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This Is Still The Chart of the Decade

February 24, 2014

We all have different time frames and risk objectives. That's something that rarely gets discussed but is probably the most important detail of our investing lives that must be defined. In my work, I incorporate a top/down approach starting with longer-term charts and work my way down to shorter-term time frames. One of my favorite long-term charts is something I coined "The Chart of the Decade" back in 2012. This is the secular shift out of Latin America and into more developed nations.

This chart represents the MSCI EAFE ETF which consists of large- and mid-cap developed market equities, excluding the U.S. and Canada ($EFA) compared with the Latin America 40 ETF ($ILF). I originally brought this up when prices were first breaking out of this monster base. But look at how nicely this one has developed (no put intended):

2-24-14 efa vs ilf

There are a few things we can take from this. The first one is obvious: big round bottoms can be very powerful. We're seeing similar bases in $USDCAD as well as in the Emerging Markets vs S&P500 spread. The second thing we should be paying attention to is just that, the underperformance in Emerging Markets. Latin America is just another example of money flowing out of this emerging space and into more developed nations. And not just the US, but into Europe and Japan, especially on a relative basis.

This is a huge secular shift that we're watching and trying our best to take advantage of it. Latin America and Emerging Markets as a group were major outperformers for a long time. This has clearly changed and based on these huge bottoms, it looks like this trend is probably here to stay.

Look at this chart above. To me there is much more upside here proving that this is still The Chart of the Decade.

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Sources:

Stocktwits Charts to Watch for 2013 (January 2013)

Is This The Chart Of The Decade? (November 2012)

Tags: $ILF $EFA $SPY

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