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Showing posts with label AAPL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AAPL. Show all posts

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Did the Recent Silver Bubble Conform to Our Understanding of Bubbles?

Yes. Yes it did.

Let's think back to this old post of the evolution of a bubble.


As always, click on the image for a larger picture. Essentially, silver conformed to the basic tenant of a bubble that, because of rapidly rising expectations of future prices, suppliers of silver became unwilling to release supply on their old supply schedule. For instance, if I held 100 ounces of silver while it was trading at $15 an ounce, I may have been willing to put twenty of those ounces on the market once the price reached $20 in a more regular time. However, when I see prices go hyperbolic, I reassess the situation and hold on with a "wait and see" approach. My supply schedule shifts in. We saw this in the early stages of the silver rally where suppliers and buyers seemed to be having their expectations change more or less in tandem. What was the tell tale sign of this? Volume did not accelerate all that drastically until the last few weeks. Now, this can be the signs of something other than a bubble and I will discuss that in a minute.


Now, it's normal for volume to spike on one-off events like a big earnings report. For volume to increase massively, independently of major events in the context of a large rise is actually not normal. Case in point, Apple (AAPL):

Most of Apple's rally since early 2009 has happened in the context of remarkably stable volume. There hasn't been a huge surge in the number of shares traded during most of the advance. Clearly, this would provide evidence that the suppliers of Apple shares (i.e. current owners) have shifted in their supply schedules as prices have advanced. However, one key trait about Apple's advance is that it typically stalls until rejuvenated by a good earnings report. In other words, the advance is sustained by commensurate news regarding the fundamental improvements in the company's future earnings potential. To underline this point, Apple only trades at about 12x next year's earnings. If anything, one could argue that investors are discounting the possibility that the current trend in earnings might not be sustained.

To return to silver for a moment, there was no particular rationale for sustaining its rate of increase aside from the fact that it was increasing awfully quickly so one would want to buy in. Clearly, an increasing number of investors didn't buy into this idea and liquidated their positions right into the most hyperbolic portion of the increase. Volume surged in the last couple weeks of the rally, far eclipsing the daily average volume of the past several months. What was astonishing, and this is what tipped me off, was that there were enough speculative buyers to sustain the rally in the face of substantial liquidation. Clearly, speculators had become unhinged. The options markets reflected this at the end the last week of April where long-dated put options for SLV in the low 40s were trading at substantial premiums while long-dated call options above $50 were not. In other words, the options traders expected things to get ugly for silver by the end of the year. I decided, based on the frenzy, that silver was going to burst extremely quickly and decided to trade the June $42 puts. I have now liquidated two out of the three positions at large gains.

Now, let's try to piece this all together into a comprehensive picture of a bubble. You may remember from an earlier post back nearly a year ago that I laid out three criteria for spotting a bubble:

1. Is the asset or asset class in question fundamentally more attractive than other alternatives?
2. Is there either little information available or is the information corrupted in some way?
3. Are market actors incorporating available information or are they doing so in a rational way?

Silver began rallying for a real fundamental reason which is that the dollar is nearly constantly depreciating and high rates of money supply growth imply a central bank willing to devalue the currency for some time. This is usually a conventional reason to trade in precious metals as a hedge against inflation. However, the increase in silver far exceeded this fundamental reason as one will note that the dollar declined maybe around 10% depending on the measure you use in the time silver increased more than 150%. Still, there was a reason why the asset class of precious metals, broadly speaking, and silver in particular would be attractive.

On the second point, people have no idea how precious metals should be valued and economists have rarely ever been able to construct a reasonable model for how precious metals can be priced. Their industrial uses are never enough to justify their prices and their sentimental or emotional values to people are impossible to value. Further, there are a lot of people who corrupt what information is available with articles like "Silver going to $200 an ounce?"

On the third point, the answer was clearly no. The increase in volume wasn't based on any event, but on a short term frenzy where people were beating each other over the head with higher and higher bids to get into a crowded market. 

Take this into account with the fact that, like in all bubbles, silver followed the tradition of the trashiest asset in an asset class performing the best. Precious metals are generally in a bubble and silver is the trashiest among them and it performed the best. In fact, platinum performed the worst.

The silver bubble conformed to every basic tenant of what we understand about bubbles and the fact that several people, myself included, were able to call it should not be surprising. By the way, applying th criteria laid out here and in prior posts, you can clearly define Apple as not being in a bubble and the same applies to the overall market advance over the past two years. A large advance (50%+) does not necessarily indicate a bubble, but it does warrant examining the conditions surrounding it. 

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Smartphone Market Share Wars

Google's edge appears to be growing, for the moment at least. Among recent acquirers, it is toasting just about everyone else:


These data confirm why Motorola Mobility (MMI) reported a solid first quarter while Research in Motion (RIMM) reported a positively dreadful quarter. Incidentally, the trends in both stocks going into their earnings releases were indicative of exactly the opposite of what was reported. RIMM had been having a small rally while MMI had been slumping into its release. So much for the market always predicting these things correctly.

On a larger point, it is very difficult to see how RIMM recovers from its rapidly shrinking share. Both Android and iOS have been making headway in being adopted by enterprise customers, which are RIMM's last bastion. To put it mildly, I wouldn't be astonished if RIMM is struggling for survival in another five years. 

These data are not too bearish for Apple (AAPL) at the moment because 25% of a growing pie is not all that bad, though this isn't as bullish for them as it once was. Still, this share relatively to where they had been is a much better position than RIMM, which once had something over 50% market share and now is only at 15% among new adopters. 

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Verizon iPhone... Meh

Despite shrill articles such as this one from Bloomberg, the market probably has the reaction just about right which is that none of the stocks in question moved a whole lot on this announcement. Apple (AAPL) ran up in the last couple of months in anticipation of this, but didn't do a whole lot today. Neither did Verizon (VZ), AT&T (T), Motorola (MMI) or anyone else for that matter. I think that's because frankly there isn't the iPhone frenzy there once was and that those with existing contracts won't be that willing, or able, to switch immediately.

The article's assertion that half of Verizon users will switch from Android to iPhone seems a little ridiculous. I think that this was a classic case of an analyst not knowing so they just made something up, and something not particularly plausible. The problem that iPhone has in the long run against Android is that the Android universe of phones offers customers features in whatever configuration they might want. Additionally, in terms of hardware capabilities, by the next iteration of iPhone Apple will have to be playing catch-up big time against the new vanguard of Android phones.

There will be switchers, sure, but I just don't get the sense that the bulk of Android users are just clamoring to switch. No doubt, many AT&T users will switch, but that's a different story.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

When good isn't good enough


Apple (AAPL) probably now has produced one of the classic examples of "buy the rumor, sell the news" I've ever seen. Its earnings report blew away all estimates by wide margins on earnings per share and revenues. Its forecast was a little weak, but then again Apple always guides low. Causing this sell-off is the fact that iPad sales were weaker than estimated and the suspicion that the forecast might indicate a slowing in growth. I would not go so far as to say that this decline represents a buying opportunity because, even with its growth rate, Apple shares still trade at a premium to the overall market that is large enough that it warrants caution. At this valuation, there is very little room for error and this sell-off reflects that.

Now, you might wonder why I took a screenshot. The reason is that the change in the stock price after a mixed bag of an earnings report like that one is subject to a great deal of volatility. It could be that eight hours from now any comments about Apple's sell-off might be moot.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Does Google Actually Care About Its Shareholders?

I found an article from back in July discussing Google's (GOOG) seeming lack of love for its shareholders. I think that this does bring up an interesting point which is that Google's management does seem a bit more interested in some of its more transformative projects than necessarily routinely providing a good return to shareholders. Say what you will about Apple (AAPL), but Steve Jobs never enters a product area without a very good idea how he's going to make money for Apple shareholders.

Google, on the other hand, has sprawled into a variety of areas that I am not sure have yielded the highest possible return on investment for investors. One of those areas is, of course, YouTube. We all love YouTube, but it is a bit of a free lunch as the advertising dollars don't even come close to covering the vast operating expenses. In total, YouTube lost something on the order of $450 million last year. Now, Google may argue that somehow owning YouTube has boosted its ad revenues by X% elsewhere and that has offset the cost. Even if that is true, and that's a big if, it still was not likely the best return on investment Google could have embarked upon at the time.

With Android, Google is winning the war against Apple with Android, which should be fantastic news for Google considering the growth of the smartphone market. However, I think this is a case of where Google management wanted to embark on a more transformative path than a lucrative one. It doesn't charge a license fee for Android, which it developed (and still develops) so it doesn't make money up front. Further, its own attempt at a phone flopped badly while Motorola (MOT) is resurrecting itself on the back on Google's labors.  In the end, I am still not convinced that Google will get more ad dollars through greater usage of its search engine than it would have if it had not entered the market. After all, I think most iPhone users probably use Google's search engine.

Then there are the other projects like when Google planned on giving San Francisco free Wi-Fi, its plans to provide ultra-fast internet to a variety of US cities, a free web browser (which is awesome by the way), and so on. You add this in with not paying a dividend to shareholders despite a monstrous cash pile and you do sit there and scratch your head a bit. Since publicly traded companies have a fiduciary responsibility to try (though most fail) to earn the maximum possible return for their shareholders, I have to question whether or not Google management actually acknowledges this responsibility.

The stock price performance over the past couple years reflects that as well:


There is multiple compression in there to be sure as profit growth, despite the above mentioned problems, has been quite solid. However, this multiple compression is not just a function of a bad overall stock market, but possibly also because investors may not believe that management can continually deliver how they have in the past due to these diversions.