Thursday, January 21, 2021

The ARK Bubble

You might not notice looking at the SPX or the Nasdaq, but there is a huge bubble going on.  It is showing up a bit in the Russell 2000, but not to the extent that you saw it like in the Nasdaq in 2000.  The speculative fervor has moved on from AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, FB, MSFT, to an even more overvalued group of almost everything in the ARK ETFs (ARKK, ARKG, ARKQ, ARKF, ARKW), the largest holding being TSLA.  Its not as if ARKK is just holding a few stocks, it hold 52 stocks with none of them with a weighting greater than 10%.  It is a broad representation of the mid to large cap speculative space.  Add in ARKG, ARKQ, ARKF, and ARKW to round out to various other sectors and you have a good representation of a newer version of the 1999-2000 dotcom bubble. 


The divergence between the S&P 500 and ARKK are reminiscent of the divergence between the SPX and Nasdaq in 1999-2000.   

The above chart shows Nasdaq vs SPY from late 98 to the top in March 2000.  

And let's not forget the smaller cap stocks like a BNGO, GEVO, BLNK, or UAVS not represented in those ARK ETFs that are up between 500 to 1500% over the past few months.  Oh, and also the SPACs, which aren't in any of those ETFs.  

The US stock market has turned into a giant, crowded casino, with the players euphroric over their winnings and looking to bet more.  Of course, the main source of funds for these rampant gamblers is the US government, via the continuous stimulus and unemployment checks that are pumping up the stock market but not doing so much for the real economy.  

It is a state sponsored bubble, with one stimulus package after another.  The US is debasing its currency to feed a stock market bubble of gigantic proportions.  Of course, all under the pretext of the Rona, the greatest excuse ever made for pork spending and handouts.  

And the Fed has such a huge rear view mirror that whatever happened in the economy a few months ago is what they use to determine monetary policy.  They have no foresight, no vision, its pump a bubble if the economy is weak, and when the economy is recovering, keeping putting more air in the bubble, until its so obvious that the economy is too hot, and then do something minor to pretend like they want to cool it down.  

It is tough to fight a bubble like this when the Fed has its heads in the sand regarding inflation and financial stability.  Its as if Greenspan years of the stock bubble in the late 1990s to 2000 and the real estate bubble from 2004 to 2007 are anomalies, something the Fed could do nothing about.  

All this bubble will do is exacerbate wealth inequality even more, as its the newbie retail investors that are the most fervent buyers of the hot garbage being passed off as ESG investing.  Lots of wealth will be transferred from retail and late to the game institutions to SPAC sponsors (20% cut for finding steaming hot turds loved by retail), corporate insiders who cash out during the bubble, and corporations wise enough to sell as much of their ridiculously overvalued stock as they can.

Then you will have minted a fresh new batch of bitter bagholders who are too stubborn and hard headed to realize that they bought stock in a company that will just bleed all that cash they raised and never make a profit.  

It looks like you had a fair amount of "scared" money that was waiting for the all-clear from a riot free inauguration before buying more stocks, even if they had to pay up to do so.  In the stock market, with certainty comes a higher price tag
.  
My initial plan to short around 3800 at the beginnig of the year is thrown out the window.  Market is just too strong, the stimulus that is coming is just too big.  If $600 stimulus checks to the bubble heads can cause this much buying, imagine what an increase in unemployment payouts and a $1400 stimulus check will do.  Plus the perfect storm of a re-opening of the economy after the vaccine rollout along with the wealth effect and you have the makings of the hottest economy since the late 90s.

I don't recommend shorting this market unless you reach totally egregious overbought levels in SPX.  And if you look at the SPX over the last 2 months, it has gone up ~200 points, a bit less than 6%, which is a lot, but not so much that a selloff is imminent. Considering how much investing fervor there is, it can continue at that pace for a few more months.  

I think its going higher, but I don't want to buy unless you get a washout and stop run to clear out some of the bold speculators buying calls and penny stocks that go up 100% a week.  It probably comes sometime in the next 2 months, and I want to have a lot of dry powder to be able to buy the dip aggressively instead of defensively.  With that comes missing out on potential upside if the bubble keeps getting bigger without any significant pullbacks along the way.  

I don't mind missing out on more upside since this market is already so overvalued so remaining on the sidelines, playing some individual stocks here and there, but not too big.  

If the SPX does squeeze even higher from here towards 3900-3920 area by next week, I will probably put on a small short. 

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

How much longer do you think we will keep going up?

Stimulus won't actually be passed until late Feb or March.

In the meantime, 10% selloff beginning 2/1?

Anonymous said...

I want to short but I feel like there needs to be a one last 5% melt up lasting 3 days that takes the spx to 4040.

Market Owl said...

Base case is that market stays in an uptrend until May. I don’t see a 10% correction anytime soon.
Agree there needs to be a meltup before the market tops out, and we haven’t seen that yet.

Anonymous said...

Highly disagree with the May call. I think you have been shellshocked by shorting at 2900 and letting it go against you 10%+ and became a newly converted bull/formerly bear by coercion

Since the march low, mkt hasn't gone 3 months without at 10% correction.

We're almost at the end of 3 months right now.

Market Owl said...

Better to be a newly converted bull since last October making money than a stubborn bear losing money since last March. Just going by what all the other bubbles do before they hit the peak. Until economy completely reopens, market will not have a 10% correction. 10% correction is 385 SPX points, not easily done.

Yes, we’ve gone a long time since a sharp correction, but that complacency can be resolved with a 150-200 point SPX drop in February

Anonymous said...

Wrong