Everything Is Disjointed

As a blogger and investment adviser, I spend a fair amount of time on social media sharing my ideas with others and absorbing new concepts. I find that the community of the well-respected traders and investment guru's that I follow has opened my eyes to unseen opportunities as well as potential pitfalls. All told, the sum of this engagement has been a productive use of my resources in vetting the path for the portfolios I manage.

One prescient tweet from @NorthmanTrader on Twitter today spoke of the nature of the markets at this juncture.

There's a reason most funds are lagging big time. It's not because these managers are idiots, it's because everything is disjointed.

— Northy (@NorthmanTrader) December 9, 2014

I think that is a fair assessment of the seemingly endless divergences we have seen in 2014. Portfolio managers have been confounded by the continued strength in broad-based equity indices such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) and PowerShares QQQ (QQQ), while many individual stocks and traditional high beta small caps have failed to make any headway.

If you're a stock picker, the difference between the 45% rise in Apple Inc (AAPL) and the 4% decline in Google Inc (GOOGL) this year probably has you scratching your head. Aren't stocks in a similar segment like supposed to move in a similar fashion? The 50% relative performance divergence between these two mega-cap companies can make or break your year depending on your asset allocation.

Another matchup of endless speculation is the strength in bonds with equities sitting near all-time highs. Bonds are generally regarded as a flight to quality mechanism that only trade with such strength during periods of duress in the stock market. Yet here we sit with the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) having hit a new 2014 closing high with gains of more than 24% this year.

Stock bulls have bemoaned how that can keep happening when the appears to be on sound footing and the Fed is contemplating its first rate hike in half a decade. They relish the opportunity for interest rates to rise and capital to come spilling back into cash, stocks or other areas of the market.

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