 Mid Cap, and the Russell 2000 or the major growth and value indices. It also reflects relatively stable economic data with the US and global economies recovering and growing but at a below average pace for an economic recovery. What all that really means is that little new data hit the models that varied with data accumulated over the prior few months. We are still in a sluggish economic recovery with easy money. It is a good environment for publicly traded corporations but a difficult environment for many individuals. The primary risk to stocks remains that corporations can only grow profits and cash flow so far without help from end demand.

    Performance from the models last month was pretty good but did not add a lot of value. Both models produced returns just barely in negative territory while the S&P 500 lost about three quarters of one percent. MDY fell about one quarter of one percent, SPY lost three quarters of one percent, and IWM fell 1.6%. On the Style side, growth was barely negative and finished ahead of not only the S&P 500 but also the value index.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Northlake is registered investment advisor with the State of Illinois. Filings can be found at www.sec.gov.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:18 PM | Comments (2)

    April 03, 2012

    Back to Mid Cap for April

    For the month of April, Northlake’s Market Cap signals switched from favoring small cap to favoring mid cap. As a result, client positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) have been swapped into the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). The Style model remains on a growth signal so client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be maintained for at least another month.

    The shift from small to mid cap is the result of a combination of factors. As mentioned in prior updates, the small cap signal was relatively weak for both months it was in place. A small shift in the underlying model factors could easily shift it back to mid cap. This is exactly what happened as the technical and trend indicators favoring small cap weakened and the uptick in interest rates this past month is a negative for relative performance of small caps. The technical and trend indicators reflect that small cap stocks very slightly lagged large cap the past of couple of months. Interest rates are pretty straightforward. Small companies have less access to credit as a general rule so any uptick in interest rates, even from very low levels, tends to focus investors toward larger companies unaffected by possibly tighter credit conditions.

    During March, the models put in a mixed performance. The small cap signal neither added nor subtracted value as the Russell 2000 and S&P 500 each rose a little over 3%. The growth signal continued to perform well as IWF rose 3% ahead of the 2.5% gain for the comparable value index. For the quarter, the story was much the same as the Market Cap model produced a return in line with the S&P 500, while the growth model beat the S&P 500 and the value index. Growth is benefitting from superior performance of technology stocks over the past few months.

    Disclosure: MDY is widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a core holding in select accounts at Northlake Capital Management, LLC. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, a registered investment advisor with the Illinois Securities Department. IWM is a short hedge in the Entermedia Funds. Steve Birenberg is co-portfolio manager of the Entermedia Funds, owns a stake in the Funds investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:43 AM | Comments (2)

    March 03, 2012

    Small Caps and Growth Still in Vogue

    There are no changes to Northlake’s models for March. The Market Cap model is recommending small caps for the second consecutive month. The Style model continues to favor growth, as it has since August 2011. With no changes this month, Northlake client assets invested in the models will continue to own the Russell 2000 (IWM)) and Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    As mentioned in last month’s update, when the models shift off long running signals, there is often several months of volatility in the recommendations. The Market Cap model did stay on small cap for a second month. However, the indicators underlying the model show a weaker small cap signal. The bond momentum and trend indicators each shifted away from a small cap reading. Bond momentum measures the recent trend in interest rates. Although rates have not gone up over the last several months, the steady downtrend in rates has ceased. Small caps perform best is falling interest rate environments, so the indicator shifted away. The trend indicator is now in neutral mode after favoring small caps last month. This indicator measures very recent relative performance of small stocks vs. large stocks. As discussed further below, small caps lagged February’s rally so this indicator is no in neutral mode. Based on the current condition of the Market Cap model indicators, the model could very well shift back to mid caps next month.

    The Style model saw a strengthening of its growth signal for March driven mostly by a shift in trend indicator that reflects the recent strong performance of growth stocks. The growth signal is very likely to remain in place for at least another month or two given the currently strong reading in favor of growth stocks. With technology stocks back in a leadership role for the market, a growth signal is a comfortable place to be.

    Last month, the models put in a mixed performance. The new small cap signal trailed the market the S&P 500 by a little over 1%. Fortunately, this was offset by above average performance for the growth signal. On a year to date basis, both models are running comfortably ahead of the S&P 500.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:13 PM

    February 01, 2012

    Small Cap Back in Favor

    For the first time in 13 months, Northlake’s Market Cap model has a new signal. Beginning February, 2012, the model favors small cap. As a result, Northlake client holdings dedicated to the model have sold the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and proceeds were reinvested into the Russell 2000 (IWM). There were no changes to the Style model, which continues to strongly favor growth. Positions in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be maintained for at least another month.

    As is often the case when the model signal shifts, the new small cap reading is a weak one. Bear in mind that there is often volatility in the signals as they transition so a shift back to mid cap next month is possible. However, barring a significant market setback that impacts the technical indicators, I do not expect that to occur.

    The shift to small cap is primarily the result of the same technical indicators. Several months of a strong market rally has been led by small caps. The expanding breadth of the rally generally portends more rally lies ahead and continued strength for small cap stocks. The model also reflects improving U.S. economic performance. Small caps generally do well in the early stages of economic expansions as investors look to be more aggressive and corporate profits improve.

    The expired mid cap signal did not produce excess performance but did not meaningfully lag the market. Over the 13 months, MDY gained 3.7% against an increase of 4.4% for the S&P 500.

    Looking just at January 2012, the mid cap signal performed well, with MDY up 6.6% against a gain of 4.5% for the S&P 500. The Style model is also off to a good start in 2012. Growth was up 6.1% last month against 3.9% for value. After struggling in 2011, it is good to see the models on track again.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC. MDY is held in select Northlake client accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor. IWM is a net short position in the Entermedia Funds. Entermedia is a long/short equity hedge fund focused on media, communications, and related technologies. Steve is co-portfolio manager of Entermedia, owns a stake in the funds’ investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:16 PM | Comments (5)

    January 03, 2012

    2012 Starts at Mid Cap and Growth

    Northlake's Market Cap and Style models begin 2012 as they ended 2011, favoring Mid Cap and Growth. Both themes struggled in December but underlying factors in the models remain in place. As a result of the latest signals, Northlake clients invested in the models will continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    The Mid Cap signal remained in placed despite some changes to factors underlying the model. The recent upturn in consumer confidence shifted that indicator in favor of small caps. Also shifting toward small caps was the U.S. dollar indicator. Dollar strength presents a headwind for large caps, although this factor is not unusually strong. On the other hand, the year end market surge was led by large caps shifting the trend and technical indicators toward large caps. Overall, balance remains between indicators favoring large cap and those favoring small caps, so the model remains in mid cap mode.

    There were no changes to the signals from the indicators underlying the Style model. The model remains firmly in growth territory.

    Both models struggled in December, producing barley negative returns against a gain of almost 1% for the S&P 500. There is no obvious explanation for the poor performance of mid cap, especially since small cap was unchanged. The two are normally well correlated. Growth lagged due a weak month for technology stocks. The technology dominated NASDAQ fell close to 1% last month due to worries about the lingering impact of floods in Thailand on supply of critical components. Concern over demand also rose, fueled by a disappointing earnings report from Oracle.

    For 2011, both models produced disappointing results, declining approximately 2.5%. The Market Cap model was in mid cap mode almost all year and its return tracked the S&P 400 Mid Cap index. The Style model favored value until the fall when it switched to growth. The switch was timely until December when tech stocks fell and took a took a big bite out of growth.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, and SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:59 PM | Comments (2)

    December 05, 2011

    December Sticks With Mid Cap and Growth

    Mid Cap and Growth continue to be the favored themes at Northlake Capital Management, LLC. The latest model signals for December showed some underlying but not enough to shift the signals. As a result, for at least another month, Northlake clients using the models will continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    Looking at the individual factors underlying each model, there was some movement in favor of large caps and growth. The Market Cap model saw the breadth factor shift in favor of large cap. This reflects large cap stocks performing than better than small cap stocks over the past six months. The shift in this one factor still leaves the model solidly in mid cap territory but if another factor shifted toward large cap next month a change is possible.
    In the Style model, there was also one factor shifting its signal this month. Advisory Service Sentiment moved to Growth from Value reflecting less bullish sentiment among investment professionals. In the case of the Style model, the movement was in the direction of the current signal, so the Growth signal is now stronger and in territory where it is likely to stay in place for at least a couple of more months.

    The current signals have a bullish bias such that they should prove accurate if the market continues its recent rally through year end. With some more hopeful signs in Europe and continued good data on the U.S. economy, a yearend rally seems plausible. The potential fly in the ointment for the models is that any rally could be led by financial stocks which are highly sensitive to developments in Europe and include in Value. The rally that began last week has, in fact, been led by financial stocks with technology, a major component of Growth, lagging the market’s gains. In a bullish environment, technology should catch up if history is any guide.

    The models put in a good performance in November although the gains over the benchmark S&P 500 were minor. The Mid Cap signal saw MDY down just ¼ of 1% against a drop of almost ½ of 1% for the S&P 500. The Growth signal did a little better with IWF falling just 1/10th of 1%.

    Since the current signals were put in place the performance has been mixed. Growth has done well, down about 3% vs. a drop of over 4% for the Value. The Mid Cap signal has been off with MDY down over 2% against a drop of less than 1% for the S&P 500. Mid Cap has easily beaten Small Cap with the Russell 2000 (IWM) dropping almost 6%.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor. SPY and IWM are net short positions in the Entermedia Funds. The Entermedia Funds are long/short equity hedge funds focused on media, entertainment, communications, and related technologies. Steve is co-portfolio manager of Entermedia, owns a stake in Entermedia’s investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:22 AM | Comments (2)

    November 02, 2011

    Growth and Mid Cap Continue To Be Favored

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for November. Mid Cap and Growth remain the favored themes. As a result, client positions dedicated to these models and currently invested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be maintained for at least another month.

    For the last few months I have been expecting the Market Cap model to shift to large cap, reflecting the weak economic outlook. Most of the model's economic indicators already favor large caps. However, the models also contain interest rate and stock market technical components. These indicators continue to favor riskier small caps leading to an overall balanced model reading that settles on Mid Caps.

    Interest rates remain unusually low driven by Federal Reserve policies to support and improve the domestic economy. Low interest rates favor risk-taking and smaller companies with less access to capital. The technical indicators are specifically included to help the timeliness of the models. The huge market rally in October kept these momentum based indicators in the small cap camp. With recent U.S. economic data looking better, I feel OK about sticking with higher risk Mid Cap for another month.

    The Style model still favors growth as underlying indicator movement was modest. Strong performance from value stocks (led by financials and commodities) in October's rally moved the technical indicators from growth to value but this was offset by economic indicators moving in favor of growth. Growth is more valuable in a slowing economy as growth companies have their own earnings drivers and are less dependent on an economic tailwind. I am comfortable with growth as technology is most likely to lead the U.S. out of its economic troubles.

    The models put in a solid performance last month, reversing some recent inaccurate signals. Mid Cap rose over 13% in October, ahead of the 10% gain for large cap, as measured by the benchmark S&P 500. Value slightly beat growth, up 11.5% vs. 10.8% but both indices beat the S&P 500. The current Mid Cap signal has been in place since December during which it has lagged the S&P 500 by about 1%. The Growth signal is beginning its fourth month. Thus far, it has done well, producing a return about 1% ahead of value.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg’s personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 03:32 PM | Comments (3)

    October 05, 2011

    Mid Cap Survives Another Month as U.S. Economic Data is Mixed

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for October. The signals continue to favor Mid Cap and Growth. Underlying indicator movement was modest with a slight shift toward large cap and further movement toward what is now a solid growth signal. With no changes for October, Northlaake clients portfolios will continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) for at least another month.

    I am a little surprised that the Market Cap did not shift to large cap for October. The trend indicators did shift reflecting the weak performance of riskier small and mid cap stocks during September's market swoon. However, the economic and interest rate indicators remain mixed, much like the data on the U.S. economy. One of the difficulties for investors in U.S. stocks is that the recession risk is coming from an extension of Europe's problems. U.S. GDP growth has slowed but overall the indicators are not at recession levels. This dichotomy explains why U.S. stocks are so volatile. If recession is avoided, the market looks cheap so any positive news out of Europe causes a big rally, while continued weak economic data and inconsistent communication on contagion response efforts leads to sell offs.

    Ideally, the Market Cap indicator remains at Mid Cap as that likely indicates the U.S. avoids recession and the stock market rebounds. I think the outlook is very uncertain and I remain concerned about downside risk. As a result, I am keeping client portfolio positions with much higher cash balances than usual. This protects downside and partially compensates for the added risk while the Market Cap model remains in Mid Cap mode.

    Last month, the models put in a poor performance. MDY fell over 10% compared to 7% for the S&P 500. The model did avoid the 12% loss on the Russell 2000 Small Cap index. The Style model's growth signals fared better, with IWF declining just a bit more than the 7% loss on the S&P 500 and falling less than the 8% loss on the comparable value index. For the quarter, the model's performance looks similar. MDY was down significantly more than the S&P but held up better than small caps. The Style model had two months at growth and one at value which produced a return a little worse than the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:29 AM

    September 02, 2011

    Markets and Models are Volatile but Growth and Mid Caps Still Favored

    Despite lots of volatility in the stock market and the factors underlying Northlake’s Market Cap and Style models, there were no changes to the signals for September. The Market Cap model is still signaling Mid Cap and the Style model remains in Growth mode. As a result of the latest signals, Northlake client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be maintained for at least another month.

    Market volatility impacts both models primarily through the technical trend indicators. These indicators measure performance of various stock market indices over multiple time periods. Their function is to help the timeliness of the models. Most of the other indicators in the models measure economic data and monetary policy. They are purposefully designed to be focused on the long term. When the technical indicators are added, the models are balanced to a three to nine month outlook with average holding periods of four to six months typical for new signals. Keep in mind that the goal of the models is to identify major themes in favor on Wall Street. Northlake is trying to capture incremental performance over months and quarters and years. The strategy is not to capture performance every day or every week.

    I thought the Market Cap model might shift off the Mid Cap signal this month in favor of large caps. Small caps have led the market lower in the sell-off that began in late July. In addition, weaker economic data suggests reducing risk by shifting to less volatile large cap stocks. However, despite an unusually large shift in four of the ten underlying indicators, the model stayed on Mid Cap. The technical trend indicators did move toward large cap as I expected. In addition, the sharp drop in long-term interest rates flattened the yield curve, which signals less GDP growth ahead and is a time to be defensive.

    Despite these changes, the rapidly changing market and economic landscape also shifted a couple of indicators toward the increased risk of small caps. The collapse in consumer confidence has been so sharp that the model is now in territory where things are likely to get better before they get worse, signaling that adding risk makes sense. The market bottoms when the news is at its worst. The equally sharp drop in interest rates that triggered the flattening of the yield curve also shifted the interest rate indicator toward small caps. With short-term rates already near 0%, the drop was concentrated in the long end of the yield curve. Regardless, lower interest rates correlate well with small and mid cap stocks outperforming large cap caps. I still expect the Market Cap model to shift toward large cap in the coming months but the unusual and rapidly evolving market and economic environment means predictions are difficult.

    There were also a lot of changes to indicators in the Style model. In this case, the change was overwhelming in one direction: toward growth. The Style model shifted to growth for August and the new signal is much stronger. In general, the Style model is shifting in favor of growth stocks to reflect the weakening economy. Growth companies are more valuable in poor economic environments because they require less of a tailwind from the economy. Some growth companies can continue to make progress even during recessions.

    For September, the flattening yield curve, trend indicators, and insider buying and selling activity all moved to growth. Only coincident indicators shifted to value but this indicator is right on the border line so I do not much stock in the current signal. Overall, five of the nine indicators in the Style model now favor growth, a sharp shift from as recently as June when six of the nine indicators favored value. The current growth signal appears to be here to stay for a few more months.

    During August, the models put in a mixed performance. The new growth signal from the Style model worked well. IWF fell 5% but this was less than the 6% loss for the similar value index or the 5.8% loss for the S&P 500. The Mid Cap signal from the Market Cap model fell 7%, worse than the S&P 500 but better than an almost 9% loss for the Russell 2000 small cap index. On a year to date basis, the Market Cap model has produced a loss of 3% matching the price only return of the S&P 500. The Style model is down over 4% this year, trailing the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Ehrenberg personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Google, an SEC registered investment advisor. MDY is a net short position in the Entermedia Funds. Steve Birenberg is co-portfolio manager of Entermedia, owns a stake in the Funds’ investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:36 AM | Comments (3)

    August 01, 2011

    Growth and Mid Caps Favored for August

    As I suspected might occur, Northlake's Style model shifted from Value to Growth for August. The Market Cap model is unchanged for August. It continues to favor Mid Cap. As a result of the new Growth signal, all client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) have been swapped into the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). Positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) will be maintained for at least another month.

    With just a few exceptions, the Style model has favored Value since mid-2009. The reason is that Value usually performs better in the early to mid-stages of economic expansions. Value includes sectors like financials, industrials, and basic materials. Each of these sectors is cyclical and benefits from the economic strength and bullish Wall Street money flows. The economy began recovering in late 2008 and early 2009 so a Value signal made sense for most of the time since then.

    What has changed over the past few months is decelerating economic growth. The economy is still on a positive track but growth has lessened as evidenced most starkly by weaker than expected job numbers. Last week's weak GDP report clearly revealed the slowdown in the pace of economic recovery. In a lower growth economic environment, growth stocks in sectors like technology and health care make sense because they do not require the strong tailwind of economic growth to produce good earnings or rising stock prices.

    Looking back at July, the models performed poorly. MDY fell about 3.5%, worse than the 2.2% loss for the benchmark S&P 500. Value also lagged with IWD also dropping 3.5%, trailing both the S&P 500 and Growth, which fell just 1.3% as measured by IWF.

    So far this year, the models have a mixed performance. The yearlong Mid Cap signal has been accurate with MDY the best of major market cap indices, up 4% against 2.9% for the S&P 500 and 1.9% for small caps. The Style model fell short so far in 2011 with the yearlong Value signals up 1.1% against 2.8% for Growth. The just completed Value signal has been in place since December 2010. During that time, Value gained 8.5% and Growth gained 10.3%.

    Disclosure: IWF and MDY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:33 AM

    July 02, 2011

    Mid Cap and Value Still Reign

    For the seventh consecutive month there were no changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. Mid Cap and Value continue to be favored. As a result, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be maintained for another month.

    The lack of change to the signals for this long is unusual but no unprecedented. The Market Cap model typically changes signals every four to six months and the Style model normally changes every five to seven months.

    There was little movement in the underlying indicators of the Market Cap model, which remains right in the model of the range that favors Mid Cap. However, the Style model saw two indicators shift in favor of growth. Any further shifts in specific indicators in July could change the signal from value to growth for August.

    The two indicators that shifted toward growth this month were insider activity and trend. The insider indicator measures net buying by insiders of stocks in growth and value industries. Over the past few months it has shifted decisively toward growth. The trend indicators measure recent relative performance of value and growth indices and are picking up the relative strength in growth stocks over the past few months. In reality, it has been weakness in value stocks that is driving the shift. Bank, industrial, and industrial stocks fared poorly in the market correction when investors lost confidence in the economic recovery and worried again about bank balance sheets in light of renewed problems in Greece.

    In June, the model signals were inaccurate. Small and Mid Cap stocks led the market lower so MDY trailed the return of the benchmark S&P 500. However, year to date, the Market Cap model has added significant value with MDY gaining almost 8% versus 5% for the S&P 500.

    The Style model's value signal produced a return slightly worse than both the S&P 500 and small cap Russell 2000 in June. For the year, the Style model is now slightly worse than the market and the Russell 1000 Growth. Neither gap is large, however. This lagging performance for value stocks is what the trend indicator discussed above has picked up.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:26 PM | Comments (3)

    June 02, 2011

    Mid Cap and Value Again for June

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Cap or Style models for June. The Market Cap model continues to recommend Mid Cap, while the Style model remains on a Value signal. As a result of the latest signals, there are no changes to the portion of Northlake client portfolios dedicated to the models and positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    Underlying factors in the model had minimal movement. This is to be expected with the economy in slow but steady recovery and Federal Reserve policy on hold. Basically, the macroeconomic and interest rate drivers of the models are on hold leaving the factors underlying the models and the signals themselves unchanged.

    The Style model saw no movement at all for June but the Market Cap model did see a couple of offsetting changes. The Yield Curve indicator moved in favor of small caps but was balanced by the Breadth indicator moving toward large caps. The yield curve has steepened recently which historically has been appositive for small caps as it usually is associated with accelerating economic growth. May's selloff in stocks was led by small caps which move the breadth indicator to large cap. Weak breadth is often a forerunner of market weakness when large cap stocks typically hold up better.

    Last month the models saved clients a little money in a down market. MDY and IWD both held up slightly better than the market but the savings were modest. Year to date, the Market Cap continues to perform quite well gaining over 11% vs. a rise of almost 7% for the S&P 500. The Style model is up about 7.5% in 2011, producing a small incremental return compared to the market.

    ,b>Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:45 PM | Comments (10)

    May 02, 2011

    Continued Stability as Mid Cap and Value Look Good for May

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap or Style model signals for May. The Market Cap model continues to favor mid caps and the Style model still prefers Value. The models have been stable for six months now leaving Northlake clients invested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD). The stability of the models reflects an economic recovery that is proceeding according to historical norms and low volatility in the major stock market averages.

    As usual, there are some changes in the indicators that drive the models. Most notable, in the Style model, the value signal is stronger for May. This is the result of accelerating earnings growth for value stocks which leave them at historically cheap levels compared to growth stocks on the basis of P-E ratios. The economic recovery thus far has been kind to cyclical companies that comprise value indices thanks to big increases in basic materials prices driving commodity stocks and suppliers of products and services to commodity companies.

    Last month's mid cap and value signals did not provide value added to client portfolios. However, there was no material downside either. MDY and IWD each gained 2.6% last month, almost matching the 2.8% return for the benchmark S&P 500. Year to date, the Market Cap remains a winner, producing a return of over 12% against a gain of over 8% for the S&P 500. The Style model has matched the S&P 500 so far in 2011.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake Capital Management, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:59 PM | Comments (10)

    April 03, 2011

    Another Month Favoring Mid Cap and Value

    Despite great volatility surrounding events in Japan, Libya, the Middle East, and Europe, the stock market ended little changed in March. Northlake held up very well during the volatility just after the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. As the market rallied into month end, small and mid cap stocks once again asserted leadership, helping Northlake client portfolios finish a strong quarter.

    Despite volatility in global events, there was no change to Northlake's Market Cap and Style model signals for April. The Market Cap model continues to recommend Mid Cap, while the Style model still favors Value. The message being delivered by the models remains that the economic and stock market cycles are favorable but we are far enough along in the recovery to warrant having less than maximum risk. As a result of the latest model signals, client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be held.

    Northlake's models continue to send accurate and value added signals. Leading the way again for Northlake clients in March was an accurate signal from the Market Cap model. During March, the Mid Cap signal was quite profitable as MDY gained about 2% against a flat return for the S&P 500.

    Mid Cap was favored for the entire first quarter and produced an equally good result with MDY up over 9% versus a gain of less than 6% for the S&P 500. The Style model produced a neutral result in the first quarter, as the quarter long Value signal left client portfolios invested in IWD, which closely tracked the almost 6% gain in the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:22 AM | Comments (4)

    March 01, 2011

    Mid Cap and Value Remain in Favor for March

    There we no changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for March. The favored themes remain Mid Cap and Value. As a result the latest signals, there will be no change in Northlake client holdings dedicated to the models. Clients will continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    With no change to the signals, it is not surprising that movement in the underlying indicators was minimal. In each model, one factor shifted against the latest signal. Overall, the Mid Cap and Value signals look firm and are likely to remain for April barring significant market movement that impacts the shorter term technical and trend indicators.

    The Market Cap model has already been impacted by market trends as the market breadth indicator shifted from large cap to small cap for March reflecting the positive relative performance for small cap stock indices over the past several months. The Market Cap model now has four indicators favoring small cap and six favoring large cap, resulting in a mid cap signal. The model is balancing the positive momentum of a long running bull market with economic statistics that are suggesting the recovery is nearing a normal path. Small caps are the choice on the turn off the bottom in the market and economy, while large caps work best in latter stages of bull markets and economic expansions. Right now, we appear to be a midpoint so the model flashes a mid cap signal.

    In the Style model, the one factor that shifted was relative valuation. The price-earnings ratio of growth stocks compared to value stocks is now below the long-term average indicating that growth stocks look relatively cheap. However, the Style model remains very firmly in value territory with only two of the ten indicators flashing a growth signal.

    The models performed reasonably well last month. The mid cap signal provided an excess return of more than 1% vs. the benchmark S&P 500, although small cap stocks did even better. A small cap signal would have earned 1% more than the mid cap signal. Year to date, mid cap has been the best performer, up about 6.5% versus 5.9% for large cap and 5.2% for small cap.

    The Style model produced more modest incremental returns in February with the 3.8% return exceeding the S&P 500 and the growth index by about one half of 1%. So far in 2010, growth, value, and the S&P 500 have all earned plus or minus 6%.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:40 AM | Comments (2)

    February 02, 2011

    Mid Cap and Value Still Favored for February

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style model signals for February. The Market Cap model continues to favor mid cap, while the Style model still recommends value. As a result of the latest signals, Northlake clients will maintain positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    Underlying movement in both models was minimal. The mid cap signal did weaken slightly and is not far off a switch to large cap. Recent weakening in the dollar as the European crisis eased moved the U.S. Dollar indicator in favor of large caps. The rest of the Market Cap model indicators remained unchanged for February.

    Since a strong small cap signal in November, the Market Cap model has shifted steadily toward large cap. The message is that the economic recovery is moving into a more normal phase of sustained growth. As a result, it no longer pays to own the riskiest of the three asset classes (small, mid, and large cap equities). It is counterintuitive but it is usually best to own the risky asset at extremes. As the extreme, reversion to the mean, or the risk trade, pays off. Now that economic risk has receded, as recent data shows steady strengthening, the model is moving to safer investments since the incremental upside in risky investments is less.

    The Style model shifted to growth for one month back in November but is now firmly in value territory again. That makes nineteen of the last twenty months where value was favored. Value is favored when the economy is recovering or at the depths of recessions. Value stocks tend to be cyclical and get a boost when the economy is bottoming or improving. Growth works best when an economy is in late stages of expansion as the unit growth characteristics of growth companies become more highly valued as the economic tailwind slackens.

    Neither model added or subtracted much from portfolio performance last month. Both models gained slightly over 2%, bracketing the 2.3% return for the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:15 PM

    January 04, 2011

    Shifting to Mid Cap and Sticking with Value to Start the New Year

    Northlake's Style model shifted back to Mid Cap for January after a three month run at small cap. As a result, client assets dedicated to the Core and Explore strategy shifted their investment from the Russell 2000 (IWM) into the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). The Style model was unchanged for January, sticking with the value signal. Client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be maintained.

    The Market Cap model has been vacillating between small cap and mid cap over the past six months. There is no real message there. Rather the favoring of small or mid cap over large cap is a sign that the economic recovery is proceeding and interest rates are low. These conditions favor the more volatile asset class with a higher risk-reward tradeoff. For January, there were actually no shifts in the underlying factors making up the Market Cap model. The model uses a two month average and last month the slight uptick in interest rates, which accelerated in December, had moved the one month reading to mid cap. The January update confirmed the prior month reading and shifted the two month average to mid cap.

    The Style model has moved back pretty firmly into Value territory after a one month stay at growth in November. I would expect February to once again signal value based on the current readings of the model's underlying factors. The Style model is also signaling a firming economic expansion with conditions that favor continued strengthening. These include low interest rates, a steeper yield curve, and investor appetite for risk. Value is also sensitive to the performance of financial stocks. Banks led the rally in December, pushing the technical and trend indicators that contribute to the Style model deeply in favor of value.

    Last month, both model signals proved accurate, capping off a great year for Northlake's models. IWM gained over 7.5%, about 1% more than the S&P 500 and S&P Mid Cap 400. For the year, the Market Cap model returned just over 28% vs. a little under 13% for the S&P 500 on a price only basis.

    In December, IWD was also up about 7.5%, beating the S&P 500 by 1% and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) by almost 2.5%. For 2010, the Style Model earned over 1%, also about 2.5% more than the S&P 500 on a price only basis.

    Both of Northlake's models did their job well in 2010. Here is a New Year's wish for more of the same in 2011!

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a core holding for select clients of Northlake. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC registered investment advisor. IWM is currently a short position as a hedge against much greater longs in the Entermedia Funds. Steve Birenberg is co-portfolio manager of Entermedia, owns a stake in the Funds' investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:57 AM | Comments (1)

    December 01, 2010

    Back to Value as Economic Recovery Becomes More Sustainable

    Northlake's Style model shifted back to Value after a one month stay at Growth. The model is in transition with mixed signals that are straddling the line between growth and value. The monthly signal volatility is not unusual when a long running signal reaches its conclusion. Prior to last month, the Style model had been signaling value since the summer of 2009. I think the trend is clear and I expect a growth signal to re-emerge over the next few months. But I never outguess the models so as a result of the new signal, all Northlake client holdings in the Russell 1000 Growth Index (IWF) have been swapped back into the Russell 1000 Value Index (IWD).

    The shift this month occurred primarily due the recent strength in the dollar. Growth stocks benefit from a weak dollar as many growth companies like technology and pharmaceuticals do much of their business outside the United States. With the prior month's growth signal being a weak one, right on the border between growth and value, one factor shifting its signal was enough to change the Style model's recommendation. Regardless of the volatility of the signals of late, the message from the Style model is that the economic recovery is moving from its cyclical bounce to a more sustainable, albeit low growth phase. This phase of the economic cycle favors growth because these companies can sustain momentum with less help from the economy than the cyclical companies that dominate value indices.

    The Market Cap model remains on a small cap signals for the third straight month. As a result, client holdings in the Russell 2000 (IWM) will be held for another month. The Market Cap model did have underlying movement toward large cap. In fact, there is a good chance that next month the signal will shift to mid cap. Weaker market breadth in November, still modest levels of consumer confidence, and recently rising interest rates all contribute to the weaker small cap signal this month.

    Last month both model signals provided value added. The growth signal generated a positive return of almost 1%, while value and the S&P 500 each produced a small negative return. The small cap signal was particularly good in November as the Russell 2000 (IWM) gained almost 3.5% a little higher than mid cap and much higher than the small loss for the S&P 500. Year-to-date, the Market Cap model has been extremely valuable, producing a return of 15% against just under 6% for the S&P 500. The Style model has mixed results, producing a gain about 1% ahead of the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: IWD and IWM are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC-registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:35 PM | Comments (4)

    November 02, 2010

    Style Model Finally Favors Growth

    For the first time since the summer of 2009, Northlake's Style model is recommending Growth over Value. In last month's commentary, I mentioned this shift was possible as there had been a steady drift in the underlying model factors toward growth. The signal for November changed to growth but is just over the borderline. It is a weak signal as the indicators are actually split pretty evenly, just leaning slightly toward growth. As a result of the new growth signal, all Northlake client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) were swapped into the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    The new growth signal is based on a combination of sluggish U.S. economic growth, the weakening dollar, and recent strength in technology stocks that has shifted stock market technical indicators toward growth.

    There was no change in the Market Cap model this month, which continues to favor small caps. The signal is stronger than it was for October.

    The long running value signal produced mixed results. For the entire 16 month period it was active, IWD produced a return of 27.8%, trailing the return on IWF by about 3.5%. However, for 2010 and the entire signal period, IWD produced a return that matched the S&P 500 benchmark for Northlake's investment strategy.

    The new small cap signal is off to a good start. In October, it's first month, the Russell 2000 Small Cap (IWM) earned 4.2%, ahead of the S&P 500 at 3.8% and the previously owned S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) at 3.5%.

    Disclosure: IWF is widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC-registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:20 AM | Comments (6)

    October 05, 2010

    Small Cap Emerges Again, Value Alive But Fading

    Northlake's Market Cap model shifted back to small cap for October. As a result of the change, all client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) were sold and replaced by the Russell 2000 (IWM). There were no changes to the Style model, which remains on the long running Value signal.

    The shift to small cap comes after a three month run for mid cap. Several underlying indicators in the Market Cap model shifted in favor of small cap but the primary catalyst for the change was in the technical stock market indicators. The big rally in September and a double digit gain for the major averages in the second quarter improved the technical condition of the market and drove trend based indicators to favor the more aggressive small cap index. Technical factors shifting in favor of small cap include advisory service sentiment, market breadth, and trend indicators. There was one change in economic indicators as consumer confidence moved toward small cap. Consumer confidence is a contrarian indicator. The recent lower levels of confidence are interpreted to mean the next move is likely up. At negative extremes, investors want to stress the higher risk asset to take advantage the likely coming improvement. It is often difficult to get more aggressive when news flow is poor. This is one reason why the models are useful and successful as they take emotion out of the decision-making process.

    While the Style model again stayed on Value, as it has since July 2009, there was underlying movement in the model factors which put a shift to growth in the possible range for next month. Once again it is trend indicators driving the movement as the September rally was led by growth stocks.

    Overall, the models still are giving a message of a low growth economic environment that is conducive to success for corporations and the stock market. The models are not suggesting a good economy for average consumers but the stock market can disconnect from the economy under certain economic conditions. The current environment of extremely low interest rates, record profit margins, and improving corporate balance sheets is one such instance.

    September saw mixed results for the models. The mid cap signal worked well, as MDY gained 2% more than the benchmark S&P 500 and just about kept up with IWM. However, as noted, value lagged growth and also lagged the S&P 500 by just under 2%. For the third quarter, when the mid cap signal was in place, the performance was similar. Mid cap was a good place to be but value returned less than growth. The long-term performance of the Style model has slipped slightly but the value signal still matches the return of the growth index. As they say, "no harm, no foul."

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:26 AM | Comments (2)

    September 02, 2010

    Mid Cap and Value Again in September

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for September. The Market Cap model is recommending Mid Cap for the third straight month and the Style model is signaling Value as it has since July 2009. With no changes this month, Northlake client assets dedicated to the Core and Explore strategy will continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    The Mid Cap signal is slightly stronger this month as the Market Cap model continues its steady drift away from recommending high risk small caps. Eventually this model will shift to large caps unless economic activity and the stock market both firm up. The model continues to pick up softening but still positive economic growth and stock market trends suggesting less risk is better. The slight movement away from small caps to a stronger mid cap signal for September is the result of technical indicators picking up deteriorating stock market breadth over the past few months and lagging performance by small cap stocks.

    The Value signal remains very strong for September, matching its most value-oriented reading this cycle. There was no movement in any of the underlying indicators this month. The Style model is picking up on slowing but still positive economic growth. This environment offers industrial companies good profit opportunity as has been evident in the very strong earnings growth reported over the last few quarters.

    Neither model added much value last month. MDY lost slightly more than the S&P 500 last month while IWD held up a bit better. Over the past two months, the new Mid Cap signal has barley lagged the S&P 500 but has outperformed the small cap Russell 2000 (IWM) which it replaced. IWD has performed well in its thirteen month run, earning more than the comparable growth index and the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. Steve is sole proprietor of Northlake, an SEC-registered investment advisor. Steve is also co-manager of the Entermedia Funds, long/short equity hedge funds focused on media and communications.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:10 AM | Comments (2)

    August 06, 2010

    Mid Cap and Value Still in Favor for August

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market and Style models for August. The market Cap model continues to recommend Mid Caps and the Style models still favors Value. As a result, Northlake client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be maintained for another month.

    The Market Cap model saw a few shifts in its underlying indicators with one moving from large cap to small cap and another shifting the opposite way. The overall model thus held quite steady. Moving to small cap was the market breadth indicator which reflects the broad rally in July that lifted all the major indices, sectors, and themes up in unison. Shifting to large cap was the coincident indicators factor. This factor reflects the ongoing economic recovery. Small caps make sense when the economy is doing quite poorly because cyclical influences mean the next move is likely up. Therefore, when things look bleak the riskiest trade makes sense. Now that a recovery is underway, even if it is stalling, it no longer makes sense to play the higher risk small caps. Overall, the Market Cap model continues to reflect a moderate economic recovery that is supportive of the stock market.

    The Style model saw no changes in its underlying factors. The signal remains in a very strong Value position. Value stocks are favored in a moderate economic growth environment where cyclical economic growth can drive earnings of industrial, materials, and financial corporations that dominate value indices.

    As noted briefly above, the July stock market rally was remarkably broad and consistent. The S$P 500 gained almost 7% and most all other major indices gained right around the same amount. MDY was up 6.8%, the small cap Russell 2000 (IWM) was up 6.8%, IWD was up 6.8%, and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) was up 7.2%. Little value can be added by Northlake's model when the market moves in unison but neither can anything be lost. So far this year, both models have added value and outperformed the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a core position for selected clients of Northlake Capital Management. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, an SEC registered investment advisor.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:16 AM | Comments (2)

    July 01, 2010

    Moving to Mid Cap for July

    Northlake's Market Cap model shifted from small cap to mid cap for July, ending a five month run favoring the small company theme. As a result of the shift, all Northlake client assets invested in the Market Cap model have sold IWM and purchased the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). There was no change to the Style model, which continues to flash a value signal as it has since July 2009.

    The shift to mid cap is the result of the loss of momentum in the economic recovery and a couple of months of lagging performance for small caps relative to large caps. Simply put, recent economic statistics and stock market performance align with a lower exposure to the riskiest asset in the market cap basket. The fact that the economic recovery has stalled as opposed to reversed into recession supports above average risk exposure and mid caps over large caps. That said, the model works in a stair step fashion and it would take highly unusual circumstances to move from small cap to the least risk asset, large cap, in just one month. The current signal is actually closer to small cap than mid cap so even another month of weak economic data and poor stock market breadth is likely to leave the model in mid cap at least through August. Should the economic data and stock market environment improve, a shift back to small cap is very possible.

    There were minimal changes in the underlying factors that drive the Market Cap model. In fact, the only factor to shift was bond market momentum which actually moved in favor of small caps due t rapidly falling interest rates. The larger shift to mid cap was driven by many of the other inputs moving toward a less risky posture in light of an apparent sudden slowing in the economic recovery.

    There was also minimal change in the Style model inputs for July. The relative P-E measure did shift from value to growth but it was not enough to meaningful move the very strong value signal that has been emanating from the Style model over the past several months. The Style model is suggesting that the economic recovery remains intact despite the recent batch of worse than expected economic data. It is worth noting that many of the soft economic statistics remain in positive growth territory. They are just less growth-oriented than Wall Street had been expecting.

    During the five months the Market Cap model recommended IWM, the small cap index outperformed the S&P 500 by more than 5%. IWM even held up well on a relative basis during the May/June market decline. This is somewhat of a surprise and I am more comfortable with the mid cap signal given the suddenly tricky market environment.

    The Style model has also sent an accurate signal since the current signal went into place a year ago. Over this time frame, the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) has gained almost 14% vs. a gain of just under 12% for the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). More recently, the value signal helped relative performance in early 2010 and held its own in the second quarter.

    Disclosure: IWD and MDY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a core holding in select accounts managed by Northlake Capital Management. Steve Birenberg is sole proprietor of Northlake.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:38 PM

    June 02, 2010

    Lots of Movement for June But Still Favor Small Cap and Value

    May's sharp market correction caused a lot of underlying movement in Northlake's Market Cap and Style models but not enough to change the signals for June. The Market Cap model continues to signal small cap and the Style model remains favoring value. As a result, Northlake client positions dedicated the Core and Explore strategy will remain invested in the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    The Market Cap model had quite a bit of underlying movement with three indicators shifting in favor of large cap and one indicator moving toward small cap. Moving to large cap were deteriorating bullish sentiment, the flattening of the yield curve, and narrowing market breadth. Shifting to small cap was the strengthening of the U.S. dollar as small cap stocks have less exposure to negative currency translation and increased competitiveness of foreign companies. Overall, the movement in the Market Cap model suggests a desire to take less risk as the volatility in global financial, currency, and commodity markets threatens the economic and corporate earnings recovery. The Market Cap signal for just June is actually in mid cap territory (the signal Northlake uses is a two month average). Relative stability in the indicators for June is likely to shift the model to Mid Cap for July.

    The Style model also had increased underlying movement this month with the result being an even stronger signal in favor of value. Lower P-E ratios for value relative to growth and the strengthening dollar work in favor of value. The one shift in favor of growth was insider activity where buying and selling is now more balanced between growth and value stocks. The Style model continues to show confidence in the economic recovery and is attracted to the cheaper stocks in the value universe. The current value signal is strong is extremely strong and will certainly remain value for July.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a short hedge in the Entermedia Funds. Steve Birenberg is co-portfolio manager of the Entermedia Funds, owns a portion of the Funds' investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:34 AM | Comments (2)

    May 04, 2010

    Another Month at Small Cap and Value on Tap for May

    The latest signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models once again are unchanged. For May, the Market Cap model still favors small cap and the Style model remains in value mode. Northlake client positions dedicated to the models will remain invested in the Russell 2000 (IWM) for small cap and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) for value.

    May is the 4th consecutive month the Market Cap model has signaled small cap and the 11th straight month the Style model has recommended value. The models generally reflect a recovering economy and an increased appetite for risk among investors. This is consistent with my own outlook for the market and the economy with the biggest risk being a sharp correction where the higher volatility of small cap and value stocks hurts returns in the short run.

    Fortunately, the model signals have been on target in the latest month, year to date, and since they went in place. Last month the S&P 500 returned 1.48% on a price only basis while small caps as measured by IWM gained 5.87% and value as measured by IWD gained 2.60%. So far this year, the Market model has returned 15.41% and the Style model is up 9.16% against a price only gain of 6.42%. The 11 month run in the Style model for value has generally worked well with a gain of almost 32% against growth at 28% and the S&P 500 at 29%.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:53 AM

    April 02, 2010

    Small Cap and Value Again in April

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for April. The Market Cap model is recommending small cap for the third straight month, while the Style model continues to signal value, as it has since July 2009. Northlake client assets invested with the models continue to own the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    There was minimal change in the model factors this month. The Market Cap model has the same reading as the prior month, which I would characterize as moderately strong small cap signal. None of the underlying factors changed for April. The Market Cap model continues to reflect a recovering economy but the small cap signal emanates more from sentiment and technical factors that suggest investors are willing to accept more risk.

    The Style model had a bit of movement for April with the trend indicators moving from neutral to favoring value. This reflects the strong performance of value stocks so far this year, which are well ahead of the S&P 500 and their growth counterparts. The Style model also reflects a recovering economy but one that has moved beyond the sharp cyclical upturn normal seen at turning points.

    Both models are performing well so far in 2010 with returns of greater than 8 % vs. a gain of just under 5% for the S&P 500. The two month old small cap signal has returned about 13% when the S&P 500 is up approximately 9%. Since July 2009, the value signal has gained almost 28% vs. 26% for the growth index and 27% for the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a short position in the Entermedia Funds, solely as a hedge against a long portfolio. the Entermedia Funds do not use Northlake's models. Steve Birenberg is co-manager and co-owner of the Entermedia Funds and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:29 AM

    March 01, 2010

    Sticking With Small Cap and Value for March

    There were no changes to Northlake's models for March. The Market Cap model is sending a small cap signal for the second consecutive month and the Style model remains on value, as it has been since July 2009. As a result of the latest signals, all client positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 (IWD) tracking the models will be maintained.

    Underlying movement in the model indicators was modest. The small cap signal is slightly stronger this month but still registers as a weak signal. The only factor to shift was NYSE Breadth which moved from large cap to small cap reflecting the broad market gains over the past six months. The value signal weakened but remains firm. Two factors, Insider Activity and Trend Indicators moved from Value to Neutral. Overall, the models continue to suggest a transitional market and economy, moving from the oversold, cyclical rally phase but struggling to gain the consistent growth in an economic and market expansion.

    In February, the Market Cap model sent an accurate signal while the Style model performed was neutral. Small caps gained over 4% in February, ahead of the 3% gain for the S&P 500. Both value and growth gained a bit over 3%.

    So far in 2010, both models have produced a return better than the market with each gaining about 1% vs. a decline of just under 1% for the S&P 500.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. IWM is a hedge in the Entermedia Funds. Steve Birenberg is co-manager of the Entermedia Funds, owns a portion of the Funds' investment management company, and has personal monies invested in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:10 PM

    February 01, 2010

    Back to Small Caps as Market Cap Model Volatility Continues

    Northlake’s Market Cap model continues to show unusual volatility, reflecting the volatile economic and financial market environment. For February the model is sending a small cap signal. As a result, all Northlake model-driven, client positions in mid cap (MDY) have been sold and the proceeds have been reinvested in small cap (IWM). The Style model remains firmly on a Value signal. As a result, all client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) are being maintained.

    The Market Model has switched signals for three straight months and five of the last six. This is very unusual volatility. The last time something similar occurred was in mid-2005. The volatility is tied to the maturing of the first phase of economic and financial market recovery. Economic statistics have moved off their dire readings to somewhat normal levels for the early stage of an economic recovery. At the same time, financial markets have stabilized and in some cases, such as stocks, staged a huge rebound. This leaves the economy and financial markets in limbo awaiting the next big move. With many of the model’s underlying indicators moving from extreme readings to normal readings, the monthly “score” of the model sits right in the middle of its 0 to 100 range. Thus, changes in the indicators lead to greater than usual volatility in the monthly signals.

    Interestingly, the Style model is exhibiting little volatility. The value signal has been in place since July 2009. A couple of things are at work. First, the style model made a strong move into value territory in the first month or two of the current signal. This makes modest changes in the underlying indicators less likely to change to the monthly signal. Second, by virtue of having just two options, growth or value, the Style model has longer average holding periods.

    The current value signal strengthened considerably for February and is now at is strongest level since early 2005. For February, two underlying indicators moved from growth to value. Coincident Indicator of economic growth is now accelerating on a year over year basis, a clear positive for more economically value stocks and consistent with the recent GDP report showing the economy is growing economy. The stock market trend indicators also shifted to value as growth stocks suffered from a sharp sell-off in technology stocks. Expect the value signal to remain in place for the next couple of months.

    In January, the models performed fairly well. The value signal worked as IWD fell 2.8% against a decline of 4.5% for the comparable growth index and 3.7% for the S&P 500. Since July, IWD has slightly outperformed the comparable growth index. The January mid cap signal was accurate but added minimal value. MDY fell 3.2%, holding up better than the S&P 500 and the Russell 2000 Small Cap (IWM) which each fell 3.7%.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. MDY and SPY are core holdings for some clients of Nortlake Capital Management, LLC, including in Steve Birenberg's personal acocunts. IWM and SPY are short positions, solely for the purpose of hedging, in the Entermedia Funds. The Entermedia Funds are co-managed and co-owned by Steve Birenberg, who has a significant personal investment in the Funds.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:23 AM | Comments (2)

    January 05, 2010

    Back to Mid Cap to Start the New Year

    Northlake's Market Cap Model started 2010 with a new signal favoring Mid Cap. This reverses the change made at the start of December when the model moved from mid cap to large cap. As a result of the new signal, positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) linked to the model were swapped to the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). Some clients have long-term, core positions in SPY which are not impacted by shifts in the model. There were no changes to the Style model which remains on a Value signal, as it has since the begging of July.

    The shifting signals from the Market Cap model are occurring because the economy and stock market recovery have advanced just far enough to take away the incentive to own higher risk assets that are desirable "when things are so bad, the next move is likely to be up." The model is right on the borderline between moderate risk and below average risk so small changes in the underlying factors can move the needle enough to switch the signal on a more regular basis. In general, average holding periods for both models are four to six months.

    The shift to mid cap for January was due to two underlying factors. Market Breadth and Trend Indicators now both favor small cap, creating a situation where half of the underlying indicators are flashing small cap and half are flashing large cap. The resulting signal is mid cap.

    Both the factors that changed are reflecting the outstanding performance of small and mid cap stocks in December compared to large caps. Unfortunately, this means that the December shift from mid cap to large cap left money on the table. Clients still made a couple of percent on SPY but had the model stuck with MDY the upside would have been about 5% greater.

    The Style model also lagged in December, reversing earlier gains relative to the market and the Growth index. Since the signal switched to Value in July, the resulting investment in Russell 1000 Value (IWD) has matched the market and its growth counterpart.

    For all of 2009, both models closely tracked the return on the S&P 500. This is a satisfactory result although the goal of the strategy is produce excess return vs. the S&P 500. Given the highly unusual nature of stock market activity over the past twelve months, it does not seem surprising that in the end returns evened out.

    Disclosure: MDY, SPY, and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal account.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:23 PM

    December 01, 2009

    Market Cap Model Shifts to Large Cap for December

    Northlake's Market Cap model shifted to Large Cap from Mid Cap for the month of December. The current signal is just barely in large cap territory. The shift reflects the lessening impact of a cyclical bottom in the economy and financial market conditions. When the financial markets and economy quickly decelerated following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, the Market Cap model began to strongly favor small caps. As the markets and economy have been in recovery mode since spring, the extreme readings seen in many of the underlying indicators have moderated.

    One basic tenet of the model is that at extreme readings you should take the opposite trade. In other words when all the indicators were reflecting the disaster in the global economy and markets, the next move was likely to be up. Thus, it was time to favor small caps and bet on their higher volatility. Now that economic and market conditions have eased, there has been a gradually lessening in the desirability of the higher risk small and mid cap indices. This was first reflected in October when the Market model shifted from small cap to mid cap. After a two month run, the model took the next step in reducing portfolio risk by moving to lower volatility large cap.

    As a result of the latest shift, all non-core client holdings in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) were sold and proceeds were reinvested in the S&P 500 (SPY).

    There were actually few changes in the underlying indicators of the Market Cap model. Rather several indicators that were favoring small caps weakened. In particular, the indicators tied to interest rates, while still favoring small caps, are much weaker now than a month ago. On the other hand, technical indicators, which had already favored large caps, grew stronger in that view following a month when the S&P 500 produced a return far in excess of the Russell 2000 (IWM) and S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY).

    The Style model is unchanged for December and continues to flash a value signal. As a result, client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) will be maintained.

    The models had a below average performance in November. The Style model's recommendation of Value worked out OK as IWD rose 5.73% almost exactly matching the S&P 500 return of 5.74%.

    The Market Cap model underperformed in November as MDY gained 4.20%, lagging the S&P 500 by about 1.5%. Not all was lost, however, as MDY still performed better than the small cap IWM, which gained 3.1% in November.

    The current value signal has been in place since the beginning of July. During that time, the value signal has been pretty good with IWD up 10.3% against a gain of 18.4% for the comparable growth index. The S&P 500 is up 19.1% during the same period.

    The expired Mid Cap signal had mixed results. For October and November, MDY produced a price only return of -0.50%. The S&P 500 easily beat this results as SPY gained 4.1%. Once again, not all was lost as the small cap IWM fell 3.6%. Thus, the model's recommendation to move from small cap to mid cap at the start of October was accurate. It was not, however, as accurate as possible.

    Disclosure: IWD and SPY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. MDY and IWM are held as core positions by selected clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:26 PM | Comments (2)

    November 02, 2009

    November Model Update: Mid Cap and Value Still Favored

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for November. The Market Cap model is sending a Mid Cap signal for the second consecutive week. The Style model has a Value reading for the fifth consecutive month.

    Underlying trends in the Market Cap model show a continued shift toward large cap and away from small cap. However, while leaning toward large cap, the indicators remain mixed, so the signal remains on mid cap. Two indicators moved in favor of large caps this month. Both were technical/trend indicators, reflecting the weak performance of small cap stocks last month. More detail can be found be below.

    The Style model also saw two changes to underlying indicators this month, one in each direction. The valuation indicator switched from growth to value as value stock relative P-E ratios are now below average compared to growth stocks. This reflects the economic recovery and the positive impact it has on value companies that tend to be more sensitive to economic growth.

    The trend indicators moved from value to growth last month. This reflects a good month for growth stocks in October. More details below on this as well.

    Overall, the Market Cap ad Style models still reflect an improving economy and better investor confidence that the recovery will take hold. The models are no longer at the extreme readings from earlier this year when investor sentiment was very sour and the economy was at the depths of the recession. The result is that the models are sending somewhat mixed readings that no longer advocate for the most aggressive positioning. Client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and Russell 1000 Value (IWD) are being maintained and reflect the mixed readings.

    Northlake's models were off target in October but not all was lost. The Market Cap model moved from small cap in September to mid cap for October. This proved to be a mixed signal as the Russell 2000 (IWM) fell by 6.5% against a decline of 4.5% for the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). However, mid caps still underperformed the large cap S&P 500 (SPY) in October. SPY fell just 2.0%. The Market Cap model correctly called moving away from small caps after a 13 month run but incorrectly shifted only to mid cap.

    The Style model's four month run on value still looks good. Value, as measured by the Russell 1000 Value index (IWD) has outperformed growth, as measured by the Russell 100 Growth index (IWF), by more than 1%. However, in October growth was the winner, limiting its loss to -1.3% vs. -3.2% for the S&P 500.

    Mid caps and value lagged in October due to souring investor sentiment toward the economic recovery. Both strategies work better in a bullish stock market environment. The S&P 400 Mid Cap benefits from greater volatility relative to large caps and also has more exposure to economically sensitive industries like materials and energy. The Russell 1000 Value has a similarly greater exposure to economic trends with the addition of many more financial companies. Financial companies are the fulcrum of investor sentiment this market cycle due to their central role in the economic crisis.

    Disclosure: MDY and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC. IWM and SPY are held by certain clients of Northlake as core positions. In his personal accounts, Steve Birenberg holds MDY, IWD, and SPY.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:07 AM

    October 02, 2009

    October 2009 Models: Small Cap Run Ends, Mid Cap Favored

    After 13 months flashing a Small Cap signal, Northlake's Market Cap model shifted to Mid Cap for October. I had anticipated this move after steady weakening of the small cap signal over the past several months. The new mid cap signal is a weak one and could shift back next month but the message is clear: the extreme conditions in place in the economy and credit markets have eased reducing the attractiveness of small caps as the play in a market and economic recovery.

    As a result of the shift, all Northlake client positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) dedicated to the model were sold and the proceeds were reinvested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY).

    The Style model was unchanged for October. The Value signal that has been in place since July 1st remains in a slightly stronger position. All client positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) have been maintained. Last month growth slightly outperformed value but since the current signal was triggered, IWD has beaten the comparable growth index (IWF) by almost 4%.

    Two underlying indicators in the Market Cap model shifted in favor large caps this month while one shifted in favor of small caps. Please keep in mind that the model rates ten factors as favorable for small or large cap and a mixed result leads to a mid cap signal. Also remember that the models almost work in stair step fashion, moving from small to mid to large to mid to small.

    The factors shifting in favor of small caps were a peaking in advisory service bullish sentiment and the continued weakness in the dollar. Technical indicators moved back to favoring small caps reflecting the very strong relative performance of small cap stocks over most of 2009.

    During the 13 months the small cap signal was in place, the return for the Russell 2000 Small Cap index matched the return of the S&P 500 as both fell 18%. The small cap signal was inaccurate in the fourth quarter of 2008 but fully reversed the lost performance in 2009. In fact, in 2009, the Russell 2000 has produced a return of 22%, about 5% ahead of the S&P 500.


    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:04 PM | Comments (5)

    September 03, 2009

    September Models Still Favor Small Caps and Value

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for September. The signals remain small cap and value. As a result, all client positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) and Russell 1000 Value (IWD) controlled by these models will remain in place until at least the first trading day of October.

    August marks the 12th straight month that the Market Cap model has sent a small cap signal. September's signal weakened for the third straight month and could easily switch to mid cap for October. The Market Cap model generally follows a stair step approach as it moves from small to mid to large and in reverse.

    Small Cap Signals Weakens

    The weaker small cap signal for September came about as a result of an apparent peaking of bullish sentiment, the rebound in consumer confidence, and newly neutral trend indicators. The Market Cap model is designed to put money into small caps when the economy looks bleakest and bearish sentiment is high. With increasing signs the economy has emerged from recession and the huge rebound in stocks since the March low, a weaker signal or a shift away from small caps is logical.

    The small cap signal has worked well recently. Since the end of March, the model has produced a return of 36.0% vs. a gain of 28.8% for the S&P 500 ETF (SPY). Year-to-date, the model is up 16.2% vs. 13.5% for SPY. As discussed in prior emails and quarterly letters, the shift to small caps was early this cycle due to the very fast deterioration in the economy last summer and fall and last September's market crash. As a result, since the small cap signal has been in place, the model has produced a return of -22.6% vs. -20.4% for SPY. Obviously, the bulks of the lagging performance occurred in 2008 from September through December.

    Weak Value Signal Remains

    There was minimal change in the Value signal for September. The model continues to flash a weak value signal with the only underlying indicator showing any movement being the trend indicators which moved from neutral to value. The Style model continues to pick up a bottoming in economic activity and signs of renewed economic growth. Value stocks ate typically more cyclical and make sense at this stage of the economic cycle.

    The shift in the trend indicator reflects a very strong month for value stocks in August. The Russell 1000 Value (IWD) gained 5.4% against just 1.9% for the Russell 1000 Growth. Improved sentiment towards an economic recovery and huge rebound in financial stocks helped value outperform. The current value signal came into place at the start of July and so far it has produced a return of 12.9% vs. 8.8 % for the corresponding growth index and 11.0% for SPY.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:12 AM | Comments (2)

    August 03, 2009

    August 2009 Model Signals Favor Small Caps and Value

    There were no changes to Northlake's monthly Market Cap and Style models for August. The Market Cap model is still recommending small caps and the Style model is signaling Value. The small cap signal has been in place since September 2008, while this is the second consecutive month for the value signal. As a result of the fresh signals, Northlake clients will continue to own positions in the Russell 2000 Small Cap index (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Value index (IWD).

    Two of the underlying indicators in the Market Cap flipped this month but the overall signal strength is unchanged at a moderately strong reading in favor of small caps. Seven of the ten indicators are flashing small cap.

    The Advisory Service Sentiment indicator moved from small cap to large cap for August reflecting rising bullish sentiment. This indicator is contrarian, moving into small caps when bearish sentiment is rising rapidly and into large caps when bullish sentiment is rising rapidly (presently the case). The idea is to anticipate the next move in sentiment. When everyone is bearish, it means they have already sold and the next market move is likely up. Small caps are favored for the extra volatility they provide on the way up. That same volatility is a penalty if bullish sentiment is too strong signaling a market correction. Thus, at bullish extremes the move is back to less volatile large caps.

    The other Market Cap indicator to change this month is Consumer Confidence, which moved to a small cap signal. This indicator is picking up a bottoming in consumer confidence measures which suggests better times ahead. Better times means investors want the extra bang provided by small cap stocks.

    There were no changes to the underlying indicators in the Style model for August. The reading remains fairly weak although due to use of two month smoothing to reduce volatility of the signals, the August signal is slightly stronger than the July signal.

    The models performed well last month, continuing a recent trend of accurate signals. IWM gained 8.8% in July, comfortably ahead of the 7.4% gain in the S&P 500. So far this year, the Market Cap model has produced a return of 12.9% against a rise of 9.3% for the S&P 500. The recent run of accurate small cap signals has regained most of the lost performance from September through March when the small cap signal proved early. Since last September, IWM is -24.8% against -23.3% for the S&P 500 as measured by SPY.

    The Value signal almost matched the S&P 500 last month gaining 7.1% against the S&P 500's 7.4%. Value started July poorly but gained through month end and led the way on August 3rd as the S&P 500 continued its rally and broke through 1,000 for the first time since early November 2008.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWD are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts. SPY is held as a core or trading holding in many Northlake client accounts once again including Steve's personal accounts.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:20 PM | Comments (1)

    July 01, 2009

    July 2009 Model Signals: A Shift to Value

    For the first time since February, there has been a change on Northlake's Core and Explore ETF models. The Style model has moved to Value after spending 5 months at Growth. The new Value signal is weak, just barley in Value territory on Northlake's 0 to 100 scale. However, five of the nine underlying indicators now favor value and a sixth is rated neutral. The trend toward value has been in place for several months so this move comes as little surprise.

    As a result of the new signal, all client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) were swapped into the Russell 1000 Value (IWD). The effect on client portfolios is to shift exposure from technology, health care and consumer sectors to financial services, utility, and energy sectors. The shift is anticipating a second half recovery in the economy that favorably impacts the more cyclical parts of the economy.

    The Growth signal since the beginning of February was very accurate and contributed favorably to client portfolio performance. While clients owned IWF, it gained almost 19% against an increase of less than 12% for the IWD. This is exactly how the model is supposed to function – capturing incremental performance in a major trend.

    There was no change to the signal from Northlake's Market Cap model. It remains firmly in small cap territory although the signal has weakened slightly for two consecutive months. The small cap signal also anticipates better times ahead for the economy and continued improvement in credit market conditions.

    Small caps, as represented by client exposure to the Russell 2000 (IWM) outperformed the S&P 500 in June for the second consecutive month. SO far in 2009, the Russell 2000 is up 3.6% vs. a gain of 2.5% for the S&P 500. Thus, the Market Cap model has done its job this year. The small cap signal has been in place since September 2008. During that time, small caps have lagged large caps by a little less than 2%. The small cap signal was early in anticipating an improved economic and stock market environment. Performance especially suffered during the initial portion of the market crash in the final quarter of 2008.

    Disclosure: IWD and IWM are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:18 PM | Comments (4)

    June 01, 2009

    June 2009 Model Signals Still Favor Small Cap and Growth

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for June. The signals remain small cap and growth. As a result, client positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) will be maintained.

    The Market Cap and Style models provide monthly signals projecting relative performance of small cap vs. large cap and growth vs. value over the coming six months. Each model uses a combination of economic, interest rate, and stock market indicators that have historically shown predictive ability for identifying future relative performance of the market cap and style themes. The models use a weight of the evidence approach so that the signal generated is determined by the majority of the indicators.

    The small cap signal has been in place since September 2008 and continues to register very strongly. Eight of the ten indicators are flashing small cap for the third consecutive month. The only holdouts are bond momentum and relative forward P-E ratios. Small caps often struggle when interest rates are rising over the prior three months. Presently, large caps have much lower P-E ratios.

    The overall message of the Market Cap model is that we are near the bottom of economic and stock market cycle. The model has a contrarian aspect. When the economy and market get to the point that they are so bad the next move is likely to be up, small cap stocks typically perform well as their business operations are more sensitive to economic trends and their stock prices are more responsive to market trends.

    During May the small cap signal proved inaccurate as the IWM gained 3.4% against a 5.5 % gain for the S&P 500. For the second quarter, the signal has proved accurate, with IWM gaining approximately 3% more than the S&P 500. Year to date, the small cap signal has been neutral, with IWM trailing the S&P 500 by less than 1%. Since the current small cap signal began in September 2008, IWM has lagged the S&P 500 by about 4%. The extremely rapid deterioration in the economy and stock market last fall moved many of the indicators to extreme readings and triggered the small cap signal early. As the economy has stabilized and hopes for recovery have grown, small cap stocks have begun to perform much better over the past few months.

    The Style model has been showing more movement over the last few months even though it has flashed a growth signal since February. The current growth signal has been weakening and could now be classified as weak. Both models use the two month average to determine the current signal. The June only Style model reading is right on the border line between growth and value so it could change next month.

    Two indicators moved in favor of value for June, the consumer/cyclical ratio and insider activity. Consumer/cyclical measures the performance of consumer stocks vs. cyclical stocks. Consumer stocks are a proxy for growth while cyclical stocks are proxy for value. As investor sentiment toward the economy has improved over the past few months, cyclical stocks have rebounded strongly, outperforming consumer stocks. The gains for cyclical stocks in April and May were enough to shift this indicator to value. Insider activity had consistently been more favorable for growth stocks over the last few months but insider transactions became more balanced in May so this indicator moved from growth to neutral.

    The Style model now has four indicators favoring value, three favoring growth, and two neutral with the most recent signal having been growth. There is no clear message from the current set of indicators. Rather they represent the somewhat muddled view of the outlook for the economy and stock market now that it appears the worst has passed and the doomsday scenario is off the table.

    Last month, the growth signal was inaccurate as IWF gained 5.2% while the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) gained 6.7%. Since the current growth signal began in February, it has proved extremely accurate with IWF producing a return almost 6% higher than IWD.

    As always, thanks for Ned Davis Research for originally developing and continuing to maintain the Market Cap and Style models.

    Disclosure: IWM and IWF are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including Steve Birenberg's personal accounts.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:22 PM

    May 03, 2009

    May Model Signals Still Favor Small Cap and Growth

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for May. The signals continue to recommend small caps and growth. As a result, I will maintain positions in the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    There was no movement in the underlying factors of the Market Cap model. Eight of the ten factors continue to favor small caps with only valuation and bond momentum signaling large cap. The small cap signal actually got a bit stronger this month so much so that is certain to stay small cap at least another month (the current signal uses two month smoothing). The added signal strength emanates from the trend indicators which reflect April's incredible relative strength in small caps.

    The Style model's growth signal weakened a little for May but looks strong enough to last another month at least. The trend indicators flipped from favoring growth to neutral reflecting a month where growth and value indices had similar performance.

    The small cap signal worked very well in April as IWM gained 15.4%, easily outdistancing the S&P 500. Year-to-date, IWM has now outperformed the S&P 500, as measured by SPY, by 166 basis points. The small cap signal has been in place since 9/1/08. Thanks to the great month in April, underperformance since September 1st is down to just 320 basis points. The small cap signal clearly was early and the unusual market conditions kept it inaccurate for many months. However, as market and economic conditions have stabilized the overwhelming message from the economic, interest rate, stock market, and technical indicators that compose the model is that small caps are poised to outperform.

    The Style model provided little value added in April but did no damage either. Value slightly outperformed growth with the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) rising 10.6%, 50 basis points more than IWF. Small cap value (IWN) also outperformed small cap growth but by just 60 basis points. The Style model has been recommending growth since February 1st and it has been an accurate signal so far with IWF up 9.9% to just 2.9% for IWD.

    As always, thanks to Ned Davis Research which originally developed the Market Cap and Style models and back tested and adapted them for the use of Northlake Capital Management, LLC.

    Disclosure: IWM, IWF, and SPY are widely held by clients of Northlake Capital Management, LLC including in Steve Birenberg's personal accounts.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:32 PM

    April 01, 2009

    April Model Signals Favor Small Cap and Growth

    There were no changes this month to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. The signals remain small cap and growth. As a result, within the index rotation portion of client portfolios, I will continue to hold positions in the Russell 2000 Small Cap Index (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Growth Index (IWF).

    The small cap signal has been in place since September. For April, the signal is slightly stronger than it was in March due to an improvement in NYSE Monthly Breadth. Breadth improved dramatically last month as the market came off its lows. A breadth thrust of this nature has usually led to strong out performance for small cap stocks. Better breath is usually associated with rising markets and indicates that investor appetitive for risk has improved. Both these characteristics favor small cap stocks wit their higher volatility.

    There were no other changes in the factors underlying the Market Cap model. Eight of the ten factors now favor small caps. This is not surprising given that the market and economy are at historically bearish extremes. There is a contrarian nature to both models so with many measures at extremes the models assume the next move is reversion to the mean. For market cap, a less bearish market and economic environment is a time to take incremental risk and own small caps.

    The growth signal has been in place since the beginning of February. There were no changes to the underlying factors for April with six of the nine indicators favoring growth. The Style model is picking up the very weak economic environment which favors relative performance for less cyclically sensitive growth stocks. Value indices have a lot materials, industrial, and financial stocks which need an economic tailwind to perform well. Growth stocks get a boost in a weak economy because of the relative strength in their fundamental operating performance.

    The Style model also has a contrarian slant at market and economic extremes so my main concern is that stabilization in the economic environment will lead to a sharp rebound in value stocks as investors rotate toward economically sensitive sectors.

    The March model signals provided little value added. Small, mid, and large cap and growth and value indices all performed in very narrow band as the market rally was a rising tide, lift all boats event....

    Since the current small cap signal went into effect in September 2008, it has inaccurate as the Russell 2000 has underperformed the S&P by about 5%. The current growth signal has performed very well since the start of February with the Russell 1000 Growth outperforming the Russell 1000 Value by over 6%.

    Given the extraordinary times, I am cognizant of the fact that the models are built on historical data and correlations. It is plausible that "this time is different" and the models will be less accurate. My concern is lessened by the passage of time which is allowing some relationships to normalize and early sings that the economy is stabilizing. These models have a superior track record approaching 30 years. Now is not the time to panic.

    If you have fresh fund s to invest or need to rebalance your portfolios, you should be looking at indices or individual stocks with small cap and growth characteristics.

    Northlake clients own positions in IWM and IWF including positions held in my personal accounts.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:49 AM

    March 03, 2009

    March 2009 Model Signals and Market Comments

    The bear market accelerated in February. I think three things were at work. First, economic statistics on a global basis decelerated rapidly in January and February. Second, as corporations reported their year end results they confirmed the accelerating weakness in the economy. Third, Wall Street frustration with government's response to the crisis boiled over. Put these three things together and investors see no signs of a recovery while risks of further substantial downside in the economy remain. In this scenario, selling stocks is a logical choice.

    The risk in selling is that a significant rebound will occur once there are signs of stabilization in the economic outlook. Furthermore, even when the outlook is bearish stocks can overshoot to the downside. With the Dow below 7,000 I think we have overshot, the question is what will trigger a countertrend rally?

    I wish I had the answer. My plan is to hold above average cash reserves, remain open to upside trading opportunities, and hold current and potential individual stock holdings to a much higher hurdle rate than usual. The initial bounce will be large and fast. I'd like to catch it but the probability of a long period of consolidation after the bounce is high so I see no reason to be too aggressive in trying to time the bottom.

    March Model Signals

    There was no change to Northlake's models this month. The signals remain small cap and growth. I did rotate clients from the S&P 600 Small Cap to the Russell 2000 Small Cap, reversing the trade made in December to lock in tax losses.

    The small cap signal weakened a bit this month, the second consecutive month of weakening. The only factor to change this month was bond momentum which went from favoring small caps to large caps because the three month rate change in long-term Treasury bonds is now rising. Another weak month for small caps relative to large caps also contributed to the weaker signal as the trend indicators became less favorable for small caps. The Russell 2000 underperformed the S&P 500 last month by 130 basis points and is about 400 basis points behind the S&P 500 since the current small cap signal went into effect last September.

    The growth signal remained at the same strength for March with no factors shifting their signals. The growth signal worked quite well last month as the swap from the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) to the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) saved over 4%.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:29 PM | Comments (3)

    February 02, 2009

    February 2009 Model Signals: Back to Growth

    Northlake's Style model shifted from value to growth for February. Hopefully, it was only one month late. Last month was awful for value on a relative basis with the Russell 3000 Value (IWW) dropping 11.6% against a decline of just 5.6% for the Russell 3000 Growth (IWZ). The S&P 500 fell 8.6% so last month's signal proved costly. As a result of the new signal, I swapped all positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) and S&P 500 Value (IVE) into the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    This is the first growth signal since September. Thanks mainly to the horrible performance for value in January the signal proved inaccurate. Since the value signal went into effect on the first trading day of October, IWZ was down 27.4% and IWW was down 31.8%.

    At the indicator level, five factors now favor growth and four favor value. The only shift last month was the trend indicators which now favor growth. These indicators reflect the outperformance for growth in January which has swung the three and six month technical measures that comprise the trend indicators to growth. The trend indicators are included in the model to help with timeliness. One month late is frustrating especially when the last month of the prior indicator performs badly but the goal of this model is to predict relative performance over a six to twelve month period.

    There was no change to the signal from the Market Cap indicator....

    ....It continues to flash a very strong small cap signal. Last month's call was also small cap and that also proved to be a bad call as the Russell 2000 (IWM) fell 9.7% against a decline of 8.6% for the S&P 500. Client positions in IWM and the S&P 600 Small Cap index (IJR) reflect the small cap signal.

    The Market Cap model is overwhelmingly in favor of small caps with many traditionally reliable indicators all strongly in small cap territory. The bearish market environment and the unusual market and economic conditions have the mode off kilter but if we get a turn for the better with the indicators near their current position there should at least a brief period of massive outperformance for small caps if history is any indication.

    I'll have a detailed look at the indicators from both models up in a column later this week.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:11 PM

    January 02, 2009

    January 2009 Model Signals

    Northlake's monthly Market Cap and Style models favor Small Caps and Value for January. As a result, client and personal accounts have a position in the Russell 2000 (IWM or IJR) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD or IVE). These positions are unchanged from December. In fact, the small cap signal has been in place since the beginning of September and the Value signal has been in place since the beginning of October.

    The small cap signal is at its strongest reading since July 2003. Eight of the ten indicators covering a variety of economic, interest rate, sentiment, and technical factors favor small caps. The stronger reading from last month is due to small caps outperforming in December which shifted the technical indicators from neutral to small cap.

    The value signal weakened this month and is now a weak signal. Only four of the nine factors favor value over growth but those that do are sending strong signals. One factor shifted from value to growth this month. Advisory service sentiment shifted after sentiment came off an extreme negative reading.

    The models worked OK last month....

    ....Small cap was a good call as IWM rose 4%, far ahead of the S&P 500's gain of 0.78%. Growth slightly outperformed value last month due to large cap growth stocks. Small cap growth and value provided similar returns.

    Since the current signals went into place the results are mixed. Small caps have significantly underperformed sharply thanks to the shellacking they took in the teeth of the decline in October and November. Value has slightly outperformed growth for the past three months but the incremental gains were immaterial given the rout in the market.

    As a reminder, the models were originally developed and continue to be maintained by Ned Davis Research. NDR tested many factors for their predicative ability in the small cap vs. large cap and growth vs. value debates. The factors making up the model were chosen due to their predictive ability and to provide variety across economic, interest rate, and stock market/technical indicators. NDR uses a weight of the evidence approach so broad exposure is important. If 8 of 10 indicators across a variety of factors line up similarly your odds are probably pretty good.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:01 PM

    December 01, 2008

    December 2008 Model Updates

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for December. I continue to own Small Cap (IWM/IJR) and Value (IWD/IVE) for personal and client funds . As a reminder, Northlake uses monthly models to rotate ETFs trying to capture excess return relative to the S&P 500 (SPY). The models are designed to look ahead six to twelve months and average holding periods are four to six months.

    I was actually a bit surprised that the Market Cap model stayed at small cap. I had thought the significant weighting of technical indicators in the model would have shifted the model from a small cap to mid cap signal (the model works in steps and rarely will go from large to small or small to large without a stop at mid). However, the sharp drop in interest rates and a small bounce in advisory service sentiment off its low provided fresh signals favoring small caps and actually led to an ever stronger small cap signal this month. Of the ten underlying indicators measuring a variety of economic, interest rate, valuation, and technical factors, seven now favor small cap, with two recommending large cap and one neutral.

    The Style model remained firmly in value mode for the third consecutive month. The only underlying factor which changed this month was insider activity which now favors growth over value. The Style model also uses a mix of economic, interest rate, valuation, and technical indicators. For December, six of the nine indicators favor value and three favor growth.

    Recent performance of the Market Cap model has been poor. In November, the small cap signal was way off with IWM falling 11.7% vs. a loss of 7.2% for SPY. Since the small cap signal went in place on September 1st, IWM is down 35.9% vs. 30.2% for SPY.

    The Style model has fared better with value outperforming growth but not providing incremental return to the S&P 500. Last month, value outperformed growth across all market caps. I am presently invested in Russell 1000 Value which fell 7.% last month, a little worse than the S&P 500 but ahead of the 8.4% drop in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). The value signals has been in place since October 1st during which IWD is down 23.2% vs. 24.7% drop in IWF. The S&P 500 is down 23.1%

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 03:47 PM

    November 03, 2008

    November 2008 Model Signals

    There are no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for November. The signals continue to be small cap and value. As a result of the update clients continue to own the Russell 2000 (IWM) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) to reflect the latest signals. As a reminder, these are monthly models designed to predict relative performance over the next several quarters. The average holding period is 4-6 months.

    The Market Cap model remains pretty firmly in small cap territory but the signal weakened based on the latest data. The weaker signal occurred primarily as a result of the very poor performance of small caps in October when the Russell 2000 underperformed the S&P by more than 5%. This pushed the trend and sentiment indicators off their previous small cap signals. There were no changes to the other underlying indicators which measure economic, interest rate, and stock market factors. Key to the small cap signal are the steep yield curve, unusually wide credit spreads, the stronger dollar, and economic indicators that are so bad they are good for small caps (they are predicting the next move is up so it is time to go small).

    The Style model is registering its strongest value reading since the first half of 2006. Seven of the nine indicators in the model now favor value up from six last month. The factor measuring relative P-E moved in favor of value this month.

    Last month the signals were not very helpful....

    ....The value signals did no damage as IWD fell almost exactly the same as the S&P 500. The small cap signal was poor as the IWM fell 21% about 5% worse than the S&P 500. In a relative performance world, a 500 basis point miss is bad news. It could have been worse as at one point early last week before the market rallied the gap was about 10%. The last time the Russell unperformed this badly was back in 2002. There were several months in the 2000-2002 bear market where small caps underperformed. In fact, scanning monthly data all the way back to 1980, most of the months where the Russell has massively underperformed the S&P 500 have been during bearish periods.

    As always, thanks to Ned Davis Research, which developed and continues to maintain these models.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:09 AM

    October 01, 2008

    October 2008 Model Signals

    For the first time since June 2007, Northlake's Style model is flashing a value signal. The new signal breaks a 15 month run of growth signals. As a result of the new signal, I sold all client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF) and purchased dollar-for-dollar in the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD).

    There was no change to the Market Cap model which is flashing a small cap signal for the second consecutive month.

    The readings on both models suggest that the November signals will be the same....

    ....Six of the nine factors in the Style model now favor value. Two factors switched to value this month and one got stronger. The yield curve has now steepened to the point at which value tends to outperform. The larger weighting for financial stocks in the value indices certainly plays a factor. The other factor to shift to value is the dollar. A strong dollar is consistent with value outperformance. Growth stocks get a bigger benefit from a weak dollar due to their greater overseas exposure. The indicator that strengthened in favor of value is credit spreads. They are very high now as we all know. This is a contrarian indicator such that value indices benefit as credit spreads narrow.

    The Market Cap model is sending a stronger small cap signal this month because of dollar strength. A weaker dollar favors large cap companies that generally have greater overseas operations.

    The long running growth signal was a good one with IWF outperforming IWD by about 700 basis points. However, value has been outperforming since June thanks largely to the rebound in financial stocks off their summer lows. At its widest the growth signal was outperforming value by 1300 basis points.

    Last month was the first for the small cap market signal. It worked out well with the Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) falling 7.9% vs. a 9.9% decline for the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) and an 11.1% decline for the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY). Small caps have underperformed sharply for the past week or ten days, however.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 03:50 PM | Comments (15)

    September 03, 2008

    September 2008 Models: Shifting to Small Caps

    For the first time since August 2005, Northlake's monthly Market Cap model is flashing a small cap signal. As a result, I sold all client and personal positions that tin the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) that track this model and reinvested dollar-for-dollar in the Russell 2000 (IWM).

    Small caps have outperformed for several months since March or May depending on how you measure it. Given the poor tone to the market and the higher beta of small caps, the switch makes me nervous. However, this model has served Northlake very well over the last four years and discipline requires never outguessing your model.

    After flashing a very strong signal in favor of large caps in 1H07, the model moved to mid cap mode where it stayed for all but one month so far this year. The trend toward small caps was evident in the underlying indicators and overall model reading since June but the signal did not grow strong enough to change until this month.

    Indicators that now favor small caps include unusually high credit spreads, a slight upturn in advisory service sentiment following a plunge, a steep yield curve, and the sharp drop in consumer confidence and coincident indicators of economic growth, and technical trends. Still favoring large caps are breadth, valuation, interest rate momentum, and the dollar. The dollar should switch soon if recent strength holds.

    Several of these indicators are near extremes where the message is "it is so bad the next move will move be up." That is an environment that would favor small caps (the latest rally was a good indication of what is supposed to happen). Since technical trends are confirming the odds of an accurate call seem good.

    There was no change this month to the style model which continues to solidly favor growth. Growth has been the signal since July 2008....

    ....Keep in mind that these models are designed to predict relative performance and the average holding period is 4 to 7 months. As always, thanks to Ned Davis Research who developed these models and help me analyze and adapt them for use as a money management tool.

    In the most recent month, the mid cap and growth signals were not great calls. Small caps were clearly the place to be in August although mid caps held their own vs. large caps. Value outperformed growth last month with stability and recovery in financials coinciding with a weak performance by technology.

    So far this year, both models have been accurate. Through August, the S&P 400 Mid Cap is down 4.5% vs. an 11.9% decline or the S&P 500. The model could have been a bit more accurate, however, as small caps have been the best performer with the Russell 2000 down 2.7%. For the style model, the Russell 1000 Growth is down 10% vs. a 13% decline for the Russell 1000 Value. Worth noting, however, is that small cap value is down just 1.1% vs. a decline of 4.3% for small cap value.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 07:45 AM | Comments (2)

    August 02, 2008

    August 2008 Model Signals

    Once again there were no changes to Northlake's monthly Market Cap and Style models. The Market Cap signal remains mid cap and the Style signal remains growth. As a result, Northlake continues to own the S&P 400 (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) for assets devoted to this strategy.

    The Market Cap model remains a split decision with half the indicators favoring small caps and half favoring large caps. The resulting signal is mid cap. The indicators did move significantly in favor of small caps for August. In fact the unsmoothed signal month reading is just barely in small cap territory. The two month average remains in mid cap but leaning toward small cap. The only indicators to shift this month were the technical trend measures.

    The Style model remains firmly in growth territory as it has been for over one year. The growth signal has weakened form earlier this year due to the steepening of the yield curve and the valuation measure which is reflecting the massive underperformance of value during the last twelve months.

    Last month the mid cap and growth signals were inaccurate....

    ....Both large caps, as measured by the S&P 500, and small caps, as measured by the Russell 2000, produced a return great than MDY. Mid cap indices have been big beneficiaries of their relatively greater exposure to the energy and basic materials boom and relatively lesser exposure to financials. In July, those sectors pulled back sharply and financials rallied. Growth lagged last month as well as financial heavy value indices got a boost from the sharp bounce in that sector and technology stocks lagged.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:31 PM

    July 02, 2008

    July 2008 Model Signals

    There were no changes again this month to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. The signals continue to flash mid cap and growth. As a result, I am maintaining client and personal positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) that are dedicated to this strategy.

    Both signals weakened slightly this month but stayed firmly in their current recommendations. On RealMoney.com, two contributors who I greatly respect, Bob Marcin and Rev Shark, have been sharing their concerns about small and mid caps needing to catch up on the downside, especially as it relates to beta and risk aversion. However, one thing that goes unsaid in those comments is that there are some previously reliable indicators which are currently suggesting that now is a favorable environment for small and mid caps.

    Unusually weak consumer confidence is a contrarian call favoring small caps. Weak coincident indicators are also consistent with future small cap outperformance in a contrarian sense. Historically wide credit spreads also have lined up with small cap outperformance in the past on a contrary basis. The current environment is unusual to say the least so the indicators may be off but not everything is lined up against small and mid caps.

    And there are some indicators that clearly suggest caution toward small and mid caps....

    ....Rising interest rates are definitely a problem as is the recent weakening in market breadth and initial underperformance of small and mid caps. Dollar weakness also favors large caps although a lot of folks expect the dollar to strengthen.

    On the Style side, the indicators remain mostly unchanged with the exception of forward earnings yields which now favor value. That is mostly due to the collapse in value stock prices on a relative basis over the past year. Cheap is not always good but it is worth noting that this indicator finally indicates we are in cheap territory.

    Last month the models were accurate. Mid Caps fell 7.4% against an 8.6% decline for the S&P 500. Growth outperformed the S&P as well with IWF falling 6.9%. The Russell 1000 Value Index suffered again, declining 9.5%. The models have also been accurate over longer time frames as well. Growth has been favored since July 2007 during which IWF is down 7% and IWD is down 20%. Mid Cap has been in favor every month this year except April. For the year so far, the Market Cap model is off a bit over 6% while the S&P 500 is off almost 13%. I'm a believer in reversion to the mean so this run of good calls makes me nervous in the very short-term but these models have a great track record and I never try to out guess them.

    As always, special thanks to Ned Davis Research who originally developed these models and continues to maintain them.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:22 AM | Comments (8)

    June 03, 2008

    June 2008 Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap or Style Model for June. The Market Cap model continues to flash a Mid Cap signal while the Style model remains firmly in growth mode. As a result, client positions in the S&P Mid Cap 400 (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) are being maintained.

    The Market Cap model saw no changes in any of the underlying factors. However, the model showed a slight shift toward small caps as several of the underlying indicators moved toward stronger small cap readings. In particular, relatively weaker earnings performance from large caps, plunging consumer confidence, weaker growth in coincident indicators of economic growth, and technical trend indicators moved in favor of small caps. The one indicator moving in favor of large caps is the rise in the general level of interest rates. This is a powerful indicator and should be closely watched. The Market Cap model has favored Mid Cap every month this year except for April.

    The Growth model continues to register a reading firmly in favor of growth. This model also showed little change for June with only one underlying indicator changing its signal: insider activity moved from neutral to favoring value. Until economic growth beings to accelerate or the dollar strengthens, I expect the growth signal to remain in place. One indicator in the news and close to a value signal is the yield curve. An unusually steep or inverted yield curve favors value and the recent steepening of the curve has put the shape close to a value signal. The Style model has favored growth every month since July 2008.

    Both models sent accurate signals in May....

    ....The S&P 400 Mid Cap was the best performing index last month, producing a gain of 5.4% as measured by MDY. The S&P 500 gained just 1% while the Russell 2000 was up a little under 5%. Growth outperformed Value last month with the both small cap and large cap Russell growth indices gaining around 4% vs. no change for large cap value and a gain of 1.5% for small cap value. Strength in technology and weakness in financials caused the performance dispersion.

    So far this year, the Market Cap model has also worked well, producing a return of over 1% vs. a loss of more than 4% for the S&P 500. The Style model has also outperformed with IWF falling a little over 2% versus a drop of more than 4% for the S&P 500. Since the growth signal went in place last July, IWF is down just 1% vs. a loss of 13% for the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    As a reminder, these models were developed by Ned Davis Research and are based on a consensus approach. Each underlying indicator has predictive value for relative performance of small vs. large caps or growth vs. value. How the underlying indicators line up in favor of one theme or the other determines the monthly signal.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:12 AM | Comments (5)

    May 01, 2008

    May 2008 Model Signals

    Fresh signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models are in. The Market Cap signal swung back to Mid Cap for May, while the Style signal remains Growth as it has been since last July. As a result of the new signals, I sold all positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) dedicated to this strategy and used the proceeds to buy the S&P Mid Cap 400 (MDY). I continue to hold client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) which is reflection of the Growth signal.

    The Market Cap model has been fluctuating between Mid Cap and Large Cap for the last three months. The current signal is a bit stronger in favor of Mid Cap than the one form February. I suspect it will hold for at least another month. The sfit to Mid Cap came about as three of the underling factors moved from large cap to small cap while just one factor flipped the other way. As a reminder, this model is composed of ten factors which I breakdown among economic, interest rate, and technical indicators. Each indicator sends a monthly signal in favor of either small cap or large cap. An overall Mid Cap signals is sent when it is a split decision as is the case for May....

    ....The indicators that flipped in favor of small cap this month include sentiment, breadth, and coincident indicators. The sentiment indicator is picking up the extreme bearish sentiment reading form a month ago that has now reversed off its low. The breadth indicator is picking up better action in small and mid caps during April. The coincident indicator is making a contrarian call that economic growth has slowed to the point that the next move will be up. That is usually a good time to own small caps.

    While the Style model stayed in growth territory, it did show some movement in favor value as one indicator shifted from growth to value. The yield curve has now gotten so unusually steep that it is in a range where value stocks have outperformed. Value has history of outperforming growth when the yield curve is unusually steep or unusually flat.

    Last Month's brief shift from Mid Cap to Large Cap turned out to be a bad call. During April, MDY rose over almost 8% while SPY gained just under 5%. Large Caps did slightly outperform small caps which gained 4.6% as measured by the Russell 1000 ETF (IWM).

    The growth signal worked out better in April with IWF gaining a little over 5%, while the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) gained 4.7%. Small cap growth performed even better, gaining 5.8% against 3.9% for small cap value using the Russell 2000 Growth and Value indices, IWO and IWN, respectively. Since the growth signal went into effect in July 2007 it has been very accurate: IWF is down 3% while IWD is down 10.7%. The gap between small cap growth and value is similar.

    As always, special thanks to Ned Davis Research who developed these models and continues to maintain them.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:13 PM | Comments (5)

    April 02, 2008

    April 2008 Model Signals

    Northlake's Market Cap model shifted from Mid Cap to Large Cap for April. As a result, I sold all client positions in the S&P 400 ETF (MDY) and swapped into the S&P 500 Spyder (SPY).

    The underlying indicators in the model were unchanged. This shift occurred because the model is based on two-month smoothing and the fresh reading slightly favored large cap replacing the dropped month which slightly favored mid cap. The model could easily shift back next month as the two month average is now composed of two readings that barely edge into large cap territory. Of the ten factors in the model, five favor large cap, four favor small cap, and one is neutral. A mixed group of indicators leads to a mid cap signal.

    The Style model remains firmly in Growth territory as it has since last July. Six of the nine indicators favor growth. The latest factor to move in favor of growth is the trend indicators. These indicators measure relative strength of growth vs. value over two, nine, and twelve month time frames. In general, the Style model continues to favor growth because it is picking up slower economic activity, a weak dollar, and a normally shaped yield curve....

    ....The Mid Cap signal that just expired was in place for three months. It was a decent signal as MDY outperformed SPY by a little less than 1% during this period. Given that the stock market declined by about 10% during the first quarter I am pleased that mid caps did so well as the beta effect might have suggested that mid caps would lag.

    The Growth signal lagged a bit in 1Q08, as my preferred tracking vehicle, the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF), underperformed the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) by slightly less than 2%. Almost all of the gain for value came in January when financial stocks responded favorably to the first aggressive moves by the Fed. Given the heavy weighting for financials in the value indices, the fact that value slightly outperformed growth in 1Q is a bit surprising. Since it went into place last July, the growth signal has been superb, produced a return more than 7% better than value.

    I would not read too much into recent price trends among differing indices. There was very little variance among index returns in the US in 1Q as the market decline fairly evenly decimated all styles, sectors, and market caps.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 05:16 PM

    March 03, 2008

    March 2008 Model Signals

    There were no changes for March to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models that I use for ETF allocation. The signals remain mid cap and growth. The mid cap signal remains a weak one that could shift back to large cap next month. The growth signal is moderately strong and got a little stronger last month. It is strong enough that it seems unlikely to shift to value next month. Entering March I thought a shift to value was possible. Given the current model signals, I continue to own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) in client and personal accounts. As always, special thanks to Ned Davis Research who developed the original models and continues to maintain them.

    There was little movement in the underlying indicators in either model. The only shift in the Market Cap model was the Advisory Service Sentiment indicator moving from small caps to neutral. The model is picking up the most recent drop in sentiment but also now shows that bearish sentiment is high enough to trigger a move back in favor of small caps next month. The concept behind this indicator is that small caps are favored when bearish sentiment reaches an extreme and then reverses. The extreme is in place. The reverse is not. Coming off an extreme bearish sentiment bottom, you want to own small stocks for the benefit of the beta effect.

    There was a similar lack of movement in the underlying indicators in the Style model. The only indicator to shift was Insider Activity which moved to growth from a neutral reading.

    Overall, the indicators reflect a slowing economy that favors large caps and growth, an interest rate environment that increasingly favors small caps, and stock market internals that favor large caps and growth. The weak dollar also favors large caps and growth. The mid cap reading is a result of mixed readings on market cap....

    ....The mid cap signal went into effect on January 1st. So far it has been a good call. Through the end of February, MDY (mid cap) has outperformed the S&P 500 (SPY) by about 156 basis points. February was particularly favorable to MDY, which fell 1.1% against a drop of 2.6% for SPY.

    The growth signal has been in effect since July 1, 2007. For the entire period it has been a great call with growth (IWF) down 8% and value (IWD) down 15.5%. Year to date, value has outperformed growth by 150 basis points thanks strong relative performance in January when the Fed aggressively cut rates. Growth made a comeback in February with IWF falling just 1.7% against a 3.9% drop for IWD.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:52 PM

    February 03, 2008

    February 2008 Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for February. The Market Cap model continues to flash a mid cap signal while the Style model remains in growth mode. As always, thanks to Ned Davis Research who originally developed and continues to maintain these models.

    The Market Cap model swung to mid cap for January after an 11 month run at large cap and remains at mid cap for February. There was absolutely no movement in the underlying factors for February leaving the model with what I classify as a weak mid cap signal. The Market Cap model is picking up conflicting signals on the economy and interest rate trends that are beginning to favor small caps but have yet to be confirmed by the technical indicators. Falling rates and bearish sentiment extremes favor small caps but slowing economic growth and the weak dollar favor large caps. The model defaults to mid cap in this situation.

    The Style model remains in growth mode but the underlying indicators made a significant move in the direction of value for February. The one month reading is right on the borderline between growth and value but the two month smoothed reading is still probably deep enough in growth mode to give growth at least another month. The only big shift in an underlying factor was in the trend indicators which shifted to value after value massively outperformed growth in January. The value signal generated by rapidly rising and now well above historic level credit spreads also has contributed to the shift in favor of value.

    The January signals offered a mixed performance picture....

    ....The mid cap call was neutral as both the S&P 400 Mid Cap and S&P 500 fell by about 6%. For most of the month, the S&P 500 was easily beating the S&P 400 Mid Cap but in last week's rally the S&P 400 along with the Russell 2000 easily beat the S&P 500. The growth call was poor in January with the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF) falling by 8% against a 4% decline for the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD). Weak tech stocks and rebound in financials in conjunction with the Fed easing caused the divergent performance. The growth signal has been in place since June 1st and remains a very good call. Since June 1st, IWF has fallen 5.5% vs. a decline of 11.7% for IWD.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:37 PM

    January 02, 2008

    January 2008 Model Signals

    Northlake's Market Cap model (courtesy of Ned Davis Research) shifted from a large cap signal to a mid cap signal for January. There was no change in the Style model which continues to flash a growth signal. As a reminder the Market Cap and Style models I use send monthly signals predicting relative performance over an intermediate term time frame which I define as several quarters. The change in the Market Cap model led me to sell positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) and reinvest the proceeds in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). Northlake's long position in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) remains unchanged.

    The new mid cap signal is a weak one, just barely moving across the line separating mid cap form large cap. The large cap signal had been in place since last February. It was an exceptionally strong signal from April through September, peaking in August and September at readings matching the strongest large cap signals in the 25 year history of the model. Since September, the large cap model has gradually weakened until it flipped for January.

    The Market Cap model measures ten factors based on historical data for small cap and large cap performance. A mid cap signal is flashed if there is spilt decision. Since September when all ten factors lined up for large caps, five of the factors have shifted to small cap camp. These factors are widening credit spreads, rising bearish advisory service sentiment, the steepening of the yield curve, the collapse in consumer confidence, and falling interest rates. Each of these factors now correlates with relative performance favoring small caps.

    Turning to the Style model, the reading remains firmly in the growth camp.
    The signal is as strong now as it has been since the model shifted to growth in June. There was virtually no movement this month in the underlying indicators....

    ....During the 11 months the large cap signal was in place, as measured by the ETFs, the S&P 500 rose 1.7%, the S&P 400 Mid Cap rose 2.4%, and the Russell 2000 fell 4.4%. While the Mid Cap was the top performer, I consider the large cap call a win, especially when one adjusts for higher volatility in the mid cap index.

    The Style model's call in favor of growth has been a home run so far. Again using the ETFs, the Russell 1000 Growth has gained 2.6% while the Russell 1000 Value is down 7.8%. The large representation of financial stocks in the Russel 100 Value index has really hurt its performance.

    I want to reiterate that the new mid cap signal is a weak one and could flip back to large cap next month with little movement in the underlying factors. That said, I always follow my model. No reason to have a model if you aren’t going to follow it.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:30 PM

    December 06, 2007

    December 2007 Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for December. The signals remain on large cap and growth. As a result, client portfolios continue to own the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWD).

    It looks like we could get a move in the Market Cap signal fairly soon, however. The model reading is on the very cusp of switching to a mid cap signal. If that occurs, positions in SPY will be sold in favor of the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). For December five of the ten indicators in the model favor large cap and five favor small cap, a shift of two indicators in favor of small caps. Falling rates and widening yield spreads led to shifts this month. Lower rates definitely favor small caps which presumably have less access to capital. The credit crisis has widened spreads enough that they are now in a mode where in the past small caps have outperformed. These two indicators join bearish market sentiment, the steepening yield curve, and low consumer confidence in the camp favoring small caps. As a reminder, small caps often perform best when sentiment and the economy look worse. The model attempts to look ahead toward the next big move and when things look bleak the next big move is often up which creates an environment where the added volatility of small caps works in favor of investors.

    The Style model, on the other hand, looks unlikely to make a shift away from growth any time soon. The model is still firmly in growth mode reflecting sluggish economic growth where unit growth stories are more valuable to investors. For December, two of the underlying indicators moved from value to growth mode: measure of relative strength for consumer stocks and the return of the yield curve to a normal upward sloping shape.

    I find the current model signals consistent with my own views of how to invest in a weakening economy. My big worry about the current signals is that a countertrend rally in favor of small caps and value (financials are a big component of value indices) seems overdue.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:27 PM

    November 05, 2007

    November 2007 Model Signals

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for November. Large cap and growth remain favored over small/mid cap and value. There was some shift in favor of small/mid cap and value in the underlying indicators, however. I think the large cap growth trend is likely to stay in place for several more quarters but a temporary shift toward small cap and value would not surprising given the outperformance for large cap and growth over the past several months. Since the July 19th S&P 500 high, the S&P 500 is down just 3% compared to a fall of over 6% for the Russell 2000 and a 4% decline for the S&P 400 Mid Cap. In the style arena, the model shifted from value to growth on June 1. Since that time, the Russell 1000 Growth ETF is up 5%, while the Russell 1000 Value ETF is down almost 5%! That is basically technology stocks over financial stocks.

    In the Market Cap model for August, all ten indicators were flashing growth. Four of the ten indicators now favor small cap. The shift has occurred in indicators which consider the shape of the yield curve, sentiment, breadth, and consumer confidence. In general, the indicators are picking up extreme readings that suggest a reversal could be at hand. This contrarian call would favor small caps.

    The Style model is also drifting away from its long standing signal. In this case, the severely lagging performance of value over the past few months is driving a weakening of the growth signal.

    I'd be surprised if either model moves enough this month to flash a new signal for December. January, on the other hand could see a shift to mid cap and value if current trends continue. If and when the signals change, I'll happily follow along. No reason to use a model like this if you are going to second guess it and neither model has given me any reason to second guess for the last three years.

    As always thanks to Ned Davis Research for the initial development and ongoing maintenance of these models.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:57 AM | Comments (4)

    October 01, 2007

    October 2007 Model Signals

    There are no changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for October. The market cap model continues to flash a strong signal in favor of large cap outperformance. The style model is now flashing its strongest signal since the late 1999/early 2000 market peak for growth stocks. To capitalize on the signals, I continue to own the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) in client and personal accounts.

    The market cap model did undergo a slight shift toward small caps as two of the ten factors went form a large cap signal to a small cap signal. Advisory Service Sentiment got extremely negative and then turned up in the past two months. This is normally bullish for small caps. In addition, consumer confidence has fallen to a level that favors small caps. This is a contrarian indicator. The concept is that low consumer confidence leads to the next move by the Fed or in the economy being favorable to investors. If so, why not own beta. Low and falling consumer confidence also often leads to falling interest rates. Falling interest rates are one of the strongest indicators of small cap outperformance. I still expect the large cap signal to hold for another month or two at least but the model suggests that outperformance of large caps may moderate.

    And large caps have been outperforming. Since the current large cap signal went into place on February 1st, SPY is up 6% while the Russell 2000 as measured by IWM is up less than 1%. In the third quarter, SPY rose 1.5% while IWM fell over 3%. Even as the market rallied sharply in September, SPY was king, rising 3.4% vs. 1.6% for IWM.

    As mentioned the Style model now has its strongest reading and its longest string of growth readings since the period from August 1999 though March 2000. The only change to the underlying factors for October was a shift in the insider activity indicator from value to neutral.

    Since growth signal went into place in June, the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) is up over 4% vs. a loss of almost 1% for the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).....

    ...In small cap style indices, it is also firmly growth over value although the Russell 2000 Growth (IWO) is down about 1%, but that looks good next to an almost 7% loss for the Russell 2000 Value (IWN). For September both growth indices decisively outperformed their value counterparts.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 03:10 PM

    September 04, 2007

    September 2007 Model Signals

    For the third consecutive month there were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. The signals remain large cap and growth. Client portfolios own the S&P 500 Spyder (SPY) and the iShares Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) to take advantage of the current signals.

    The large cap signal from the Market Cap model remains one of the strongest readings in the monthly data I have going back to 1980. All ten factors covering a breadth of economic, interest rate, and stock market technical indicators are flashing a large cap signal. On their own, each factor has in the past shown predictive ability for anticipating relative performance of large caps vs. small caps as measured by the S&P 500 and Russell 2000. With the weight of the evidence from a broad array of previously accurate indicators lined up so solidly in favor of large caps, I feel very good about the prospects for large cap outperformance to continue for at least a few more months. The fact that large caps tend to hold up better when the market gets whacked is all the better given the uncertainty that remains in the market and economic outlook.

    The growth signal coming from the Style model is not as strong but it is a solid reading in favor of growth. This marks the third consecutive month where the growth signal has sent a pretty strong reading. The three month stretch of solid growth readings is first since 2005, and only the third since the model started flashing value in the spring of 2000. With tech stocks acting better and concerns rising about economic growth and the balance sheets and earnings power of financial institutions (finance makes up over 30% of the Russell 1000 and Russell 300 Value indices), I also find the growth signal to be a comfortable place to be.

    For July, the accuracy of the model signals was mixed....

    ....The Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) outperformed the S&P 500 Spyder (SPY). In Style, the Russell 3000 Growth ETF (IWZ) gained 1.5% vs. a gain of 1.1% for the Russell 3000 Value ETF (IWW).

    Since the current signals were put in place, both models have been accurate. The large cap signal has been in place since February 1st. Over the seven months ending August 31st, SPY has gained 2.7% vs. a loss of -0.7% for IWM. The growth signals has been in place since July 1st. For the two months ending August 31st, IWZ is down -0.3% vs. a drop of -3.7% for IWW. The damage return differential in style indices has been consistent across market cap but there is a bigger advantage for growth in small caps.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:13 PM

    August 07, 2007

    August 2007 Model Signals

    There were no changes of Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for August. The signals continue to be Large Cap and Growth. The large cap signal remains one of the strongest in the close to 400 monthly readings I have going back to 1980. The growth signal move from weak to solid this month and is the strongest reading in favor of growth since the value trend kicked of in 1999. There have been a couple of false starts since then but ultimately the trend reverted to value. I think this time the growth signal will hold for awhile. Both signals were accurate in July when the market dived lower. Large caps fell 3% last month but the decline in mid caps and small caps was 5% and 7%, respectively. Growth fell about 2-4% last month vs. declines 5%-8% for value.
    Given the lack of changes in the models, I decided to offer you a post I did for Real Money describing the latest reading on the Style model and providing some background on how the model works and the theory behind it. The comments work for the Market Cap model as well. This might be a good refresher course.

    Posted On RealMoney.com on August 2, 2007 at 8:08 ET:

    I've posted before that I use monthly models originally developed by Ned Davis Research to rotate substantial funds between the Russell Growth and Russell Value ETFs. My definition of growth and value is whatever Russell puts in these indices. I am buying growth or value as an index, not an individual stock. The model chooses one index or the other with the goal of being in the best performing index.

    The model shows an unmistakable trend toward growth after favoring value for much of the past seven years....

    The latest update came out Wednesday morning morning and is the strongest growth reading since March 2000. There have been several readings close to this strong since mid-2005 when the long period of strong value readings ended. This may be another false start but I am betting against it.

    Yesterday, Bob Marcin, Noah Blackstein, Norm Conley, and Tom Au were debating growth vs. value. While it seemed like they were on opposite extremes (Noah and Norm vs. Bob and Tom), I think that something Bob wrote is actually common ground. Bob said, "Growth is not due, value is not due. No style is ever due. There are just sets of conditions, i.e. fundamental growth rates and valuations. Period."
    The key part of Bob's quote is "there are just sets of conditions." The Ned Davis models measure economic, interest rate, stock market, and technical indicators to see if conditions that have previously had predictive value are coming into alignment in favor of one or the other. Over the past few months, the conditions that in the past have favored growth are coming into alignment again.

    In particular, narrow but expanding credit spreads, a weak dollar, decelerating economic growth, and a steepening yield curve are conditions that historically have favored growth. Additionally, growth as a class is cheap on a relative P-E basis, trading below the typical premium growth stocks are accorded compared to value. Several months of outperformance by growth have also pushed trend and technical indicators into positions that in the past have presaged additional periods of growth outperforming.

    I don't know if we are at the beginning of a multi-year trend favoring growth but I believe for the next few months at least growth will be the place to be.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:13 AM

    July 02, 2007

    July 2007 Model Signals

    I received the latest monthly updates Sunday night from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. The Market Cap model continues to flash a very strong signal in favor of large caps. My data goes back to 1980 and the strength of the large signal is in the top 5% of all monthly readings. The Style model is now flashing a growth signal following a five month run in favor of value.

    As a result, yesterday I sold all client positions in the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD) and moved it to the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF).....

    The style model has been pretty evenly split for much of the last year sending either a weak growth or weak value reading. The shift this month is reflecting recently improved relative performance of growth stocks picked up by the model's technical indicators. As a reminder, the technical indicators are designed to make the models more timely since most of the underlying indicators measuring economic growth and interest rates are longer term in nature.

    In general, I see the message from the underlying factors in the models reflecting a slowdown in economic growth. This is an environment where it pays to take less risk (large caps over small caps) and seek out companies that are less sensitive to economic activity (growth over value).

    The latest value signal form the style model proved to be less than perfect. During the five month period it was in place, the Russell 1000 Growth ETF rose 4.5% while the Russell 1000 Value ETF gained 3.6%. On the other hand, the large cap signal that is now in place for the sixth consecutive month has been a pretty good call. During this period large caps as measured by the S&P 500 have gained 4.7% vs. small caps at 4.6% as measured by the Russell 2000. Performance parity may not be anything to get excited about but in a strongly uptrending stock market environment, small caps typically outperform. As a result, I think the market model has allowed client to earn the generally available return in the stock market at a lower level of risk.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:31 PM | Comments (2)

    June 04, 2007

    June 2007 Models

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for June. The signals remain large cap and value. The large cap signal remains very strong, while the value signal remains weak. As a result of the updated signals, there are no changes to the holdings in the portion of the portfolios I manage using these models. Clients continue to own the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    This is the fifth consecutive month that the market cap model has flashed a large cap signal. The average holding period for this model based on data since 1980 is four to six months. For the last several months, the signal has been very strong favoring relative outperformance of large caps over small caps. In fact, there have only been 13 months with stronger signals in favor of large caps out of the 339 months that I have data on the model. All ten indicators in the market cap model are flashing a large cap signal. The model is picking up a moderately growing and slowing economy, rising interest rates and the recent technical deterioration of the Russell 2000 versus the S&P 500.

    This is also the fifth consecutive month that the style model has flashed a value signal. The average holding period in the style model is five to seven months based on data since 1981. The value signal remains a weak one with just five of the nine indicators in the model flashing a value signal. Flipping of just one indicator or changes in the strength of one or two underlying indicators would be enough to change the model to a growth signal....

    Performance of the models has been mixed since the current signals have been in place. The market cap model has been pretty good with the S&P 500 slightly outperforming the Russell 2000 since February. For May, the Russell 2000 slightly outperformed the S&P 500. I take comfort in these results given that one would expect the beta effect to cause small caps to outperform with the market in such a strong uptrend. In my opinion, the large cap signal has allowed my clients to earn as good as returns as the Russell 2000 while taking less risk. The model has not been perfect, however. Mid cap has been the pace to be over the past four months. The S&P 400 (MDY) has outperformed the S&P 500 by about 350 basis points. I believe the combination of private equity deals and strong performance from energy stocks has driven the outperformance of mid caps.

    The weak signal from the style model in favor of value has fairly reflected the compression of performance among value and growth over the past four months. During that time, as has been the case for most of the past year, there has been very little variance in the performance of the major growth and value indices. In fact, over the last four months, the returns have been almost identical. For May alone, growth outperformed value.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:26 AM

    May 03, 2007

    May 2007 Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for May. The Market Cap model continues to flash an extremely strong signal favoring large caps. The Style model continues to flash a weak signal in favor of value. As a reminder, these models are designed to predict relative performance and have minimal predictive ability for the stock market direction. The latest signals leave my exposure in the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    There was almost no movement in the factors underlying the two models this month. The only change was a shift to small cap from large in the NYSE Breadth factor reflecting steady, if unspectacular improvement in breadth during April's market rally. Despite this change the overall model actually moved a touch deeper into large cap territory. The large cap signal has not been this strong since the end of 1995. Since the start of my data in the spring of 1979, there have been only about a dozen monthly readings more strongly in favor of large cap outperformance. The current reading will take several months to switch to a small or mid cap signal even if the underlying factors begin to move in favor of small caps. I think it is a good bet that the model won’t shirt again to small caps without a large move in either the stock market or the economy. It seems most likely those moves would be to the downside as the small caps are favored at extremes rather than in moderate or soft landing scenarios....

    The Style model, on the other hand could easily shift over to growth as soon as next month. The current value signal came into effect in February but has been a weak signal for all four months. The latest movement was in favor of growth and it won’t take much more to turn the signal for June.

    The large cap signal first went effect in February. For the three months ending April 30th, the S&P 500, as represented by SPY is up 3.2% vs. a gain of 1.8% for the Russell 2000, as represented by IWM. Mid cap has actually been the best performing category over the 3-month period so the signal has not been perfect.

    The value signal has not been very accurate so far but since I have limited client exposure to large cap value the damage has not been great. For the three months, large cap growth (IWF) is up 3.1% and large cap value (IWD) is up 3.05%. This period continues a trend of performance compression among growth and value that has been in place for most of the past year. In the small cap area, growth has outperformed value considerably over the past three months. Fortunately, the strength of the Market Cap signal has kept me out of small cap value.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:46 AM

    April 04, 2007

    April 2007 Model Signals

    For the second consecutive month there were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style models. The signals are still flashing large cap and value. As a result, in the portion of the portfolios Northlake manages that are dedicated to the ETF rotation strategy, I continue to own the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Value Index (IWD).

    Despite the lack of changes in the signals, there is some exciting news. The Market Cap signal favoring large cap is at its strongest level since November and December of 1995! In fact, the signal strength is in the top ten going all the way back to the beginning of my measurement period in 1980. For what it's worth, the 1995 signals proved accurate as large caps outperformed small and mid caps over the next three months and especially in months six through eighteen following the signal. The models are designed to offer signals over an intermediate time frame which I define as six to twelve months. The average holding period for the market Cap model in the 25 plus years of back testing is five months....

    The Market Cap model contains ten factors, all of which now favor large cap. I divide the factors into three buckets: economic, interest rate, and stock market/technical. In general, the model has favored large caps when the market returns are about average. Small cap signals usually occur when the market and economy have been doing poorly for awhile. The idea is to move into what is going to work next so there is a contrarian aspect. The stock market/technical indicators include some trend based factors to keep me from being too late or too early. Ned Davis Research developed these models and continues to maintain them.

    The Style model had no changes this month to any of the underlying factors leaving the reading exactly the same as last month. I'd classify the reading as a "weak value" signal. Over the past six to twelve months, the Style model has not been sending strong signals as it has rotated a few times between growth and value. Over this time frame, returns on the major growth value indices have not shown significant variation.

    So far in 2007, the signals from both models have been pretty accurate. Thanks mostly to a call favoring mid cap to start the year, the Market Cap model produced a price-only gain of 1.07% in the first quarter vs. just .19% for the S&P 500. The Style model benefited similarly from a good call on value to start the year and produced a first quarter gain of 1.89%.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:19 PM

    March 01, 2007

    March 2007 Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap or Style models for March. The signals remain Large Cap and Value. As a result in the portion of client portfolios dedicated to Northlake's ETF rotation strategy (generally ranging from 40% to 80% of equity portfolio value depending on account characteristics), I continue to own the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    Despite the lack of changes in the signal, there is one notable item when looking at the factors underlying the model. The current reading in favor of large caps is one of the two strongest signals since a five year run in favor of small and caps ended in 2005. Since then the model has rotated between mid cap and large cap with more recent data trending generally toward large caps.....

    The Market Cap model contains ten factors that I classify as economic, interest rate, or stock market indicators. Presently nine of these factors large caps. Some of the factors are sending stronger large signals than others but the message is clear.

    The Style model had few changes for March. The signal in favor of value is a little stronger but I would not classify as a strong signal. It could easily flip back to growth next month if just one or two factors changed.

    I am uncertain whether this week's sharp stock market decline is the beginning of a bearish or just part of a stiff short-term correction. However, one thing I think we can for certain is that for awhile volatility is likely to be greater and the downside risk has increased. In this type of environment I am pleased that the Market Cap model is sending a strong large cap signal. As a long only manager/fully invested manager, the best way I can protect my clients assets is to own less risky assets when risks to the downside are highest. I feel the current position of the models is closely aligned with the new market environment. I can’t ask for much more than that whether the signals turn out right or wrong.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 04:42 PM

    February 05, 2007

    February 2007 Model Signals

    Both of the models in Northlake's ETF rotation strategy sent new signals for February. The market Cap model shifted from Mid Cap to Large Cap and the Style model shifted from Growth to Value. As a result of these changes, I swapped client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) for the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) for the Russell 1000 Value (IWD).

    Several indicators in the Market Cap model shifted in favor of large caps this month including many of the indicators that I refer to as stock market indicators. The measure of Advisory Service Sentiment moved from small cap to large cap as it dropped below recent highs indicating that peak in bullishness maybe at hand. Not surprisingly, history shows that large caps outperform small caps when bullish sentiment roles over. The indicators that measure breadth and trend also moved in favor of large caps. These indicators are picking up the lagging performance for small caps since the lows last May and June. The final indicator to change is the 3 month measure of bond momentum. Small caps underperform when interest rates are rising so the sharp rise in rates over the past month and a half clearly favors large caps.

    Only one indicator shifted in the Style model: Advisory Service Sentiment. This indicator also has had predictive ability on the growth vs. value question. Similar to the Market Cap interpretation, this indicator favors value when it appears that bullish sentiment has peaked. Once again, the interpretation is that at peaks in bullish sentiment the next big move might be lower and it will pay to lower your risk value. Value, like large caps, is the place to be when risks are higher.

    Both of the just vacated Mid Cap and Growth signals were in place for three months. The Mid Cap signal proved very good as over the 3 month period, MDY gained 5.77% to 4.33% for SPY and 4.09% for IWM. The Growth signal was inaccurate but did not prove too costly. As measured by the Russell 3000 Growth and Value ETFS (IWZ and IWW), value outperformed growth by 5.35% to 4.66%. Using the Russell 1000 or 2000 Growth and Value ETFs, the returns were about the same, growth underperformed value by 50-75 basis points.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:15 AM

    January 04, 2007

    January 2007 Model Signals

    It's a new year but there were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap and Style model signals for January. The Market Cap Model continues to favor mid caps and the Style model remains firmly in the growth camp. Within my personal and Northlake client accounts, I am implementing the Market Cap signal by holding equal amounts of the S&P 500 (SPY) and the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY). The entire exposure to the Style model is in the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).

    Both signals are the results of a somewhat muddled group of indicators looking at economic, interest rate, and technical measures. My interpretation is that the indicators are picking up the slower economic growth increasingly evident over the past six months but the implications of the slowing are mixed for major investment themes. In other words, the market is operating without a major theme with all investment strategies rising and falling together. This is far different than the consistent themes of small caps and value that were evident from the bottom in the market in 2002 until the breakout last summer. I suspect the correct interpretation is that we are transitioning to new leadership. Large caps seem likely candidates but I don’t the evidence is strong enough yet to make a big bet on that outcome.

    Since we are at year end, I thought I'd offer a look back at performance of the models in 2006....

    Overall, despite poor signals in December, the models were pretty accurate. As implemented in real accounts, the Market Cap model beat the S&P 500 by about 160 basis points and the Style model beat the S&P 500 by about 400 basis points. The key to the good results was the value signal that was in place for most of the first half of 2006, my use of small cap value early in the year to leverage a persistent Mid Cap signal from the Market Cap model, and great performance from Mid Caps until the sharp decline in the market in May.

    I'll close with a quick thanks to Ned Davis Research who developed the models I use, continues to maintain them and provide me with consulting, and allows me to write about them on here and on StreetInsight.com. Special thanks to Alex White, Ed Clissold, and Tim Hayes.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:04 AM

    December 09, 2006

    December 2006 Model Signals

    My attendance at the UBS Media Conference led to the delay in getting the latest model signals up on the website. Fortunately, the models did not signal change for this month. Here is some detailed commentary:

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models for December. The Market Cap model continues to send a mid-cap signal, while the Style model moved to a stronger growth signal. As a result of this month's update, I made no changes to client ETF holdings. The Market Cap allocation continues to be split evenly between the large-cap S&P 500 (SPY) and the mid-cap S&P 400 (MDY). The Style allocation remains 100% Russell 1000 Growth (IWF).....

    Looking at the underlying factors that make up each model, on the market cap side, I think it is fair to say that the signals remain mixed. This model flashed a mid-cap signal from January through June and then switched to a four-month run favoring large cap. The move back to mid caps in November was largely a function of better relative performance for small caps in the late summer and early fall. I consider the current signal from this model to be weak which is why I am splitting my exposure between large and mid caps.

    The Style model is more interesting as it has moved firmly into growth territory. The current signal is the strongest in favor of growth since the fall of 2005. Before that, the last time the growth signal was this strong was in mid-2003. Almost all the underlying indicators are lined up in favor of growth including narrow credit spreads, a below-average relative P/E premium, outperformance by consumer stocks, bullish overall market sentiment, the weak U.S. dollar, and a variety of intermediate-term technical indicators that are picking up improved performance for growth stocks over the past six months.

    The only factors favoring value are the inverted yield curve and continued moderate economic growth. The yield curve favors value either when it is very steep or inverted. Historically, growth has performed best with a normal upward sloping yield curve in place. With recent indications that 4Q06 GDP growth may slip toward 0%, the coincident indicator that measures GDP growth in this model will likely flip to growth soon, leaving only the shape of yield curve favoring value.

    Northlake's models are implemented in a disciplined manner, leaving me little flexibility to adjust my dedicated ETF holdings. However, I also use the models to influence the limited assets managed outside Northlake's ETF rotation strategy. The strengthening growth signal has me considering a trading position in the Nasdaq 100 (QQQQ) if last week's volatility leads to a more substantial pullback in the broader market averages.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:22 AM

    November 02, 2006

    November 2006 Model Signals

    Both Northlake's Market Cap and Style models sent new signals for November. The Market Cap model moved from large cap to mid cap and the Style Model went back to growth from value. The mid cap signal is fairly weak, while the growth signal is moderately strong. As a result of the new signal, I swapped all client and personal positions in the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) into the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF). Since the mid cap signal was weak I swapped only half of the positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) into the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY)....

    The new mid cap signal follows a four month run where the model favored large caps. The prior call was a good one as SPY rose 8.26% for the period vs. 2.93% for MDY and 6.27% for the Russell 2000 (IWM). It is especially satisfying to have invested in the highest performing index when the signal is large cap. Looking back over the 25 years of history I have on the Market Cap model, bullish periods overwhelmingly had small cap signals. But don’t read that as a market call. Northlake's models are meant to predict relative performance, not market direction.

    The new mid cap signal is the result of rebounding technical conditions for small cap indices over the last few months. There were no changes at all in the economic or interest indicators this month. Those remain fairly evenly split between large and small cap signals (the model kicks out a mid cap signal when the underlying factors are fairly evenly split between small cap and large cap signals).

    The new growth signal is the second in the last three months following a long stretch of only value signals. The current growth signal is stronger than the September one that broke the 8 month streak in favor of value. It is also driven largely by the technical indicators but there is an unmistakable trend in the economic and interest indicators in favor of growth over the past six months.

    I follow the models regardless of whether I agree with their signals but in this case I agree that the environment favors growth. In general, the models favor growth in a slowing economy when growth companies can presumably sustain better performance with less of a tailwind from the economy. Growth has been outperforming value since July. The one month shift from growth to value for October proved slightly inaccurate as IWD underperformed IWF by about 60 basis points.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:16 AM | Comments (2)

    October 03, 2006

    October 2006 Model Signals

    The weak growth signal given by Northlake’s Style model for September turned into a weak value signal for October. As a result, I swapped all client holdings of the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) into the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) at the open yesterday.

    The one month swap from IWD to IWF for September turned out to be an OK trade from an absolute and relative basis. During the month, IWF rose 1.8% vs. a gain of 1.1% for IWD.

    The average holding period for Style model based on back tests going back to 1980 is about 5 months so the one month flip flop is a bit unusual. Usually the volatility occurs when the signals are weak or in transition. I remain of the belief that we are transitioning to an environment favoring growth despite the reversion back to a value signal this month. In general, an environment of moderating economic growth favors growth and that is exactly what I expect to be the dominant economic theme for the next several months.....

    Only one of the factors underlying the Style model changed this month, the index of coincident indicators moved from growth to value, but that was enough to switch the signal given the weakness of the prior month’s reading. This factor changed because the 12 month rate of change in the coincident indicators moved from negative territory to positive territory. This measurement is fluctuating very close to 0% and might remain volatile from month to month. None of the other 8 factors changed their signal for October.

    Switching to the Market Cap model, the signal remains Large Cap although for the first time in six months, there was movement in favor of small caps. The movement was driven by the rally in bonds as the three month rate of change of the Lehman Long-Term Treasury index moved above 5%. Historically, bond market momentum (falling interest rates) of this magnitude has favored outperformance by small caps. Seven of the ten indicators in the Market Cap model are still flashing a large cap signal. My position in the S&P 500 (SPY) remains unchanged for October.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:17 AM | Comments (3)

    September 25, 2006

    Debating Growth and Value

    Last week on Real Money, there was a debate on the growth vs. value question. It began when my colleague, Ed Stavetski asked, “As the economy slows and earnings growth tails off, does one want to own value or growth?” Ed asked the question after reviewing year-to-date returns for the Russell growth and value indices that show a big edge for value (this edge was captured by Northlake’s Style model which flashed a value signal from February through August). His conclusion appeared to be that the market had spoken and a slowing economy was rewarding value.

    Another colleague, Gary Dvorchak, jumped into the debate the next day looking at valuation of growth vs. value. He showed some charts indicating that growth is close to an all-time low on a relative value basis vs. value. Obviously, his conclusion was that growth is now the place to be.

    Northlake’s model, courtesy of Ned Davis Research, offers a similar split decision but did shift to a weak growth signal this month. The shift follows a summer that started with just three of the nine factors favoring growth. Entering fall, there are now five on nine factors favoring growth. That is barely enough to shift the signal, but it shifted nonetheless.....

    Northlake’s model includes both of the factors that Ed and Gary mentioned. While I agree with Gary’s view that growth is cheap, I take issue with Ed’s view that a slowing economy favors value. I think a slowing economy favors growth. Here is a chart that shows the performance of growth vs. value based on whether coincident indicators are rising or falling on a year-over-year basis:

    Download Growth vs. Value and Coincident Indicators

    It might be hard to read but based on this data going back to 1979 when the 12 month rate of change for the coincident indicators has been below 0%, the Russell 3000 Growth has returned 16.1% annualized while the Russell 3000 Value has risen at an annual rate of just 7.3%. Intuitively, this makes sense to me. Growth is more valuable when the economy is decelerating because growth companies don’t need the economy to produce positive year-over-comparisons in revenues, operating income, earnings, and cash flow. When data lines up with common sense, I fell pretty strongly that the thesis makes sense.

    Looking at valuation, as I noted, Gary is correct that growth is looking cheap at the moment. However, at least based on this measure of relative forward P-E rations for the Russell 3000 Growth and value indices, growth is not yet really cheap on a historical basis:

    Download Growth vs. Value Comparative Price-Earnings Ratios

    Now I’ll admit that I might be cherry picking data here to support my positions. For example, Gary showed a chart that indicated that on price-to-cash flow basis growth is cheaper than value for the first time in at least 30 years. I am sure that Ed can probably offer a chart that shows that the current economic environment, albeit slower growth than it was a year ago, favors value.

    The bottom line, however, is that after five plus years of value or growth when the predictive factors all lined up largely in favor of value, many of those same indicators are now suggesting growth. Northlake’s Style model made the switch. We shall see if the call is accurate and whether it proves sustainable by recurring next month and beyond.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:02 PM

    September 06, 2006

    September 2006 Model Signals

    After seven months signaling value, Northlake’s Style model shifted to growth for September. There were no changes in any of the underlying factors this month. Rather, the two month rolling average calculation shifted to growth when June’s value bias was dropped and August data confirmed the shift to growth first picked up in July. As a result of the new growth signal, I sold all client positions in the Russell 1000 Value Index (IWD) and the Russell 3000 Value (IWW) and swapped dollar for dollar into the Russell 1000 Growth Index (IWF).

    There were no changes to Northlake’s Market Cap model for September, which for the third consecutive month is providing a large cap signal. The large cap signal remains strong and accounts for the use of the large cap Russell 1000 in the implementation of the new Style signal.....

    For September, five of the nine factors that make up the Style model favored growth, making it two straight months with a majority for growth. As recently as June, only three of the nine factors in the Style model favored growth. The shift to a growth signal is being driven by factors picking up slowing economic growth, a weak dollar, cheap relative valuation, better technical action for growth stocks, and unusually narrow credit spreads. While I never second guess the models, I personally concur with the slowing growth scenario so this shift is comfortable for me.

    I should note that the growth signal is a weak one at the moment. The movement of just a single factor next month could shift the model back to value mode. While that could happen, the average length of a signal from this model has been seven months based on backtesting to 1980.

    By coincidence, the prior value signal was in place for seven months, and it proved to be a very accurate signal. Looking at the Russell Growth and Value ETFs, from February thru August, the Russell 3000 Value (IWW) gained 5.5% against a loss of 2.2% for the Russell 3000 Growth (IWZ). The story was the same in the narrower indices as the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) gained 5.9% against a loss of 1.7% for the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) and the Russell 2000 Value (IWN) gained 3.6% against a loss of 5.1% for the Russell 2000 Growth (IWO). Northlake’s benchmark is the S&P 500, which gained 2.5% during this same period, so no matter how it was implemented the value signal proved to be a good one.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:03 AM | Comments (4)

    August 10, 2006

    August 2006 Model Signals

    This note was originally written and published on StreetInsight.com on August 2nd. With all the trauma from my the complete crash of my pirmary PC on July 30th, I forgot to post it here. I apologize for my oversight.

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlake's market-cap and style models for August. Northlake clients continue to own large cap and value represented by the S&P 500 (SPY) and the iShares Russell 1000 or 3000 Value Index (IWD/IWW). There was some interesting underlying movement in the models, however.

    A Decisive Shift in Favor of Large Caps in Market-Cap Model

    The market-cap model made a more decisive shift in favor of large caps this month and now sits very firmly in large-cap territory. Not surprisingly, the cause of the further shift is that the trend indicator finally moved in favor of large caps. The lag for this indicator might surprise some folks, especially since small caps initially collapsed in May, but keep in mind that the models are designed to predict relative performance over a six- to 12-month time horizon. I am trying to capture the major trend, not all the wiggles. Consequently, the trend indicators look back six to 18 months.....

    Small Caps Could Bounce

    There was one contra-trend shift in the market cap model worth noting. The advisory service sentiment indicator moved in favor of small caps due to plunging bullish sentiment. Sentiment dropped far and is now so negative it suggests that bullish behavior will be rewarded. I am glad that the overall model is deeply in large-cap territory, but this indicator may suggest that a dead-cat bounce of relative performance favoring small caps is around the corner.

    Style Model Moving Toward Growth

    The more interesting results this month were in the style model, which made a fairly strong move toward a growth signal. The model is not at growth yet and might not reach growth, but this is the first move in favor of growth in many months.

    Consumer/Cyclical Ratio and Coincident Indicators Shift Toward Growth

    Two indicators shifted from value to growth this month: the consumer/cyclical ratio and the coincident indicators. The consumer/cyclical indicator measures the relative performance of the two infamous Morgan Stanley indices. Consumer stocks lifted their heads recently, and maybe a change in well-established, long-term trend favoring cyclicals is at hand. The coincident indicators shifted toward growth because the index is no longer growing on a year-over-year basis. Both of these indicators might be saying that slowing economic growth is the emerging market theme.

    Trend Indicators Still Favor Value

    These two indicators join relative P/Es, the weak U.S. dollar and tight credit spreads in favoring growth. The complete shift in favor of growth is being held back by the trend indicators, which still favor value.

    Trends Favoring Capitalization or Style Persist

    One of things I like about my models is that the trend indicators add a timing element that hopefully keeps me from being too early or too late. Again, I am looking for major trends, not monthly wiggles. A look back at market history shows that trends favoring capitalization or style tend to be persistent, often lasting years, and provide large variation in relative performance.

    Small Caps Could Bounce

    There was one contra-trend shift in the market cap model worth noting. The advisory service sentiment indicator moved in favor of small caps due to plunging bullish sentiment. Sentiment dropped far and is now so negative it suggests that bullish behavior will be rewarded. I am glad that the overall model is deeply in large-cap territory, but this indicator may suggest that a dead-cat bounce of relative performance favoring small caps is around the corner.

    Style Model Moving Toward Growth

    The more interesting results this month were in the style model, which made a fairly strong move toward a growth signal. The model is not at growth yet and might not reach growth, but this is the first move in favor of growth in many months.

    Consumer/Cyclical Ratio and Coincident Indicators Shift Toward Growth

    Two indicators shifted from value to growth this month: the consumer/cyclical ratio and the coincident indicators. The consumer/cyclical indicator measures the relative performance of the two infamous Morgan Stanley indices. Consumer stocks lifted their heads recently, and maybe a change in well-established, long-term trend favoring cyclicals is at hand. The coincident indicators shifted toward growth because the index is no longer growing on a year-over-year basis. Both of these indicators might be saying that slowing economic growth is the emerging market theme.

    Trend Indicators Still Favor Value

    These two indicators join relative P/Es, the weak U.S. dollar and tight credit spreads in favoring growth. The complete shift in favor of growth is being held back by the trend indicators, which still favor value.

    Trends Favoring Capitalization or Style Persist

    One of things I like about my models is that the trend indicators add a timing element that hopefully keeps me from being too early or too late. Again, I am looking for major trends, not monthly wiggles. A look back at market history shows that trends favoring capitalization or style tend to be persistent, often lasting years, and provide large variation in relative performance.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:05 AM

    July 07, 2006

    July Model Signals

    Northlake's Market Cap model completed its transition for July by flashing a large cap signal for the first time since June 2005. As a result, I sold all remaining mid cap exposure dedicated to the ETF rotation strategy, swapping it dollar for dollar to large caps. Specifically, at the open on Monday, I sold the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and bought the S&P 500 (SPY). There was no change at all in the signal from style model which continues to flash value as it has since February 2006.

    Current positions within the ETF rotation strategy are now entirely large cap, equally split between SPY and the Russell 1000 Large Cap Value (IWD). As recently as two months ago, clients had 25% in small cap value and 50% in mid cap, so a shift to 100% large cap is a significant change.

    The market cap model has picked up on several trends that favor large cap outperformance including....

    moderating economic growth, a weaker dollar, a flattening yield curve, rising interest rates, weakening breadth, an unusually high relative P-E for small caps, an extreme readings in investor willingness to accept risk (a contrarian indicator). Over the past six months these indicators have gradually moved in favor of large caps but only with the June and July signals did the weight of the evidence finally shift in favor of large caps.

    I use my models to enforce decision-making discipline. I never second guess them and I always implement the signals. Nevertheless, I am glad that in this case, my own opinion squares perfectly with the models. I think we face a tough summer to make money in stocks and feel the risk is to the downside. Therefore, I'd rather be invested is less volatile large caps which should limit losses if the market does fall further.

    I am pleased that client accounts now have a lower risk profile. Besides the shift toward large caps in the ETF rotation strategy, I have also adopted a more conservative position by raising cash reserves and eliminating discretionary positions in emerging market and small cap ETFs. My caution may prove wrong but by adjusting risk downward I feel a lot less pressure which usually has allowed me to make better decisions.

    Even though the signal last month was the weakest possible mid cap signal it was still a mid cap signal. Therefore, I measure the accuracy of latest mid cap signal from its first appearance in September 2005 through June 2006. During this period, on a price only basis, it was a good call as mid caps gained 6.72% against a gain of just 3.83% for the large cap S&P 500. It wasn't a perfect call though as the model could have flashed a small cap signal which would have kept portfolios invested in the Russell 2000 (IWM) for a gain of 7.82%. But I'm not complaining.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:22 AM | Comments (2)

    June 02, 2006

    June Model Signals

    The June signals from Northlake's models led to significant shifts in client and personal portfolios on Thursday. Overall, the changes moved portfolios from being small and mid cap biased to being large cap biased. The result reduces risk and volatility by moving half of the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) exposure to the S&P 500 (SPY) and all of the remaining Russell 2000 Value (IWN) to Russell 1000 Value (IWD). Looking at this another way, the portion of portfolios dedicated to Northlake's models went from 50% mid cap, 38% large cap, and 12% small cap to 75% large cap and 25% mid cap.

    The trigger for this shift was movement in the Market Cap model from a firm mid cap signal to a split decision between mid cap and large cap....

    The models Northlake uses score on a 0 to 100 scale based on a two month rolling average. For June, the score rests right on the point that divides a mid cap signal from a large cap signal. There was no change in Style model which continues to favor value over growth.

    Over the last two months, two of ten factors that make-up the Market Cap model shifted. For May, a measure of NYSE breadth picked up underlying deterioration in the stock market, while for June the factor measuring the U.S. dollar picked up weakness in the currency. Each of these changes favors large caps relative to small caps. There are a couple of other technical factors that I thought might also shift to a large cap signal, but I believe the bounce we had on Wednesday during which small caps outperformed probably prevented this indicator from changing modes.

    I am pleased to have reduced client risk profiles, as measured by relative performance vs. the S&P 500. I think the recent market break is the start of a transition period toward better relative performance for large caps. Even f I am wrong, I think this transitional period carries a lot more risk for small caps as any retest of recent lows would lead to another drubbing for highly volatile indices.

    Cash positions in client portfolios are still on the low side. My current plan is to raise cash if the market recovers a bit more. I had feared that I had remained too aggressive via the combination of being fully invested and favoring small and mid caps but the rally the last two days and the fresh signal allowed a "do over" where I could lower portfolio risk profiles on strength. As they say, "better lucky than good."

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:32 AM

    May 02, 2006

    May 2006 Model Signals

    There were no changes to signals from Northlake's Market Cap or Style models for May, which continue to flash Mid Cap and Value. Consequently, the positions used to implement these signals are also unchanged: S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and Russell 1000 Value (IWD) and Russell 2000 Value (IWN). The default position of $3 in IWD for every $1 in IWN is also being maintained.

    While the market cap signal did not shift, there was movement in underlying factors that pushed the signal toward a large cap reading.....

    In fact, the current reading of the market cap model is closer to a large cap signal than it has been since January 2006, although I am probably overanalyzing it. The only factor to shift was NYSE Breadth, which shifted from a small cap to a large cap signal due to deteriorating breadth as measured by the monthly average of weekly NYSE advances minus declines. This measure of breadth has deteriorated sharply in recent weeks. As mentioned, I am probably reading too much into these small moves but there has been awful lot of discussion on Wall Street about whether large caps will reassert leadership so I thought I would bring it to your attention.

    There is absolutely nothing new from the Style model. The signal has now remained firmly in value territory for four consecutive months.

    Last month, the mid cap and value signals worked out pretty well. MDY matched the performance of the S&P 500 despite the fact that the small cap Russell 2000 lagged. Usually, the higher volatility on MDY will cause it to move more in tandem with the Russell than the S&P 500. However, I've noticed a high correlation on daily relative performance between the energy stocks and MDY. I think this is because even though MDY is not heavily weighted in energy, it does contain more of the high octane energy stocks.

    Value led growth last month, especially in the larger cap areas. IWD easily beat the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) as the large cap energy and financial exposure in IWD boosted that ETF while IWO suffered as large cap tech like Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) performed poorly.

    The signals have also been accurate since the most recent changes took place. Mid caps have easily outperformed the S&P 500 since last September when the latest mid cap call occurred. The value signal has been in place for just three months. It has proven slightly accurate but my implementation of $3 IWD for $1 IWN has given the return a boost.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:10 PM

    April 07, 2006

    April Model Signals

    I am a little delayed getting up the monthly update on the Northlake's Market Cap and Style models because I wanted to check with Ned Davis Research (NDR), the firm that processes the models, about this month's readings. For just the second time ever, in monthly readings going back to 1981, the "score" of both models was unchanged. It is rare for even one of the models to be unchanged from month-to-month. In fact, against the 0 to 100 scoring system, the average monthly swing in the Market Cap model has been 5 points, while the average monthly swing in the Style model has been 10 points. NDR has confirmed the signals for April were correct and referred to the outcome with the "100 year flood" cliché.

    With no change in either model, the signals remain Mid Cap and Value. The signals are implemented in client portfolios with holdings of the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY), the Russell 1000 Large Cap Value (IWD), and the Russell 2000 Small Cap Value (IWN). The ratio of IWD to IWN remains $3 to $1. Overall, the models are sending mixed signals indicating that trends in the economy, interest rates, and the stock market are split. This is consistent with the up-down action the stock market has seen since January, as the models seem to be picking up the split in sentiment among investors. The models continue to be most heavily influenced by the consistent but moderate growth in GDP, upwardly trending interest rates and a flattening yield curve, and readings which suggest investors are willing to tolerate an above average level risk in their portfolios....

    Performance of the models was pretty good last month with the Mid Cap signal continuing to provide a boost. In March, the holding in MDY gained over 2.3%, more than 1% greater than the benchmark S&P 500. The Mid Cap signal began flashing in September 2005. It has also been accurate over this entire period, producing a gain of 11% vs. just over 6% for the S&P 500. For all of 2006 so far, MDY has gained about 7.5% vs. 3.8% for the S&P 500. Returns could have been even better had the model been flashing a small cap signal since last fall but it is tough to complain about the returns that have been generated.

    The IWD/IWN combo has been in pace for just two months. During that time, value and growth indices have produced almost identical returns. However, thanks to the ownership in the small cap IWN, the combined IWN/IWD holding has produced a return comfortably in excess of the S&P 500. I use the $3 to $1 large cap growth or value vs. small cap growth or value as a default weighting that roughly reflects the overall weighting of the broad US market. I would add to the small cap holding if the Market Cap model moved to a strong small cap signal. Similarly, I would increase the large cap holding if the Market Cap model moved to a strong large cap signal. Neither appears in the cards over the next couple of months based on the current signal and the position of the underlying factors.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 10:49 AM

    March 01, 2006

    March 2006 Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's Market Cap or style models for March. Client portfolios remain long mid caps and value, which I execute using the exchange trade funds representing the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY), the Russell 1000 Value (IWD), and the Russell 2000 Value (IWN). Clients continue to own $3 in IWD for every $1 in IWN, a slight bias against large cap in the style allocation. The long-standing mid cap signal, now in place for six consecutive months is the reason I am making a modest relative bet against large caps.

    Last month, the model signals offered mixed results. The mid cap signal from the Market Cap model was wrong. As measured by the ETFs or the actual indices, mid caps were the worst performing index, trailing large caps and small caps by up to 1% depending on the particular index or ETF being measured. On the other hand, the Style model flashed an accurate signal as the value ETFs slightly outperformed the growth ETFs....

    Year to date, the mid cap signal has been correct and has produced a return in excess of the S&P 500. However, a small cap signal would have provided even better returns. For the trailing five months that the mid cap signal has been in place, mid caps and small caps have returned about 9% on a price only basis, comfortably ahead of the price only return on the S&P 500 of 4.6%.

    The Style model has not offered any excess return on a year to date basis as the small excess return for value over growth merely regained the lost return in January when the model flashed an inaccurate growth signal.

    There was little underlying change in the models for March, consistent with the lack of change in the overall signal. The strength of the mid cap signal from the Market Cap model was almost identical for March as it was for February. The only factor that shifted was advisory service sentiment which moved from favoring small caps to a neutral reading. This factor attempts to identify initial shifts from overly bullish or bearish sentiment readings. Presently, the sentiment readings are muddled, which is pretty consistent with the discussion on Wall Street, in my opinion.

    None of the factors in the Style model shifted for March. However, the model did register a stronger value reading. Narrowing credit spreads, the continuing flattening or inversion of the yield curve, and strength in the U.S. dollar, all contributed to the stronger value reading for March.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:02 PM

    February 03, 2006

    February Model Signals

    For February, Northlake's Market Cap model continued to flash a Mid Cap signal as has been the case for every month beginning in September 2005. As a reminder, this model measures ten factors which I group as economic, interest rate, and stock market indicators. Each indicator has historically had predictive value for the relative performance of small caps vs. big caps. The model uses a weight of the evidence approach so that if the indicators generally favor small or large caps that is the signal that will be flashed. A mid cap signal is flashed when the indicators are split as they are currently. One interesting observation from the current status of the underlying signals is that most of the economic and interest indicators favor large caps while the stock market indicators which include especially the trend and measures favor small caps. Decelerating economic growth and moderately rising interest rates historically have favored large caps but for now investors still are supporting small caps. A key question is when will investors rotate decisively toward large caps on a relative basis if fundamentals continue in their favor?

    Northlake's Style model shifted back to value for February after a one month sojourn in growth territory. This change led to the sale of all holdings in Russell Growth ETFs (IWF and IWO) and the purchase of Russell Value ETFs (IWD and IWN). Prior to January, this model had flashed a value signal for three consecutive months. The underlying factors in this model generally favor value across the economic, interest rate, and stock market indicators. However, most of the signals are weak which explains the monthly fluctuation in the overall signal. For February, three underlying indicators shifted. First, the valuation indicator moved in favor of growth. This indicator measures the relative P-E of the Russell 3000 Growth index vs. the Russell 3000 Value index. Historically, the growth P-E has average 1.45 times the value P-E. After three plus years where value looked cheap, recently, the relative P-E has normalized on a historical basis. Last month, growth moved very slightly into the cheap mode, thus the indicator switched....

    The second change for February occurred in advisory service sentiment which measures bulls vs. bears using Investors Intelligence data. This is a contrarian indicator that shifts when sentiment moves toward extreme readings. This month the indicator shifted from growth to value as bullish sentiment rose considerably. The model reads this a reason to move into the lower beta, less risky category which in this model is value.

    The final shift for February was in the technical indicators. These indicators measure intermediate trends covering 6 to 12 months. This month the indicators actually went from a reading favoring growth, acknowledging the trend mostly in place since last spring, to a reading favoring value, picking up on better value performance over the past 4 to 6 months.

    The indicators offered mixed accuracy for January. The mid cap signal was a good one as using the price only performance of the tracking ETFs, the S&P 400 (MDY) gained 5.3% against just 2.4% for the S&P 500 (SPY). However, the most accurate signal would have been small cap as the Russell 2000 (IWM) gained 8.4% in January. The mid cap signal that has been in place since September has proved accurate so far as MDY is up 8.8%, IWM is up 8.8% and SPY is up just 4%.

    The Style model did not produce an accurate signal in January when it favored growth. I look at several indices to determine the accuracy of this model. Last month, the Russell 3000 Growth (IWZ) and Value (IWW) and the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF) and Value (IWD) saw better performance for value. Only in small caps was the signal accurate as the Russell 2000 Growth (IWO) gained 9% vs. 7.8% for the Russell 2000 Value (IWN). My implementation of the growth signal for January was weighted 75% Russell 1000 and 25% Russell 2000. This produced a return in excess of the S&P 500 but left a fair amount on the table.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:11 PM

    January 06, 2006

    Interesting Datapoint Favoring Growth

    Ned Davis Research has an interesting tidbit today in favor of the recent shift in client portfolios from value to growth. As noted in this chart, investors within Fidelity's mutual fund complex currently have fewer dollars invested in growth funds than anytime since 1992. This seems like a good contrary indicator especially in light of the fact that the trend indicators in Northlake's Style model are already picking up the improved performance of growth relative to value that has been in place since May 2005.

    It seems there is plenty of money available to shift back towards growth and drive further positive relative performance. My reading of Wall Street commentary makes me believe that a similar underweighting of growth exists at many institutions and hedge funds. Remember no model or indicator is perfect and Northlake's new growth signal is a weak one, however, it appears a good trading setup is in place to support the fresh growth signal.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:44 AM

    January 04, 2006

    January 2006 Model Signals

    I received fresh signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models yesterday that resulted in swapping all value exposure to growth at the open of trading. There were no changes to the Market Cap reading which remains at Mid Cap. The shift to growth occurred after three consecutive months of value signals, a period during which value lagged growth. Current holdings in the ETF rotation portion of client portfolios are the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY), the Russell 1000 Growth (IWF), and the Russell 2000 Growth (IWO). Portfolios maintain an equal commitment to each model but within the Style allocation own $3 in IWF for every $1 in IWO....

    The shift from value to growth occurred because the prior month's value reading was a weak one and recent performance trends have favored growth. These models score 0 to 100 and the closer they are to the extremes, the stronger the signal. The value reading last month was in the upper 30s, while anything above the mid 40s favors growth. This meant a small shift in any of the underlying factors could have been enough to tilt slightly into growth territory, and that is exactly what happened. The factor that shifted was the trend indicators. These technical indicators measure intermediate trends ranging from 2 to 12 months. They are overweighted in the hope that they will improve the timeliness of a model that otherwise relies on slower moving economic, stock market, and interest rate indicators. The trend indicators are picking up the outperformance of growth that began in May.

    Looking back on 2005, Northlake's models proved modestly helpful to the goal of beating the S&P 500 benchmark. Calculating monthly price-only returns based on the S&P 500 (SPY), MDY, and the Russell 2000 (IWM), the Market Cap model earned about 6.5%, comfortably ahead of the S&P 500. The biggest gains were made early in the year when energy stocks and utilities were performing well. I don't have good data on why the Mid Cap varies relative to the S&P 500 but I can tell you from watching it minute-by-minute and day-by-day that there seems be a direct correlation between the relative performance of the S&P 400 and those sectors. I believe the energy and utility exposure in the S&P 400 has a lot more exposure to oil services, natural gas, and independent producers than the S&P 500 and these are notoriously volatile subsectors of the energy stock universe.

    The Style model helped in 2005 but only because clients maintained a disproportionately high exposure to small cap during the year by equally dividing my exposure between the Russell 1000 Large Cap and 2000 Small Cap growth and value indices until October. Using this approach allowed portfolios to leverage the more accurate signals from the Market Cap model and beat the S&P 500 by about 150 basis points. However, had clients used broader index ETFs like the Russell 3000 Growth (IWZ) and the Russell 3000 Value (IWW), where the holdings are overwhelmingly in large cap stocks, there would have been no incremental performance from the Style model.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:21 AM

    December 02, 2005

    December Model Signals

    There were no changes to the signals from Northlakes Market Cap and Style models for December. The signals remain mid cap and value, respectively. Therefore, clients continue to own the S&P 400 (MDY), and the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) and the Russell 2000 Value (IWN). The market cap model has been drifting very slightly toward large caps over the last few months so the ratio of IWD to IWN is 3 to 1...

    The indicators in the market cap model are split with six favoring large cap and four favoring small cap. The trend indicators favor small caps due to strength throughout most of 2005 in small and mid cap indices. Since the trend indicators are overweighted in the model, essentially we got a split decision. When the model offers a mixed signal it defaults to mid cap. Looking a little deeper, I categorize the individual indicators into three buckets: stock market, economic, and interest rate. Even at this level, the signal remains mixed with the stock market indicators slightly favoring large caps, the economic indicators slightly favoring small caps, and the interest rate indicators split right down the middle.

    In the style model, there was a moderate shift toward growth this month but the signal remains value. Out of nine indicators, six currently favor value but the trend indicators and the advisory service sentiment indicator both shifted from a value signal to a growth signal for December. The trend indicators are picking up outperformance for growth indices since May. The sentiment indicator flipped to growth when bearish sentiment, which had gotten quite high prior to the current rally, bounced off its lows. Overly negative sentiment is a sign that a rally may be at hand. Growth generally leads sentiment-based rallies, probably due to the higher beta in growth sectors like information and communications technology.

    Over the last few months, Northlake's models have been mixed in their accuracy. Looking back at monthly data going back to the early 1980s, it is clear that the models are most accurate when the signals are strong. With the weak and fluctuating signals generates since summer, I am not all that surprised that accuracy has been mixed. Nevertheless, I am frustrated. Here is some data:

    The market cap model has been flashing mid cap for the last three months. Overall, this has been a decent call offering marginal upside relative to Northlake's S&P 500 benchmark. Last month, MDY was up 5.7%, ahead of the 4.4% return for the S&P 500 as measured by the S&P 500 ETF (SPY). Small caps as measured by the Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) rose 5.8%. The good October performance for MDY allowed it to pull slightly ahead of SPY for the three month period with IWM bringing up the rear.

    The style model has just been wrong over the past two months during which it has been calling for value over growth. I monitor style performance looking at the Russell 3000 Growth and Value and Russell 1000 and 2000 Growth and Value. During November, regardless of the measure, growth comfortably outperformed value by 1-2%. October also had an inaccurate call in favor of value so over the two month period the outperformance for growth expands to 1.25-2.75%. Seasonality favors growth off the October lows based on market history but I never outguess the models and thankfully the rising market has provided nice returns even a little something has been left on the table.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:41 PM | Comments (1)

    November 22, 2005

    NY Times Article Provides Support For Northlake's ETF Strategy

    Over the weekend, the New York Times ran an article about a new study of investment strategies. The article supported Northlake's ETF rotation strategy by endorsing a strategy of monthly rotation among actively managed mutual funds based on four separate macroeconomic factors. This article caught my eye because after more than two years of developing and using Northlake's Market Capitalization and Style models I still have seen very few money managers promoting a similar strategy.

    What I find most notable about this article is that the authors of the study are using a multi-factor model to rotate among mutual funds using different strategies for active management. This is very similar to the strategy Northlake employs for the ETF portion for client portfolios. Northlake has adapted two models developed by Ned Davis Research which signal when current conditions in the economy and the stock market support that a certain size company or a certain style of company (growth or value) are more likely to outperform. The results of the research in the article and Northlake's own backtests reveal that this strategy can outperform the market by significant margins over a multi-year period....

    The article used a backtest period from 1980 to 2002, compared to the 1980 to 2004 period in which Northlake's Market Capitalization and Style models were tested. Further, the backtest in the article closely paralleled the results of Northlake's models, indicating the potential to beat the market by mid-to-upper single digit annualized returns prior to transaction costs.

    Here is a link to the article which I copied into a Word document. I have highlighted a few key passages which show consistency with Northlake's ETF rotation strategy.

    Why Northlake's Strategy May Be Better

    Northlake's models are focused on Market Capitalization and Style and use multi-factor models that contain a dozen or more indicators vs. just four factors for the strategy in the article. Northlake's indicators are a combination of economic, interest rate, and stock market indicators rather than just interest rate indicators used in the strategy outlined in the article. Northlake includes stock market indicators that measure investor sentiment and current trends to add an element of timing to the models. The idea is not have perfect timing but to make sure that the models signals are fresh and are not way too early or way too late.

    Finally, Northlake makes use of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to execute its strategy. This keeps the all-in cost of management fees and commission costs comfortably below the fees charged by many actively managed mutual funds which run from 1.5% to 2%.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:00 PM | Comments (2)

    November 04, 2005

    November Model Signals

    The November signals from the market cap and style models Northlake uses to allocate ETF-dedicated funds were unchanged from October. Consequently, no trades were done for November and client portfolios continue to own Mid Cap and Value. Specifically, clients own the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) for market cap exposure, while style exposure is split 75%/25% between the Russell 1000 Value (IWD) and Russell 2000 Value (IWN)...

    ....There was virtually no change to the market cap model as none of the economic, interest rate, or stock market indicators shifted their individual signals. Of the ten factors, four favor small caps and six favor large caps. This is a viewed as a split decision by the model and defaults to Mid Cap.

    The style model sustained a Value signal for the second consecutive month as the internal reading moved much more decisively in favor of Value. A slight uptick in the ratio of growth P/E's to value P/E's moved that factor from the growth camp to the value camp as relative growth P/E's are now at a very slight premium to their long-term average as measured by the Russell 3000. Several other factors moved to modestly stronger readings for value with strength in the trade-weighted dollar on a year-over-year basis making the biggest move. The style model now is firmly in Value mode but it is not yet at a reading where relative performance has historically been the best.

    Performance of the models wasn't very helpful in October as MDY trailed the S&P by about 120 basis points and Value slightly lagged growth and fell about 10 basis points short of my S&P 500 benchmark (worth noting is that the futures fell sharply right after the close on Monday which cost MDY 40 basis points relative to the S&P 500 that was regained first thing Tuesday). Year to date the models have been mixed with the market cap model about 15 basis points ahead of the S&P 500, while the style model is 170 basis points ahead of the S&P 500. Much of the outperformance for the style model has been due to its overexposure to small cap for most of the year. All returns are before dividends and commission costs but include slippage.

    Most of this year, especially since spring, both models have been sending weak signals and have sat in the area where the historical performance is decent but not great. Northlake follows the models no matter what their strength is but I'd be a lot happier if the signals were stronger. I think the weak signals are indicative of the muddling market we have had all year with the S&P 500 trading in a tight band of plus or minus a few percent of unchanged.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:58 AM

    October 17, 2005

    Swapping Some Small Cap For Large Cap

    Although I rarely make a trade intra-month in Northlake's model driven ETF investments, last Wednesday morning I moved half of the small cap value exposure to large cap value. This resulted in a swap of the Russell 2000 Value ETF (IWN) into the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD)....

    ....My rationale was to reduce the aggressiveness of client portfolios by moving toward a lower beta (less volatile) exposure to value. Northlake's Market Cap exposure is already in Mid Caps and with half of the Style exposure in Small Cap Value I just felt there too much exposure in higher risk small and mid caps given their clearly weakening relative strength trend.

    ETFs driven off Northlake's Market Cap and Style rotation strategy make up 40% to 80% of client portfolios depending on individual goals and objectives. Prior to this trade, 30% to 60% of client assets were invested in small or mid cap ETFs. This trade moves approximately 5-10% of small cap exposure to large caps. I still look for a yearend rally but with rising risks and the poor market action so far in October, I felt it was prudent to reduce the aggressiveness of client portfolios.

    If the market catches begins to rally, I expect small and mid caps to regain some lost ground relative to large caps. If that occurs, client portfolios still have plenty of small and mid exposure to participate in the rally. I hope and expect that to happen sometime this month leading to a yearly close near annual highs.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:14 AM

    October 04, 2005

    October 2005 Model Signals

    Over the weekend I received fresh signals from Northlake's monthly models. The big change for October is a new Value signal in the Style model after four consecutive months signaling Growth. As a result of the new signal, at the open on Monday I swapped all personal and client positions in the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF) and the Russell 2000 Growth ETF (IWO) into the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD) and the Russell 2000 Value ETF (IWN). The prior fourth month run of growth signals proved profitable for clients as IWF was sold for a gain of 3.2% and IWO was sold for a gain of 6.2%. During this time period the S&P 500 rose approximately 3.2%....

    ....Equal amounts of IWD and IWF were purchased matching the equal sized holdings of IWF and IWO which were sold. Implementation of Northlake's ETF strategy calls for an equal weighted position in large cap and small cap growth or value unless the Market Cap model is sending an unusually strong small cap or large cap signal. In that case, the growth or value holdings will be concentrated depending upon the Market Cap signal.

    For October, the market cap model is sending a solid mid cap signal with little change from September. As a result, no changes were made to market cap exposure for October and all personal and client positions in the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY) were maintained. This marks the second consecutive month Northlake clients have owned MDY following a switch for September from August's small cap reading. So far that switch has proved slightly favorable for clients as small gains for MDY have exceeded the gain that would have been earned had positions in small cap been held.

    The switch from growth to value for October was driven by three factors in the Style model: widening credit spreads, a flattening yield curve, and a strengthening dollar.

    Yield spreads have risen modestly in recent months and are now wide enough to suggest that investors are no longer extremely risk tolerant. Narrow credit spreads are interpreted by the model as favoring growth when investors have a large appetite for risk. The move to value for October coincides with the indication that investors are seeking less risk.

    The yield curve has finally flattened enough to move from a growth to a value signal. This factor favors value when spreads are narrower or wider than normal. When the curve is unusually steep business conditions are very favorable which is good for value. On the flip side, buying value when the curve is unusually flat or inverted has paid off in the past presumably because investors are anticipating a near-term easing or cessation of tightening by the Fed. This second condition is what the model is picking up in October.

    The recent strength in the dollar leaves it up nicely year-over-year versus other currencies on a trade-weighted basis. A strong dollar favors value because many growth industries get a high proportion of their revenues abroad and suffer when the dollar strengthens.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:37 AM

    September 02, 2005

    September Model Signals

    After getting fresh signals from Northlake's monthly models, client holdings in the Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM) were swapped into the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY) at the open of trading yesterday. This trade was triggered mainly by the technical factors in the Market Cap Model. No changes were made based on the Style model, which continues to flash a growth signal that got stronger with the fresh data from August....

    ....The small cap signal for August was a weak one and turned out to be inaccurate as well. Northlake's goal is to have client assets in the best performing market cap class each month among small, mid, and large cap. In August, the Russell 2000 fell about 2%, twice the decline of the S&P 500 and S&P 400. The models were whipsawed during August as the strong market breadth in the July rally that shifted the model from mid cap to small cap reversed in August. Breadth (advances minus declines) usually is a leading indicator but it didn't work last month. The weak breadth in August shifted the model back to mid cap mode for September and triggered the trade.

    The style model has been flashing a growth signal since June. The fresh signal for September is the strongest yet with the model picking up decelerating economic growth as measured by the coincident indicator of economic growth. Growth stocks make sense in a modest or slower growth environment as presumably they dont need the tailwind of economic growth to continue to produce earnings growth. The style model shifted from value to growth in June for the first time since the fall of 2003. So far, the call has been good with growth outperforming value (measured by calculating the average return of the Russell 1000 and 2000 growth and value ETFs). The models work best when the signals are strong and while the growth signal is solid, it is not yet showing a reading consistent with the strongest historical performance.

    In summary, within the actively managed ETF portion of client portfolios, the holdings are now the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY), the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF), and the Russell 2000 Growth ETF (IWO).

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:52 AM

    August 08, 2005

    August Model Signals

    I was out of town and unable to post on the August Model Signals last week. As clients have seen by now, the new signals led to a trade in the ETF portion of their portfolios. Specifically, the Market Capitalization model shifted from a mid cap signal to a small cap signal. Consequently, all holdings in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) were sold and swapped into the Russell 2000 Small Cap (IWM). The Mid Cap holdings were sold for almost a 5% profit. There were several shifts in underlying factors that led to the new signal

    First, the strong market rally off the April lows that accelerated in July had very strong breadth. This means that a very high percentage of all the stocks listed on the major exchanges participated in the rally. Since most listed stocks are small and mid cap, good breadth is a sign of broad based investor confidence. In the stock market strength begets strength. Historically, periods of strong breadth have been followed by continued relative gains for small cap stocks vs. large cap stocks.

    Second, the strength in July in small caps reestablished the long-term trend going back to 2000 favoring small cap stocks. As with breadth, trends tend to stay in place on Wall Street so confirmation that the trend favoring small caps was still in place suggests that in the future small caps will perform better than large caps.

    It is interesting to note that both of the indicators that led to the shift in the Market Cap signal are technical or trend indicators. These types of indicators play an important role both the Market Cap and Style models by providing shorter term factors to complement the economic and interest rate indicators that tend to change more slowly. The idea is that the technical indicators will prevent the models from being too early or too late.

    The new Market Cap signal is just barely into small cap territory, so no changes in the Style allocations were initiated this month. The Style model remains firmly in growth mode with client holdings split evenly between small cap growth and large cap growth. When the market cap model sends out a strong small cap or large cap signal, the style holdings are shifted in favor of the market cap signal. For example, a strong small cap signal would lead to style holdings favoring small cap growth or value.

    It is worth noting that a shift toward small caps is an aggressive trade and will work best if the market uptrend remains intact. Small cap stocks are more volatile than large cap stocks and rise more in bull markets and fall more in bear markets. In the short-term, I think interest rates will be the key determinant of whether the small cap signal turns out to be accurate as small cap stocks are particularly sensitive to trends in interest rates. This week's rate decision and commentary coming from the Federal Reserve will thus be a key datapoint to watch.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:06 PM

    July 04, 2005

    July Model Signals

    Fresh signals for July for the Market Capitalization and Style models led to some trades in clients accounts on July 1st. The Market Cap model shifted from a weak large cap signal to a solid mid cap signal for July while the Style model moved firmly into growth territory for the first time since the fall of 2003. As a result of the new signals, positions in the S&P 500 were replaced by the S&P 400 Mid Cap Index. Additionally, half of the holdings in the Russell 1000 Growth Index were swapped into the Russell 2000 Growth Index. This trade gives portfolios exposure to smaller companies to take advantage of the new Mid Cap signal....

    ....The shift from large cap to mid cap in the Market Capitalization model is a function of recent strengthening in the U.S. dollar and the rally in bond prices that have led to lower interest rates. Each of these factors favors small and mid size companies in terms of relative performance based upon historical performance. Both shifts are logical as dollar strength hurts large cap companies who get significant sales overseas and lower interest rates support broad based economic strength which helps profits at smaller companies.

    The technical indicators in the Market Capitalization also shifted from toward smaller companies due to improved performance for small and mid cap indices in June. The technical indicators are the only short-term factors used in the model and are designed to catch just such a move. Effectively, the technical indicators allow the model to respect the market action and the fact that stock prices anticipate future trends.

    There were no major changes that led to stronger growth signal from the Style model. Rather, a number of factors moved slightly in favor of growth and pushed the signal a little deeper into growth territory. Given some signs that economic growth may be slowing, growth companies should gain investor attention as they can produce improved profits without a big tailwind from the economy.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:20 PM

    June 09, 2005

    Ned Davis Research On CNBC

    This morning, the #2 strategist at Ned Davis Research (NDR), Tim Hayes, discussed NDR's latest views on the stock market. A Northlake client astutely noted that Tim was recommending large cap value while Northlake's models just switched from large cap value to large cap growth. Given that Northlake's models are produced by and based on NDR analysis, the client wanted to know why there was a conflict. The answer lies in the disciplined implementation of the models for Northlake clients....

    ...NDR's own models did in fact recommend a shift from value to growth for June. In an email I received today, NDR notes that the shift from value to growth in the main Style model did take place but in their opinion it is a weak reading favoring growth and might reverse given the underlying trends in some of the individual indicators. On CNBC, Tim Hayes was merely expressing this opinion even though it was at odds with his own models.

    The whole point of using models is to enforce discipline and EXCLUDE opinion from the decision-making process. Opinion is subject to the emotions created daily in the stock market as prices move around. Given the tendency of human emotions to overreact to what is happening now, I think emotions and opinion work against investors. I do not try to overanalyze and anticipate what may happen next. I back-tested the models without second guessing or imposing my "opinion" on the monthly signals and those backtests show superior performance. Now that I have been using the models to manage money for more than 18 months, I am confident this is the right approach and that the backtests work in the real world.

    Whenever the models are at transition points, moving from one signal to another, there will be some volatility in the signals. The likelihood of increased portfolio turnover is higher as month-to-month model signals may switch more often. This adds modest trading costs but over the long-term, the average holding period for the models is around six months so turnover and commissions are not an obstacle to performance.

    The bottom line is that I do not try to outguess or anticipate the next move in the models. I think that is the best approach and the backtests and real world experience supports that approach.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:10 PM

    June 02, 2005

    June Model Signals

    Due to a slowing but still growing economy and a decisive turn in the intermediate-trend indicators, the model Northlake uses to allocate between growth and value ETFs shifted from value to growth for June. This is the first monthly signal favoring growth since October 2003! The market cap model had no change for June and continues to favor large caps. As a result of the new growth signal and the ongoing large cap signal, at the open on Wednesday, all client positions in the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD) were sold and replaced with new positions in the Russell 1000 Growth ETF (IWF)....

    Slower Economic Growth Favors Growth Stocks

    Slower economic growth favors growth stocks because presumably they can generate earnings gains with less help from an economic tailwind. Sharp outperformance of growth over value in May confirmed the economic indicators and shifted the trend indicators. In fact, in May, the Russell 3000 Growth ETF (IWZ) gained 5.0% against a gain of 2.9% for the Russell 3000 Value ETF. This was the first decisive month of performance favoring growth in at least a year and came on the heels of 1300 basis points of cumulative outperformance for value in the 11 months ended April 2005 and 500 basis points cumulative outperformance for value over the seven months ended April 2005.

    Fundamental, Technical Analysis Working Together

    The fact that the trend indicators shifted and caused a change in the model signal is a good example of fundamental and technical analysis working together. Trend indicators play an equally important role to economic and interest-rate indicators in the model specifically to try to make sure you don't arrive too early or leave too late. No model will have perfect timing but combining technical and fundamental indicators hopefully helps to make sure you get most of the major trend right.

    No Change to Market-Cap Model

    There was no change to the market-cap model for June, which continues to favor Large Cap. In May, the large-cap signal was inaccurate as the S&P 500 Spyder (SPY) gained 3.2%, underperforming both the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY: +5.7%) and the Russell 2000 (IWM: +6.5%). The relative gains for small- and mid-cap more than reversed the April outperformance of large-caps when the market produced significant negative returns across the board. The June large-cap signal is pretty stable compared to May, making it three straight months favoring large-cap for the first time since the fourth quarter of 1998. Given the massive outperformance for small-caps over the last five years, this could be a sign that the much debated shift to large-caps is finally underway.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:26 AM

    May 31, 2005

    Primer on Exchange Traded Funds

    Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are central to the execution of Northlake's unique investment strategy. ETFs represent the bulk of client portfolios and are the vehicles used to apply the signals from Northlake's Market Cap and Style models.

    I recently received a primer on ETFs from one of the main creators and distributors. Here is a link to a pdf file of the article. You will need Adobe Acrobat to open this file.

    I have added a link on the navigation bar on the right hand side of each page of the website to enable permanent access to the article. The link is titled "ETF Primer."

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 02:31 PM

    May 04, 2005

    May Model Signals

    The updated monthly signals from the market capitalization and style (growth vs. value) indicators showed no change for May. The models still favor large cap and value. Since these models are based on the weight of the evidence, I also look at the month to month trends in the strength of the signals and here there was some movement. The large cap signal got stronger and the value signal got weaker. In fact, the market cap signal moved firmly into large cap territory for the first time since the fall of 1998 while the style signal is barely hanging onto value and is at its weakest since the fall of 2003. These movements did not trigger trades this month in Northlake's ETF Plus strategy. Clients continue to own the S&P 500 Spyder (SPY) and Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD)....

    Review of April Signals

    Last month, the market cap signal proved quite accurate, while the style signal had a neutral impact. For April, based on the exchange traded funds, the S&P 500 had a return -1.9%, the S&P 400 Mid Cap had a return of -3.7% and the Russell 2000 Small Cap had a return of -5.7%. April returns for the style ETFs were -2.3% for the Russell 1000 Value and -2.2% for the Russell 1000 Growth.

    ETF Plus generally uses a fully invested strategy. The goal is to be in the area of the market that performs the best on a relative basis. If the market is falling, this means a good signal can be one in which losses are the smallest. For the Market Capitalization model, April was one of those months. ETF Plus is designed to limit losses in down markets and switch to the best performing areas of the market in up markets. If everything goes according to plan, as much capital as possible is preserved for periods when the market is rising leading to the best possible returns on an absolute and relative basis over long time periods.

    Review of Market Capitalization Model Indicators

    Looking more closely at the market cap signal, almost all of the more than a dozen indicators now are flashing a large cap signal. Here are the highlights (every condition favors large caps):

  • Credit spreads have moved back in the normal range (barely) and are rising.

  • The yield curve continues to flatten.

  • Interest rates are stable on a quarter over quarter basis.

  • The P-E of small caps is higher than the P-E of large caps (this is weak signal as the difference is less than one standard deviation).

  • Consumer confidence is within its normal range where economic growth is solid

  • The coincident indicator of economic growth remains solidly positive indicating economic growth trends are solid

  • The dollar remains below year ago levels.

  • Trend and relative strength over intermediate periods has moved to large cap
  • Review of Style Model Indicators

    Switching to the style signal, the May signal is the third consecutive and sixth in the last seven to move toward growth. As noted above, the value signal is at its weakest since the fall of 1998. However, the signal is still value so client position's remain in the Russell 1000 Value ETF (IWD).

    The weak value signal is the result of the style indicators being split evenly. Here is a brief summary of some of the indicators:

    Favoring Value:

  • Coincident indicators are up on a year over basis in a range indicating normal levels of economic growth

  • Insider transactions

  • Intermediate term (six to twelve month) technicals focusing on trend and relative strength
  • Favoring Growth:

  • Credit spreads have returned to the bottom of the normal range and are rising rising is the key

  • The shape of the yield curve from ten years to 3 months is in the normal range of 100-200 basis points (the market cap indicator also uses the yield curve but focuses on the change in the shape)

  • Short-term relative performance favors the Morgan Stanley Consumer Index over the Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index
  • Favoring Growth Just Barely:

  • The P-E of the Russell 1000 Growth is at a 33% premium to the Russell 1000 Value, below the normal 51% premium

  • The dollar is slightly weak against year ago levels
  • As you can see, no clear signal emerges for either growth or value. In general, I think it is fair to say that a waning of economic strength has led to a shift toward growth but value is still in the game as long as the economy stays on a moderate growth track. Good investors never violate their discipline so as long as the style signal remains value, even weakly so, value is what is owned in client portfolios.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 03:49 PM

    April 04, 2005

    April Model Signals

    There were only minor changes to Northlake's Market Capitalization and Style Models in the April update. Neither model changed signals from March leaving the market cap signal at Large Cap and the style signal at Value. There was continued movement in both models, with the market cap model continuing its shift toward large cap and the style model continuing its shift toward growth. The models movements did trigger a trade for Northlake clients...

    ...All remaining positions in the Russell 2000 Small Cap Value ETF (IWN) were sold and replaced with additional holdings in the Russell 1000 Large Cap Value ETF (IWD). This trade was triggered by the shift of the Market Cap Model toward a firmer reading for large cap. Positions in IWN have been gradually shifted toward IWD as the Market Cap Model has moved away from a small cap and mid cap signal to the current large cap signal.

    Two model factors shifted from a small cap to a large cap signal for April. Both factors were in the stock market indicator basket (there are also indicators based on interest rates and economic growth). The measures that shifted were NYSE Breadth and Trend Indicators. Each of these measures looks at short and intermediate term performance of the market to try to identify emerging trends. So far this year, large cap stocks have comfortably outperformed small cap stocks, with the S&P 500 falling about 2.5% against a decline of about 5.5% for the Russell 2000 Small Cap index. The underperformance of small cap stocks went far enough to move both of these factors to large cap.

    The stock market based factors in Northlake's models play an important role. They are shorter term in nature and are included to make sure that any lag from the economic or interest indicators does not get out of hand. Northlake's models function on an intermediate time horizon of six to twelve months. The goal is get the big trends generally right. If the stock market indicators improve the timing, the odds of capturing most of divergences between market cap and styles is improved.

    The Style Model continued to drift away from the very strong value signal. This marks several consecutive months where the model moved in the direction of growth. There were no changes to the signals from any individual factor in the Style Model this month. Rather, the somewhat slower economic growth statistics and upward trend in interest rates has shifted a few factors away from a pure value reading. The Style Model remains firmly in value territory and would require at least two more months to trigger a growth signal if the recent drifting maintained its pace.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:29 PM

    March 01, 2005

    March Model Signals

    After trending towards Large Cap for several months, Northlake's Market Cap model triggered a Large Cap signal for March. None of the underlying economic, interest rate, or technical factors individually moved to a large cap signal. Rather, the internal measures used for each factor collectively drifted far enough toward large cap that the trigger was met. The Style model continued its movement toward growth from value but the model remains firmly in value territory. As a result of the new March signals, Northlake initiated a trade for client accounts.

    Specifically, all shares of the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY) were sold and replaced by shares in the S&P 500 Spyder ETF (SPY). The S&P 500 is the representative large cap index used by Northlake to execute the Market Cap portion of its strategy. SPY and MDY trade within $2 of each other, so client holdings of MDY were swapped one for one into SPY. Some clients with larger cash balances may have purchased additional shares of SPY as part of their unique investment strategy.

    The new Large Cap signal did not push deeply into the large cap buy range. Consequently, since the Style model is still flashing value, within the Style portion of client portfolios, no change was made in the 3:1 ratio of investments between the Russell 1000 Large Cap Value ETF (IWD) and the Russell 2000 Small Cap Value ETF (IWN). Nevertheless, some clients with larger cash balances may have purchased shares of IWD or IWN as part of their unique investment strategy resulting in something other than a 3:1 ratio for the time being.

    The Market Cap model had been signaling Mid Cap since September 30, 2004. From that date through the end of February, the signal was very accurate as on a price only basis MDY (Mid Cap) returned 12.97%, while SPY (Large Cap) returned 7.94%, and IWM (Russell 2000 -- Small Cap) returned 10.92%. The Mid Cap signal was also accurate for the first two months of 2005 when on a price only basis MDY returned 1.16%, SPY returned -0.20%, and IWM returned -2.49%. Also worth noting is that the five month period during which the Mid Cap signal was in place exactly matched the average holding period in the over 20 year backtest of the Market Cap model.

    While I am happy to see that the Market model has worked well since last fall, the signals will not always be so accurate. The goal of Northlake's models is to get it "generally correct." As shown in the 80 year study of large cap vs. small cap performance that was sent to clients on February 22 (link), there are often large and persistent variations in the performance of stocks of different sizes (and styles like growth vs. value). My expectation is not to get it right every month, or every time the signal changes. Rather, I hope the models can get it generally correct and capture a significant portion of the incremental relative performance.

    Please remember that the models are a relative , not absolute, performance strategy. The goal is to earn a greater return than the market does when it is rising and lose less when the market fall is falling. If it works, significant excess return can be earned over time periods measured in quarters and years if the market cooperates and produces its historical positive rate of return.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 04:53 PM

    February 22, 2005

    Link To Large Cap vs. Small Cap Graphic

    In the extended entry, please find a link to the graphic I sent via email last week. The graphic showed the 80 year history of small cap vs. large cap relative performance. The extremely long periods of performance favoring one group or the other suggests that an accurate model that identified whether small or large caps were likley to outperform could provide significant value for investor portfolios. Northlake uses just such a model.

    Here is a link to the graphic I sent last week as an attachment in an email summarizing recent posts. I am posting the link here so that the graphic is preserved for your future access.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:53 AM

    February 01, 2005

    February Model Signals

    Northlake's Market Capitalization and Style models held firm for February with Mid Cap and Value signals. The Market Cap model continued its drift toward large cap and is about as close as possible to shifting to large cap as it can get without actually hitting the trigger. The Style model held firmly in value mode with no movement at all from the prior month after two straight months of shifting very slightly toward growth....

    As a result of the latest signals, client portfolios were modestly repositioned by shifting the value exposure from a 50/50 split between large cap value and small cap value to a 75/25 split in favor of large cap value. Put another way, client portfolios now own about $3 in large cap value for every $1 in small cap value vs. owning the two investments in equal size previously. There was no change to the market cap exposure which remains 100% dedicated to mid cap.

    For February, the Market Cap model saw just one change as the market breadth indicator shifted to large cap from small cap. Market breadth measures the number of advancing issues vs. the number of declining issues on the NYSE over the preceding five weeks. When breadth is positive (more advancing than declining issues), the indicator flashes a small cap signal. Conversely, when breadth is negative, the indicator flashes a large cap signal. The concept is that positive breadth is a sign of a healthy market where investors would want to own small cap stocks that tend to produce the biggest gains in bull markets, while negative breadth is a sign of a weak market where investors should own large cap stocks to provide some downside protection due to their lesser volatility.

    The market breadth indicator also looks for a breadth thrust, where there is a burst of buying that moves market breadth to an unusually positive reading. A sudden surge in buying that registers as a positive breadth thrust is usually followed by further gains as it indicates rising investor confidence. This is a good time to own small cap stocks which tend to rise faster than large cap stocks in bullish market environments. There is no evidence that a negative breadth thrust provides an edge to small or large cap stocks.

    Given the weak performance of the stock market in January, market breadth deteriorated from a modestly positive reading to a slight negative reading. This was enough to shift the indicator from small cap mode to large cap mode.

    There were no shifts at all within the Style model for February after two straight months where the Style model moved in favor of growth. The current signal remains firmly in value territory. This is not surprising as value stocks tend to outperform when interest rates are low and economic activity is sustainable or accelerating. These conditions exist today.

    Looking ahead, there is an ongoing debate on Wall Street about whether interest rates are poised to head higher, particularly in bonds coming due in 5 to 10 years and beyond. There is also a small but increasingly vocal minority that believes the recent slowing in economic growth is not a shift to sustainable growth but rather the first signs that the economy is headed toward recession. Northlake's models do not indicate a recession is on its way.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:17 AM

    January 04, 2005

    January Model Signals

    Happy New Year to Northlake Clients and Friends!

    Over the weekend, Northlake received the latest signals from its market capitalization and style models incorporating the latest economic, interest rate, and stock market indicators. There were no major changes as the the signals remain Mid Cap and Value. However, there is some underlying movement that is leading to client trading activity....

    As of 12/31/04, most clients held 100% of their style investment (growth or value) in the Russell 2000 Value exchange traded fund (Ticker: IWN) (the Russell 2000 is the benchmark index representing small cap stocks). The market cap model still is favoring mid caps but the components have shifted toward large cap for two months running. With the market cap signal mixed but leaning large, half of the funds held in IWN were shifted to the Russell 1000 Value exchange traded fund (Ticker: IWD) in trading on January 3, 2005 (the Russell 1000 is similar to the S&P 500 and represents large cap stocks). Thus, clients now have a balanced exposure to the entire spectrum of value stocks rather than a concentrated exposure to small cap value stocks. This trade reduces the risk profile of client accounts because large cap stocks are less volatile than small cap stocks.

    Small cap stocks have outperformed large cap stocks every year since 1999. Many commentators expect this trend to reverse in 2005. Northlake's indicators suggest a shift is possible with recently stable interest rates, a flatter yield curve, and narrow credit spreads for corporate bond issuers being the primary indicators that have moved from favoring small caps to large caps. Northlake's models have excellent long-term records and we never outguess them, so despite the lean toward large cap, for now, Northlake clients remain invested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap exchange traded fund (Ticker: MDY), providing middle of the road exposure in terms of market cap.

    In summary, for January, market cap exposure is 100% invested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap (MDY) and style exposure is now split evenly across the entire range of value investments with half held in the Russell 1000 Value index (IWD) and half in the Russell 2000 Value index (IWN).

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:39 AM

    December 23, 2004

    ETF Dividends

    Both of the ETF's currently owned by Northlake clients, the S&P 400 Midcap (MDY) and the Russell 2000 Value (IWN), went ex-dividend in the last week. This has a temporary negative impact on your portfolio values that will reverse in January when the payments are received....

    Specifically, MDY went ex-dividend on 12/17 for $0.30589 and IWN went ex-dividend on 12/23 for $0.985035. The MDY dividend is payable on 1/31/05, while the IWN dividend is payable on 1/6/05. When a stock goes ex-dividend, the value of the dividend is subtracted from the stock price. This has the effect of lowering the value of your account temporarily. For example, IWN closed yesterday at 193.58 but that price was adjusted downward today by 98 cents. Consequently, despite the fact that IWN is up about 50 cents today, it apears as though you have less value in your account in IWN today than you did at the close yesterday. Of course, come January 6th, the cash dividend payment will hit your account and the value of your account gets a boost.

    Normally ex-dividend dates don't create much noice. However, because Northlake uses a concentrated approach to ETF's the flucuations in market value on ex-dividend dates and payments dates can actually impact portfolio values in a noticable way.

    Also worth noting is that the current yield on MDY is 0.88% and the current yield on IWN is 1.38%. These yields are not particularly exciting but are meaningful in a low interest rate environment. More interesting is that the dividend growth for MDY and IWN in 2004 versus 2003 was unusually high at 23% and 33%, respectively. The change in taxation on dividends and several years of strong earnings and cash flow growth are the leading reasons for the high growth rate in dividends.

    Please call (847-226-9713) or email (steve@northlakecapital.com) if you have any questions or comments, or just post your thoughts below by clicking on the "Comments" link.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 01:50 PM

    December 01, 2004

    December Model Signals

    Northlake's Market Capitalization and Style models are unchanged once again in December, leaving in place the signals favoring Mid Cap and Value. Consequently, current client investments in the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY) and the Russell 2000 Value ETF (IWN) will remain in place. Any cash reserves invested in ETFs in the coming month will also be placed in these two investments.....

    The underlying indicators for the models made a slight shift toward Large Cap and Growth. However, both current signals are firmly supported and larger shifts in the underlying indicators would have to take place to change the signal. This is certainly possible, but Northlake does not try to out guess its indicators.

    In the Market Capitalization model, two indicators shifted toward Large Cap: Equity Risk Premium Proxy and Bond Momentum.

    The risk premium proxy measures the willingness of investors to take on risk by looking at the difference in the interest rate on bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury and bonds issued by medium quality U.S. Corporations. The concept is that when the spread is unusually wide, investors should shift assets should shift assets toward riskier investments (small stocks) in anticipation of a narrowing of the spread. When the spread peaks and then begins to narrow, it is an indication that business conditions for corporations are easing because investors are demanding less return as compared to the safety of U.S. Treasury securities. This is a bullish condition for stocks, so investors should shift to small stocks that are more volatile and would provide a greater return in a rising market. Spreads have been unusually wide since 2000, favoring investment in small stocks since the market peaked (a very good call as it turned out). Recently, the spread has narrowed and last month crossed over into a neutral zone where large cap stocks have a slight edge as business conditions are thought to be normal.

    Bond momentum measures the 13 week rate of change in interest rates as measured by long-term interest rates. When rates are falling, small stocks are favored as this is a bullish condition. Remember that bullish condiditons favor small stocks due to their higher volatility. During November, interest rates rose, moving the rate of change to virtually zero. When rates are unchanged or rising, investors should seek the safety of less volatile larger stocks. Consequently, this indicator is now flashing a large cap signal.

    The Style model remains firmly in Value mode despite the shift of one indicator, Yield Curve Momentum, toward growth. All other indicators continue to flash a Value signal for December.

    Yield Curve Momentum measures the difference in interest rates for short-term and long-term bonds issued by U.S. Corporations. When the difference is unusually wide or unusually narrow, the indicator sends off a Value signal.

    The theory is that a wide spread (short term rates much lower than long-term rates) represents a favorable economic condition that would drive above average growth in the economy, suggesting good times ahead for corporations. This would be a bullish environment favoring Value stocks, which are typically most sensitive to economic growth.

    Although a bit counterintuitive, a very narrow spread or one where short-term interest rates are equal to or higher than long-term interest rates (known as a flat or inverted yield curve) also favors investment in economically sensitive Value stocks. In this case, the theory is that a flat or inverted yield curve is unsustainable and has acted a depressant on ecnomic activity. The next move will now likely be toward a normally upward sloped curve engineered by the Federal Reserve to boost economic activity. In anticipation of improving economic activity, investors would want exposure to Value stocks which have a higher sensitivity to economic activity.

    Recently, the yield curve has flattened as short-term interest have risen faster than long-term interest rates. Long rates are now in a normal relationship to short rates. This favors larger companies as economic activity in neither too hot nor too cold. This condition is in place now leading the Yield Curve indicator to shift to a large cap signal.

    To reiterate, despite the indicator shifts just described, Northlake's models firmly support investment in mid cap stocks and value stocks for December.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 12:50 PM

    November 05, 2004

    November Model Signals

    There were no changes to Northlake's model signals for November. The Market Capitalization Model continues to favor Mid Caps and the Style Model continues to favor Value. There was some movement toward Small Caps in the Market Capitalization model (but not enough to switch the signal), leaving it on the cusp of a shift from Mid Cap to Small Cap. For now, client accounts remain invested in the S&P 400 Mid Cap Index....

    As a reminder, in general, sustainable economic growth and low interest rates favor small and mid size companies and value stocks. Economic growth and low interest rates make it easier for smaller companies to grow earnings and finance future growth initiatives. Economic growth and low interest rates also favor Value stocks, which are generally in traditional cyclical industries like materials and manufacturing.

    Key to the historical success of the Models is that is that the factors are designed to change their signals at extremes. This allows the signals to stay in place for most of the trend, while also recognizing that an extreme reading generally means the next move is in the opposite direction. For example, if economic growth statistics are too strong, the models anticipate that the next move is likely a slowing in economic growth meaning Wall Street will favor safer, lower volatility stocks. On Wall Street, this would be large cap and value stocks. On the other hand, if economic growth statistics were very weak, the models anticipate that the next move is likely a pickup in growth. Historically, when economic growth accelerates from low levels a bull market begins favoring small sap and growth stocks due to their higher volatility.

    For now, the models are assuming that economic growth and interest rates will continue in a zone favoring a decent but not fantastic economic environment. This is consistent with my view and suggests that corporate earnings growth will be strong enough to support higher stock prices in the months ahead.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 08:16 AM | Comments (1)

    October 07, 2004

    October Model Signals

    For October, Northlake's Market Capitalization favors Mid Cap, a change from the prior two months when Large Cap was favored. Northlake's Style Model for October remains firmly in Value mode....

    The Market Capitalization Model favors Mid Cap because the factors are evenly split between Large and Small Cap signals. Two factors shifted from Large Cap to Small Cap for October triggering the change in the overall signal from Large Cap to Mid Cap. Advisory Service Sentiment and Bond Momentum were the two factors which shifted.

    Sentiment now favors Small Caps because during September, bearish sentiment became widely prevalent among investment advisors. This factor is a contrary indicator, favoring more aggressive investment (small caps) when everyone is bearish and more conservative investment (large cap) when advisors are very bullish. The concept is that investors should position their portfolios for the next big move and once Wall Street tends to agree, the opposite happens.

    Bond Momentum measures the rate of change in interest rates over the preceding 13 weeks. When rates are falling, as they did in September, investors should be moving into small caps because falling rates are a bullish sign and small caps represent the aggressive investment. The Bond Momentum factors looks for a plus or minus 2.5% move in the bond prices to signal a change between capitalization signals.

    The rest of the Market Capitalization Model factors were unchanged for October but the shift in these two factors were enough to move the overall signal to Mid Cap. Consequently, Northlake's Model Portfolio sold its holding in the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) and purchased the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY).

    There were no changes at all in the Style Model for October, with the signal remaining very firmly in Value mode. Solid economic growth and the low absolute level of interest rates are the key drivers to the Value signal. Value is generally favored well into an economic expansion becuase prolonged periods of GDP growth help the earnings of the predominantly cyclical value stocks. Value is also favored in the latter stages of an economic expansion because value stocks have lower volatility and hold up better if the market begins to fall due to fear of an economic contraction. In other words, in the early stages of a bull market/economic expansion, investors want growth stocks for their high volatilty, while value stocks come into favor as the economic expansion matures.

    Northlake's Model Portfolio contains a holding in the Russell 3000 Value Index ETF (IWW) as a result of the Style Model's Value signal.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:12 AM | Comments (2)

    September 01, 2004

    September Model Signals

    No changes to the signals from Northlake's Market Capitalization and Style models for September. The Market Cap model signal favors Large Cap. This model favored either small or mid cap from late 1999 through May of 2004. A Large Cap signal emerged in June but shifted back to Mid Cap in July. August and September now are both in the Large Cap camp, confirming a trend toward factors that favor Large Caps. In particular, the shift in the economy toward a more sustainable GDP growth rate favors Large Caps.

    The Style Model remains firmly in Value territory as it has been since the spring of 2000 with only occasional shifts towards Growth. Value has performed very well in this time period, first as a defensive investment against the bear market, and then as the economy recovered and cyclical companies saw rapidly improving earnings prospects. Value is also favored when the economy is in a sustainable mode rather than an accelerating or topping mode.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 11:35 AM

    August Wrap-Up

    The market staged a comback at the end of the month on low volume enabling the S&P 500 to eke out a small gain of about 3/10ths of 1%. Our models and special situations worked well last month with all four special situation stocks up and the August signals from both models working effectively.

    Northlake's Market Capitalization Model was sending a large cap signal for August. Consequently, we owned a position in the S&P 500 Spyder (SPY). SPY was up 0.2% for the month vs. no change for the S&P 400 Mid Cap ETF (MDY) and a decline of 1.5% for our small cap ETF proxy, IWM (Russell 2000).

    Northlake's Style Model also worked well in August. The model had a value signal, leading us to own a position in the Russell 3000 Value ETF (IWW). During August, IWW gained 1.0% vs. a return of -1.2% for the Russell 3000 Growth ETF (IWZ). August continues a good run for our Style Model. Since Northlake opened in June 2004, the model has had a value signal. During the three month period, our the value ETF, IWW, has gained 1.5% vs. a loss of over 6% for the growth ETF. Tech stocks have really struggled this summer which has favored the value signal.

    Our special situations stocks,, which our outlined in the Research Samples link were all up in August. Central European Media Enterprises (CETV) was the big winner, gaining 19%. NTL, Inc. (NTLI) gained 4.2%, MB Financial (MBFI) gained 3.5%, and Motorola (MOT) gained 1.4%.

    There was no news on CETV but my contacts suggested that a recent report by a well regarded Wall Street media analyst was gaining some traction. There also appears to be general interest in investment opportunities in Central and Eastern Europe. I concur with that and presently I am reviewing several other US listed stocks whose business is conducted in the region.

    NTLI reported earnings at the start of August which were generally in line with expectations. The stock took a hard hit, however, in reponse to disappointing news from key competitor Sky. Competitive fears are the big issue for NTLI shares. NTLI rebounded later in the month as rumors of sale of the company's tower business picked up steam.

    MBFI reported solid earnings in August as well. No change to the thesis on this well run, high quality, Chicago bank. Upside from operations and future smaller acquisition exists and MBFI remains a preferred acquisition candidate for a larger bank wishing to expand in the Chicago market.

    Little news in MOT during August. I feel the turnaround is in place and investors will reward the shares as new mobile phone designs are shipped on time over the balance of 2004.

    Overall, a good month for Northlake's key investments.

    Posted by Steve Birenberg at 09:19 AM | Comments (2)

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