This is an important chart from Bespoke in today's premarket email. It captures something I've mentioned just a couple times over the years because it is a rare occurrence. When markets get up to 20% above their 200 day moving average it isn't sustainable. At that level the underlying is very over extended and some sort of reversion becomes extremely likely.
This really is rare. The last time it happened to the S&P 500 was late 2021. I heeded that signal and added an inverse fund which helped in 2022. The chart shows a similar over extension for the South Korean market driven primarily by SK Hynix and Samsung. Currently, the S&P 500 is nowhere near this far above its 200 DMA. Bear markets or large declines can still occur with being this extended, this is just a simple and I believe reliable indicator for the rare occasion it happens.
Next is an interesting story about the XAI Floating Rate & Alternative Income Trust (XFLT) which is subadvised by Octagon Credit Investors. The fund is doing poorly and Bloomberg reports that Octagon is in danger of being removed as the manager. There is a lot to the story but the very quick summary is that the "problem is not the asset mix, but XFLT’s structure, execution, and governance." Here's the allocation mix per CEFconnect.
Another tab on the CEFconnect page says the leverage is only 40%.
XFLT is currently at a 20% discount to its NAV. The fund pays out 15% of its market price, historically, very little of that has been ROC. Distributions have been trending lower for a little while. There was some sort of distortion in the data in March so the back test stops at 3/1/2026. Since that date, XFLT has had a very volatile ride to a 2% gain on a price basis. The total return is negative of course but not catastrophically so. If an investor took out all the distributions, they'd only have 1/3 of their money left which would be a catastrophe if they didn't understand how going ex-dividend works and how closed end fund NAVs tend to erode with high yields.
Closed end funds are more complex than they appear to be. Here are a couple of very old CEFs. Very little volatility price only but they both end up losing the vast majority of their NAVs if the dividends are not reinvested.
If you want to dig in more to CEF complexity, you can look into Saba's and Matisse's respective strategies.
If XFLT is a poorly run fund then it might fail as part of a bridge to some financial milestone but the fund is eight years old and there's still 33% of the original investment left after taking out a lot of yield. Eight years is a very long time in relation to bridging to something like Social Security or starting RMDs.
Again, this outcome is only catastrophic for people who don't understand how these work. People often are seduced by big yields not realizing the tradeoffs.
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