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eResearch Corporation 78 Cameron Crescent, Suite 202 Toronto, Ontario M4G 2A3 www.eresearch.ca Analyst Article July 4, 2016 HUMBLE STUDENT OF THE MARKETS eResearch Corporation is pleased to feature an article by Cam Hui, CFA who offers investment and trading insights on his website, HumbleStudentOfTheMarkets.com Mr. Hui posts a market comment on the weekend plus one or two articles of interest during the week. His subscription service includes annual, monthly, or daily pass options, and is focused on building a community of like-minded individuals with a common interest in investing and trading. Today’s article begins on the following page, and is entitled: Brexit Panic: Gift from the Gods? You can access his website and subscribe to his service at the following link: www.humblestudentofthemarkets.com __________________________________ eResearch was established in 2000 as Canada's first equity issuer-sponsored research organization. As a primary source for professional investment research, our Subscribers (subscription is free!!!) benefit by having written research on a variety of small- and mid-cap, under-covered companies. We also provide unsponsored research reports on middle and larger- sized companies, using a combination of fundamental and technical analysis. We complement our corporate research coverage with a diversified selection of informative, insightful, and thought-provoking research publications from a wide variety of investment professionals. We provide our professional investment research and analysis directly to our extensive subscriber network of discerning investors, and electronically through our website: www.eResearch.ca. Bob Weir, CFA Director of Research Note: All of the comments, views, opinions, suggestions, recommendations, etc., contained in this Article, and which is distributed by eResearch Corporation, are strictly those of the Author and do not necessarily reflect those of eResearch Corporation.
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Page 1: HUMBLE STUDENT OF THE MARKETS - eresearch.ca · Vote), so Britain will have to persuade 14 member states to allow it to leave. So any declaration to leave on or after that date will

eResearch Corporation 78 Cameron Crescent, Suite 202 Toronto, Ontario M4G 2A3

www.eresearch.ca

Analyst Article July 4, 2016

HUMBLE STUDENT OF THE MARKETS

eResearch Corporation is pleased to feature an article by Cam Hui, CFA who offers

investment and trading insights on his website, HumbleStudentOfTheMarkets.com

Mr. Hui posts a market comment on the weekend plus one or two articles of interest during the week.

His subscription service includes annual, monthly, or daily pass options, and is focused on building a community of like-minded individuals with a common interest in investing and trading.

Today’s article begins on the following page, and is entitled:

Brexit Panic: Gift from the Gods?

You can access his website and subscribe to his service at the following link: www.humblestudentofthemarkets.com

__________________________________

eResearch was established in 2000 as Canada's first equity issuer-sponsored research

organization. As a primary source for professional investment research, our Subscribers

(subscription is free!!!) benefit by having written research on a variety of small- and mid-cap,

under-covered companies. We also provide unsponsored research reports on middle and larger-

sized companies, using a combination of fundamental and technical analysis. We complement

our corporate research coverage with a diversified selection of informative, insightful, and

thought-provoking research publications from a wide variety of investment professionals. We

provide our professional investment research and analysis directly to our extensive subscriber

network of discerning investors, and electronically through our website: www.eResearch.ca.

Bob Weir, CFA

Director of Research

Note: All of the comments, views, opinions, suggestions, recommendations, etc., contained in this Article, and

which is distributed by eResearch Corporation, are strictly those of the Author and do not necessarily reflect

those of eResearch Corporation.

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Sunday, July 3, 2016

Brexit Panic: Is It A Market Gift From The Gods? __________________________________________________________________

A Gift From The Market Gods? Now that Mr. Market has decided that Brexit has been "fixed", it is time for a sober second analytical look at the impact of this historic decision by the U.K. electorate

on the U.S. equity market.

The knee-jerk market sell-off appears to be a gift from the market gods to investors. The economic impact of the event on the American economy seems to be

relatively minimal. Risk premiums have risen in response as the world is witnessing a repeat of the usual European theatre, whose last major production was staged during the Greek crisis of 2011.

The View From This Side Of The Atlantic Pre-Brexit, here is the U.S. macro picture, which looks good. The industrial side of

the economy, which had been in the doldrums, is showing signs of recovery:

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There has been a lot of recent hand wringing over weakness in capital expenditures. However, this report from FactSet shows that capital expenditures

ex-energy and finance (green line) has been steadily rising.

The American consumer, who has been a pillar of strength throughout this recovery, continues to be strong. The latest consumer confidence release beat

expectations and it is on the rise again.

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The bottom-up picture of the stock market is constructive. John Butters of FactSet also reported that the negative to positive earnings guidance ratio has improved from last quarter and it is slightly better than its five-year average.

Equally encouraging is FactSet's latest flash of post-Brexit earnings estimate

revisions. Forward EPS is continuing to grind upward (annotations in red are mine).

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Brexit Impact: A Slight Positive

From my reading, the projected long-term impact of Brexit on the U.S. economy is positive to neutral. Former IMF chief economist Simon Johnson thinks that America

gains while Europe loses under Brexit (via Marketwatch):

In geopolitical and economic terms, the U.S.A. is potentially the biggest winner from the disintegration of the EU. The USA rose to global predominance as Europeans fought one another and their empires declined. The post-1945 U.S. role was challenged first by the Soviet Union which, for a time, posed a real technological challenge. Today, Russia has a small — and shrinking — economy and a population in decline... Prosperity is based on people and ideas. Who can attract the most talented people, educate them and their children, and give as many individuals as possible the opportunity to work productively? The USA has some serious problems, but absorbing immigrants and encouraging creativity have been among its main strengths for more than 200 years.

Ben Bernanke thinks that most of the negative global effects come from a rising

risk premium. As long as the market does not get too caught up in excess fear, "the [American] economic recovery is unlikely to be derailed by the market turmoil".

Globally, the Brexit shock is being transmitted mostly through financial markets, as investors sell off risky assets like stocks and flock to supposed safe havens like the dollar and the sovereign debt of the USA, Germany, and Japan. Investors are perhaps more risk-averse than they otherwise would be because they know that advanced-economy central bankers have less space than in the past to ease monetary policy. Among the hardest hit countries is Japan, whose battle against deflation could be set back by the strengthening of the yen and the decline in Japanese equity prices. In the United States, the economic recovery is unlikely to be derailed by the market turmoil, so long as conditions in financial markets do not get significantly worse: The strengthening of the dollar and the declines in U.S. equities are relatively moderate so far. Moreover, the decline in longer-term U.S. interest rates (including mortgage rates) partially offsets the tightening effects of the dollar and stocks on financial conditions. However, clearly the Fed and other U.S. policymakers will remain cautious until the effects of the British vote are better sorted out.

In the meantime, the Fed is staying cautious as rate hikes are put on hold. In fact, the market-implied probability of a rate cut is higher than a rate hike until the December meeting.

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In short, we have healthy U.S. economic and equity earnings growth. We have a dovish Fed driving down bond yields. What more could a patient investor ask for?

Was this market panic a gift from the market gods?

Cue The European Drama

Meanwhile in Europe, the drama begins. We have seen different versions of this play before and it always ends the same way. The European Union has been

through one crisis after another. Just as it seems Europe is about to go over a cliff, the eurocrats cobble together a fudge and kick the can down the road. Just ask the Greeks.

Yet, this drama is no Shakespearean tragedy in which the main characters all die at

the end. Instead, it should be better characterized as a farce in the manner of Molière.

The play begins with a crisis. The British populace has voted to leave the European Union. After the vote, no one has a plan. The Prime Minister resigns. The leader of

the Opposition is under pressure from his own parliamentary caucus as most of the shadow cabinet have resigned (Telegraph). The Leave side has no plan and some of its leaders backtrack on previous promises made during the campaign (CNN,

Mirror).

Then, Boris Johnson, who was a major Leave campaigner and frontrunner to become PM, got knifed in the back by an ally and took himself out of the race to become PM (Bloomberg).

BW: Then Nigel Farage, the leader of the U.K. Independence Party, and a

chief Leave proponent, also chickens out!

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In Brussels, the European Commission wants to make an example of the British, in case any Euroskeptic parties in Europe think about leaving (chart via Ian

Bremmer). (BW: <Ctrl-Click> to enlarge.)

European Commission President Juncker has banned EU officials from discussing Brexit terms with British officials until an official Article 50 declaration has been

delivered (RT). Angela Merkel tells British PM David Cameron that there is no turning back from Brexit (Bloomberg).

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As the first act ends, pandemonium and hilarity ensues. A Cambridge economist shows up naked at a faculty meeting to protest Brexit and no one says a word - for two hours (Telegraph). Then we have the Revenge of Odin, as the English loses a

Euro 2016 match by a score of 2-1 to Iceland, a team that is coached by a dentist. As the curtain comes down, a chorus of Brexiteers are heard to disparage so-called

"experts" who "claim" that if the other team scores more goals than yours, you have lost the game.

Farce? Even Molière could not make this stuff up.

The Story Behind The Drama

Despite all the drama so far, we know how this story ends. While it is true that Brussels is doing its utmost to halt the political contagion of Brexit, a

Eurobarometer survey done in April shows that British attitudes are an exception in that they tend to self-identify by nationality rather than as European. Beneath the sensationalist headlines, the risk of political contagion is relatively low.

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In the UK, signs of regret are emerging. I am seeing much discussion, legal analysis and trial balloons of how to either reverse the Brexit referendum vote, or

achieve some form of Brexit-lite, in which the British relationship with Europe remains relatively unchanged.

The decision to leave (invoke Article 50) has to be passed by

Parliament, which is no sure thing: Such an Act may not be possible

given the disarray of both the Conservative and Labour party (and the pending leadership convention of the Conservatives and possibly Labour). We

may see a general election before an act of Parliament is passed - which is likely to tilted towards parties favoring Remain.

Perhaps Scotland can bail them out: Under the Scotland Act 1998, the

Scottish Parliament has to consent to measures that eliminate EU law's

application in Scotland. As Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to remain, perhaps a Scottish veto could save Brexit.

It's a choice between Brexit-lite (Norway model) and full Brexit (Canadian

model): The Norwegian model represents a form of Brexit-lite, a fig-leaf for

Brexiteers while remaining in the EU. By contrast, the Canadian position within NAFTA involves far greater barriers to trade in both goods and

services, as well as freedom of movement. Given the recent post-referendum trauma, expect greater support for the Brexit-lite Norwegian model, though that path may be blocked by Norway`s objections.

The deadline for an Article 50 declaration under the Lisbon Treaty is March

31, 2017. After that, the UK may need a Qualified Majority Vote to leave. The Lisbon Treaty states that a member state can trigger the provisions of Article 50, after which they have up to two years to negotiate the terms of exit.

Starting April 1, 2017, however, EU votes are weighted (Qualified Majority Vote), so Britain will have to persuade 14 member states to allow it to leave.

So any declaration to leave on or after that date will get tied up under this arrangement and the UK may not be able to leave at all under any terms.

In the weeks and months to come, there will be more threats and counter-threats. Sturm und Drang. Good news and bad news. Risk appetite will oscillate in response

to the headline. Reading between the lines, the ultimate conclusion will be Brexit under a Brexit-lite model, if at all.

A settlement will be reached. Europe kicks the can down the road once again. Risk premiums fade and the markets stage a relief rally. (Just ask Alexis Tsipras how

well his referendum worked out.)

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The Week Ahead

A week ago Monday, I wrote that the U.S. equity market was sufficiently oversold that a bounce was imminent (see Hitting the Brexit trifecta). The ensuing reflex

rally was so strong that, by Wednesday, I indicated that caution was warranted because both the bond and gold markets had not confirmed equity strength with retracement of their panic conditions (see How to trade the US election). I stand by

those remarks.

Marc Chandler also sounded a tone of caution. Chandler is a currency strategist and

therefore his comments related to Sterling, but his analysis is applicable to general risk appetite:

After plummeting 18.6 cents, mostly in a few hours after it became clear that the Brexit would carry the day, sterling has rallied four cents from the low set on Monday. We recognized that the magnitude of the drop left sterling technically over-extended, but we caution against suggests that the worst is behind us and that a durable low is in place. ..

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It may take a few weeks before the shock feeds into economic reports. Expectations for a BOE rate cut as early as next month (July 14) have risen. From the high point last week to the low point at the start of this week, the implied yield of the September short-sterling (three-month deposit) fell 20 bp. They have recovered about five bp. Many economists are projecting a recession. Sterling's gains do not appear to reflect fundamental developments. Instead, we suggest the gains are driven by two considerations. First, is the money management of momentum traders. Once sterling stopped falling, short-term participants (fast-money) bought to take profits on short positions. Remember, in the futures market, speculators were carrying one of the largest bearish bets on sterling on record (gross shorts = 93.7k contracts--each is for GBP65000). Second, institutional investors are adjusting portfolios and (currency) hedges ahead of the month- and quarter-end.

There are other short-term warnings that this market recovery is unlikely to be V-shaped, but W-shaped. Risk appetite in the junk bond and emerging market bond

market are not confirming this advance, which is a sign that traders may want to fade equity market strength.

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In the space of a week, the market has oscillated from an overbought reading to oversold and back to overbought again. This IndexIndicators chart of stocks above their 5-day moving average tells the story. At a minimum, expect a few days of

consolidation before stocks can advance. A pullback would also be no surprise.

The hourly SPX shows RSI-5 at an extreme overbought level. Readings of over 90

are not sustainable and RSI-5 has flashed a sell signal after dropping below 70 from an overbought reading. In addition, RSI-14 is nearing a similar sell signal.

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Nevertheless, the intermediate term outlook is constructive. The SPX Advance-Decline Line made another all-time high last week, which confirms the strength

underlying this advance. I would caution, however, that breadth measures such as the A-D Line are intermediate term indicators and tell us little about short-term

market action.

In addition, commodity prices, which are an important indicator of global cyclical strength, are rising despite the headwinds posed by the strong USD. I interpret this

as a market signal of global reflation, which is positive for earnings growth.

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My inner investor remains constructive on stocks and he is prepared to opportunistically increase his equity position on a pullback. The downdraft in stock

prices was likely a gift from the market gods, but the problems have not totally disappeared and risk premiums have compressed too far too fast.

My inner trader is on holiday for the next two weeks. Even though regular blogging will continue, he believes that the prudent course of action is to stand aside during

this volatile period.

Disclosure: No trading account positions Regards,

Cam Hui

Humble Student of the Markets, Inc.

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eResearch Disclaimer

eResearch Disclosure Statement

eResearch Corporation was established in 2000 as Canada's first equity issuer-sponsored

research organization. As a primary source for professional investment research, its Subscribers

(subscription is free!!!) benefit by having written research on a variety of small- and mid-cap,

under-covered companies.

eResearch also provides unsponsored research reports on middle and larger-sized companies,

using a combination of fundamental and technical analysis.

eResearch complements its corporate research coverage with a diversified selection of

informative, insightful, and thought-provoking research publications from a wide variety of

investment professionals.

eResearch provides its professional investment research and analysis directly to its extensive

subscriber network of discerning investors, and electronically through its website:

www.eResearch.ca.

eResearch does not manage money or trade with the general public, provides full disclosure of

all fee arrangements, and adheres to the strict application of its Best Practices Guidelines.


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