Tuesday, October 27, 2015

The Toronto MoneyShow October 30, 2015:



Join me and Kevin Prins, Director of National Sales - BMO ETFs - at the Toronto World MoneyShow Friday, October 30 at 1:30 pm as we discus ETFs and how they can be selected to use natural sector rotation as a tool to move in and out of global markets

Sector selection takes advantage of natural stock market rotation due to the normal business cycle which is led by the consumer followed by manufacturing and finally the cyclical industries. When executed properly rotation allows you to remain fully invested by over-weighting in the rising sectors and under-weighting in the falling sectors.

If you wish to adopt this strategy the first step is to recognise the 10 unique and distinct stock sectors (or asset classes) as set out by the index people at Standard & Poor's. They are Energy, Materials, Industrials, Consumer Discretionary, Consumer Staples, Health Care, Financials, Information Technology, Telecommunications Services and Utilities

The best way to understand the rotation order is to picture a 10-car roller coaster with the financial, utility and consumer sectors riding in the front two or three cars. We call this the front end of the market.  The next three or four cars will be occupied by the telecom, technology and industrial sectors. We refer to these as the middle of the market - and finally riding in the last few cars would be the energy and materials group which we refer to as the back end of the market.

Picture now this 10-car train slowly climbing to the crest of the ride (a bull market) and eventually the front end slipping over the crest and now falling. So now we have a condition with occupants in the front end screaming in fear while the middle and back end cars still are enjoying the climb. Eventually the middle cars crest and you know the rest.

The global markets also are also driven by the forces of rotation – our chart displays the lead – lag relationship between the BMO (ZUH) and the BMO (ZEO)




2 comments:

Shawn Severin said...

So are you suggesting that the roller coaster is going in reverse?

Shawn

Gettingtechnical.com said...

Hello

The financials lead and the materials lag

Bill C