Video: The Quantitative Approach to Tactical Asset Allocation


With over 20 years of tactical management experience, Niemann Capital Management’s primary focus is to avoid significant loss of principal in all market environments.

Don Niemann, Niemann Capital Management’s Chief Investment Officer, discusses the investment team’s daily analysis of market and sector data used to identify the areas of the market favored for investment on a risk-adjusted basis.

Video: The Cornerstone Philosophy of Niemann Capital Management


As markets continue to fluctuate, long term investing still remains a key element within any retirement plan. Travis Silberman, Niemann Capital Management’s Senior Advisor, describes Niemann’s core philosophy, analytical process and the importance of investing in the stock market.

Niemann Capital Management Launches New Global Emerging Market Sectors Strategy


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NIEMANN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LAUNCHES
NEW GLOBAL EMERGING MARKET SECTORS STRATEGY

– Emerging Markets Risk Management Solution For Investors –

Nimann Capital Management Emerging Markets Risk Management Solution For InvestorsScotts Valley, CA – February 14, 2012 – Niemann Capital Management (NCM), an innovative tactical allocation management firm, today announced its new strategy, Niemann Risk Managed GEMS (Global Emerging Market Sectors), representing an emerging markets risk management solution for investors. This new strategy was created to identify and focus portfolio assets into those Global Emerging Market Sectors expected to perform the best in the current market cycle while also using strict risk controls seeking to minimize the downside.

Sector rotation is an increasingly popular strategy for investing in the U.S., as identifying the sectors likely to outperform the market can often be more critical to overall performance than choosing individual stocks and bonds.

Niemann Capital’s emerging markets tactical asset allocation strategy will utilize the EGShares’ GEMS funds, which are composed of the leading emerging markets companies in each of 10 industries defined by the Industry Classification Benchmark (ICB). The funds, which were launched in June 2011, are all based on the Dow Jones Emerging Markets Sector Titans Indexes.

“We are pleased to offer investors a new approach to investing in emerging markets as well as launching our new strategic alliance with EGShares,” stated Charles Halliday, Chief Strategy Officer for Niemann Capital Management.

Robert C. Holderith, EGA’s Founder and President expressed, “GEMS (Global Emerging Markets Sector ETFs) were designed for investors who want sector based exposure in emerging markets. EGA is very pleased to have Niemann Capital Management employ our GEMS ETFs in their tactical sector strategy.”

Niemann Risk Managed GEMS is offered on the Envestnet wealth management platform as a convenient way for advisors to access this new investment vehicle for their clients, as well as the entire suite of Niemann products ranging from conservative to aggressive strategies.

About Emerging Global Advisors/EGShares
Based in New York City, Emerging Global Advisors LLC is an independent investment advisory firm and the sub-advisor to the EGShares family of exchange-traded funds (ETFs). The EGShares product offerings are designed to provide investment exposures that allow more accurate targeting of important emerging market opportunities. More information on the firm and its investment products can be found at www.egshares.com.

About Niemann Capital Management
Founded in 1991, Niemann Capital Management (NCM) is an innovative investment management firm distinguished by its tactical asset allocation methodology. The firm’s proprietary, disciplined process is based on continuous daily analysis of current market conditions, designed to seek the greatest potential return with the least possible risk for investors. (http://www.ncm.net/first_investor.php)

With preservation of capital as the cornerstone of its philosophy, NCM offers a range of conservative, moderate and aggressive Managed Account strategies that utilize mutual funds and exchange traded funds. NCM is based in Scotts Valley, California.

For more information about Niemann Capital Management’s complete suite of investment products, visit the firm’s website at www.ncm.net or contact a sales representative toll-free at 877.643.6222.

Media Contact:
Craig Parsons
Parsons Communications
310.472.7632 or 310.200.4310

Niemann Capital Management Launches Tactical Global Bond Strategy


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NIEMANN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LAUNCHES
TACTICAL GLOBAL BOND STRATEGY
– New investment product seeks total returns with added downside protection –

Niemann Capital Management Tactical Global Bond StrategyScotts Valley, CA – February 2, 2012 – Niemann Capital Management (NCM), an innovative tactical allocation management firm, today announced its newest strategy, Tactical Global Bond Strategy, introducing a global fixed income focus with a risk management solution. This new strategy was created to position assets in top ranking bonds from a collection of ETFs and mutual funds considered for investment, covering maturity lengths of all time frames.

The Tactical Global Bond Strategy is a conservative to moderate investment tool that provides income and the potential for moderate capital growth through a balanced mix of fixed income investments. With market volatility as a concern for most investors, this strategy will rotate assets to cash in adverse fixed income environments to avoid significant loss of principal.

“Niemann Capital’s release of this new product is part of its strategic initiative to offer investors a tactical methodology in the fixed income sector, with the benefit of downside protection investors are looking for today,” stated Charles Halliday, Chief Strategy Officer for Niemann Capital Management.

About Niemann Capital Management

Founded in 1991, Niemann Capital Management (NCM) is an innovative investment management firm distinguished by its tactical asset allocation methodology. The firm’s proprietary, disciplined process is based on continuous daily analysis of current market conditions, designed to seek the greatest potential return with the least possible risk for investors. (http://www.ncm.net/first_investor.php)

With preservation of capital as the cornerstone of its philosophy, NCM offers a range of conservative, moderate and aggressive Managed Account strategies that utilize mutual funds and exchange traded funds. NCM is based in Scotts Valley, California.

For more information about Niemann Capital Management’s complete suite of investment products, visit the firm’s website at www.ncm.net or contact a sales representative toll-free at 877.643.6222.

Media Contact:
Craig Parsons
Parsons Communications
310.472.7632 or 310.200.4310

Video: Investing in Compressed Markets


Are we coming to the end of the secular bear market? Every investment strategy has the potential to struggle depending on the market environment and investment process. The prolonged volatility over the last two years demonstrated the challenge of investing in a trading range market with no fundamental driver.

Don Niemann, Niemann Capital Management’s Chief Investment Officer, talks candidly about Niemann’s tactical asset allocation approach and investing in a compressed market.

Political Impact on Capital Markets in 2011


Looking back at 2011, investors may likely view the year as a roller coaster with ups, downs and loops that held them hanging mid-air as the political impact on the markets created constant uncertainty.

From the Euro crisis to the AAA downgrade of the U.S. credit rating, the larger policy issues and political unrest generated many volatile swings in the market during the course of 2011.

What did that mean for investors?

As found in the latest article from CNBC, the outcome of such activity was “mind-numbing volatility” at best. Click here to read: Why So Many Market Pros Made Bad Calls This Year

It is true that past performance does not guarantee future results however; we can gauge that past political unrest will likely result in continued market volatility during 2012.

As the Euro crisis and global events begin to resolve and fundamentals come back in focus, tactical asset managers, such as Niemann Capital Management, will be poised to take advantage of the trends when the new bull emerges.

For the investor, the key to taking advantage of the opportunities in the market is to be there and not have assets waiting on the sidelines.

The markets will rise and inevitably fall. Tactical asset allocation and risk management in 2012 will help provide that agility investors and asset managers will need to navigate the continually changing market conditions ahead.

Market and Allocation Update November 18, 2011


Niemann Capital Management - Market and Allocation Update Nov 18, 2011Unforeseen events in the news have always had the possibility to cause strong price movements in the markets. But over the decades we’ve been managing money, we’ve never witnessed news blowups like the ones seen recently. Over the last few weeks the market has experienced volatile price swings in both positive and negative directions as investors continue to try and position themselves ahead of imminent policy changes occurring around the world. The S&P 500 is down slightly year to date (as of this writing, with dividends reinvested) after suffering a near-bear market decline late April – early October and a rally of almost 20% the last 3 weeks of October. Currently the market seems to be coiling like a tightly wound spring ready to explode in either direction. No one knows for sure which trend will develop next as uncertainty continues to hang over the markets.

Full Market and Allocation Update available here: Niemann capital Management Market and Allocation Update Nov 18, 2011

Market and Allocation Updates Archive available here: Niemann Capital Management – Market and Allocation Update Archive

The Rise of Steve Jobs, the Fall of Charlie Sheen, and Market Volatility


Niemann Capital Management - Market VolatilitySteve Jobs’ premature death reminded us all of many important things, but one, to me, stood out among others: the potential for resurrection. Jobs’ fortune rose with the founding of Apple and launch of the Macintosh computer in 1977, fell with his 1985 departure from Apple after a bitter falling-out with CEO John Sculley, and rose again with his 1997 return to the company and creation of one innovative digital device after another. What goes up must come down, it’s often said—but Jobs illustrated that what goes down can also come up again. And that’s not unlike the financial markets.

Market volatility, it seems, is the new normal. The S&P 500 Index had nearly as many plus or minus 4 percent trading days from 2007 to 2010 (40) as the previous 57 years combined (38).


Financial professionals disagree about why. The past few years have been turbulent, economically speaking, and that can impact the financial markets, which consist of thousands of stocks that fluctuate with economic news. Others might argue that volatility has been precipitated by the rise of electronic trading in the 1990s and the 2007 demise of the uptick rule, which forced traders to wait for a stock’s price to rise before shorting it.


Regardless of the cause, one thing is certain: Market volatility is so prevalent it’s now a tradable product, with asset managers around the world making fortunes on the rise and fall of the financial markets.

Of course, volatility isn’t always good, in markets or in public figures. Jobs’ career went down and came up; entertainers’ careers often go down and stay down, as Charlie Sheen has recently demonstrated. Entertainers are quickly replaced, but assets aren’t. That’s why, in investing, it’s important to have a strategy for dealing with market volatility.


To many asset managers, the best strategy for managing volatility is diversification. Because different types of securities perform differently at different times, the theory holds, investing in a mix of asset classes increases one’s chances of obtaining a compelling total return. When some asset classes decline, others may rally, creating a cushion for the overall investment portfolio. During the 1980s and 1990s, few individual investors questioned this strategy, and for good reasons: While volatility clearly existed, it was fairly manageable, and markets recovered quickly.

This strategy has always presented some problems, however, as evidenced by the challenges of the past decade. We’ve seen two significant recessions since 2000. Equity returns have been sluggish, and many now refer to 2000 to 2010 as a “lost decade” because the S&P 500 Index’s 10-year return turned negative for the first time since the 1930s.


If investors take one thing away from the market turbulence of the past four years, it should be the importance of maintaining flexibility in one’s asset allocation—both in order to manage downside risk and take advantage of new opportunities. That’s why I believe in a tactical allocation strategy, which allows for the timely rotation among asset classes in a risk-controlled framework.


I know I risk getting too technical here, so if your eyes glaze over at the mention of the word “mean reversion,” or if you just like Mark Hamill, skip to the last paragraph. Otherwise, consider this: Asset prices consistently deviate from fundamentals based on investors’ perceptions and expectations. Yet, there’s considerable evidence that asset prices will, over time, return to fundamental levels. This is the basis of tactical allocation. In an attempt to uncover opportunity and mitigate risk, tactical portfolio managers systematically exploit changing market conditions by moving assets between classes (including cash, ideally). They often do so with an understanding of relative strength, which I recently explained in my post about fantasy football, using technical analysis to identify price momentum (which we also call trend following, another topic about which I recently wrote).

In sum, a buy-and-hold strategy may be viable in a bull market where downswings are short or you have lots of time—but sometimes we don’t have the luxury of waiting for markets (or public figures), to recover. It took 25 years for the Dow Jones Industrial Average to recoup its losses after the height of the Great Depression in 1929. Investors needed their portfolios to gain around 60 percent just to break even after the S&P 500 Index’s 37 percent loss in 2008. And a friend of mine is still waiting for the comeback of Mark Hamill, who hasn’t enjoyed anything near the fame Star Wars’ popularity suggested he would.


Why wait? Isn’t tactic allocation a better idea?

What Fantasy Football Teaches Us About the Power of Relative-Strength Investing


Niemann Capital Management: What Fantasy Football Teaches Us About the Power of Relative-Strength InvestingThe power of relative-strength investing has been well documented: Time after time, studies have shown that stocks in motion tend to stay in motion.

If you follow this blog, you know that I touched on relative-strength investing a couple of weeks ago when I wrote about trend following. Specifically, I used fashion to illustrate how the tactical allocation manager seeks to take advantage of the moves that play out in the financial markets.

It was, I think, an accurate comparison. Soon after publishing, however, I realized I’d neglected a significant part of my readership—the 50 percent of the population that is male.

At least, that’s what I surmised when Bill, a close friend who’s been kind enough to support my blogging efforts with regular readership, called me as soon as the blog went live.

“Shaggy bob?!?” he asked.

Despite Bill’s protests, I’m comfortable in my decision to blog about fashion—but I understand why he didn’t get it, and I’m determined to make amends.

This week, it’s all about football.

Come fall, Saturdays, Sundays, Mondays and sometimes Thursdays mean one thing to many American men (and women, as Bill’s wife will attest): It’s time to turn on the TV, fire up the smartphone app and check on your fantasy football selections.

What does that have to do with investing?

Sports teams, as anyone who’s ever participated in an office betting pool knows, are ranked. Players are, too, since 1969, when Oakland restaurateur Andy Mousalimas reportedly opened the first public fantasy football league to his patrons at the Kings X Sports Bar.

Both teams and players are typically ranked using the power rating. The more games a team wins or a player scores, the higher the ranking. For example, if the Packers defeat the Saints, and the Saints defeat the Colts, then one can safely say that the Packers > the Saints > the Colts. If Tony Romo scores more touchdowns than Jay Cutler, but Jay Cutler scores more touchdowns than Matt Hasselbeck, then Romo > Cutler > Hasselbeck.

Now, I don’t stand by any of those rankings, which are purely hypothetical, but they illustrate my point: The power rating is a calculation of strength relative to other teams or players. And relative-strength investing is similar; you just swap out the teams or players for investments. The better an asset class performs relative to other asset classes, the higher its ranking. The same can be said of regions and even sectors. If small-cap growth is up relative to small-cap value and large-cap growth, it has relative strength.

That may sound simple, but it’s actually much harder to reach those rankings than it may seem. Online fantasy football operators have a dazzling array of tools to quantify how well teams and players will perform, as fantasy footballers who have Jacksonville Jaguars Running Back Maurice Jones-Drew on their team will tell you; he recently fell a notch due to a fumble (or several, as Bill’s wife is quick to gloat; he’s not on her team). Similarly, asset managers who use relative-strength analysis also have quantitative tools with which they take note of an investment’s relative strength.

Results of rankings also tend to be accurate both in fantasy football and investing. Pending injury, a team or player who entered the season ranked high very often performs as expected. As for investing, I like to cite a study that divided stocks into deciles, ranked them by momentum, then looked at returns. And guess what? The portfolio with the greatest upward price momentum performed best, the portfolio with the second-greatest upward price moment performed second best, and so on.

That’s where the similarities end, though, because asset managers, unlike fantasy footballers in mid-season, can do something about the ranking information they obtain. If Jones-Drew is on your team, you’re stuck with him for the season. If Greece is in your portfolio, it can be gone tomorrow. That’s because asset managers who use relative-strength analysis are active; they actually adapt to evolving market conditions by shifting assets in response to market fluctuations.

That’s good news for investors whose asset managers use a tactical allocation strategy based on relative strength, and bad news for fantasy footballers who have Jones-Drew on their team.

If you’re in the latter, camp, though, don’t worry. Jones-Drew did fumble three times in the Jaguars recent game against the Ravens, but only one of his fumbles was lost, and his steady running game (30 carries, 105 yards) helped the Jaguars on a night that rookie Blaine Gabbert finished with just 93 passing yards. So, all things considered, he’s doing well. Better than Greece, anyway.

From Turbulence to the Sidelines Commentary Q3 2011


Niemann Capital Management From Turbulence to the Sidelines Commentary Q3 2011After a very turbulent third quarter, investors hoping for a peaceful summer vacation season were left largely disappointed with the market. Concerns about the sovereign debt crisis in Europe along with softening economic data here in the US sent the market on a volatile ride that at times was similar to the ups and downs seen in 2008.

Investors are disenchanted with the market and think the game is rigged. The retail investor has been largely on the sidelines, too disillusioned with the environment to put money to work. An overwhelming majority agrees the state of the world is bleak. But from the ashes of our many current issues comes tremendous opportunity for those who persevere.

Toward the end of a bear market, everyone comes to understand and believe the mess they’re in. The media fuels a vicious cycle of negativity, which flushes out the market and creates new buying opportunities. The more pessimistic the mood becomes, in reality, the closer we are to the start of the next bull phase.

We’ve learned through hard experience that the market really does move in cycles – the tides flow in and out and the market moves up and down. As it does, the world will be full of opportunity. It always is. We never know exactly when opportunity will reveal itself but it will. But to benefit from opportunity, you have to be there to seize it when it emerges. The flexible nature of our investment methodology and tactical allocation process is perfectly suited to do just that.

Our risk management approach strives to limit losses early on by getting out of harm’s way, but is nimble enough to recognize when the environment has improved and important investment trends are developing.

We hear it a lot. “I know when to get out, but I have a hard time knowing when to get back in.” Our investment process handles moving in and out of the market for you.

CLICK HERE to read the entire Portfolio Manager Commentary for Third Quarter, 2011

To view the full library of Niemann Portfolio Manager Commentaries, visit http://www.ncm.net/new_portfolio.php.