Timing of the market downturn

Likely due to the Greece situation in Europe and anticipation of financial disruption, the markets are raising cash like no tomorrow by liquidating everything that can be liquified.

Naturally, this has gotten me somewhat interested in the markets again from a broad perspective.

Something fascinating is that anything relating to crude has been hammered for the past month. For example, Canadian Oil Sands (TSX: COS) has a relatively boring business that has been disproportionately traded down in relation to crude prices. An example is that a year ago you could have bought a share of COS for about 0.29 barrels of spot crude and today that ratio is 0.22.

This is generally the same effect that is seen with investors in gold – the underlying commodity is the volatile component while the stocks that produce the commodity are underperforming (Barrick, Kinross, etc.).

I don’t have much comment on COS other than that while it does seem like it is trading relatively cheap, my gut feel suggests that it can get even cheaper – especially if the unthinkable occurs. The unthinkable event in everybody’s mindset today is that the price of crude oil will make a significant fall. It’s similar to how nobody anticipated how low natural gas prices could go (and indeed, even lower than the economic crisis point), and how Canadian 10-year bond yields could not get lower than a very low 3% (they are now at 1.93%).

The other comment is that a good investor makes money by deploying it at the relative trough of a period of panic and crisis, and holding on for dear life until things feel rosy again, and then selling and going away until they see the panic and crisis again.

The problem is that it is very difficult to identify moments of panic and crisis, and even when you know you are in the middle of it, you still don’t know whether it can get worse than what you are seeing. It is expensive to be early to the party. One particular barometer that I use as a guideline (and many others do as well, so the information content of this proxy is somewhat diluted) is the VIX:

This would suggest we’ve got some way to go before deploying capital would be wise. I also still don’t see hints of any panic simply by looking at corporate bond yields – nothing is breaking in that department yet.

But assembling that watchlist would be a good idea. And this time, my instinct would be to go for non-commodity, non-yielding securities. And certainly not Facebook equity.