Introduction to FOMO
Changing
sentiment appears to be a much stronger force than earnings taking the stock
market higher. A couple of years ago, investors reluctantly were buying
equities in the face of expected rising interest rates, relatively slow
earnings growth, and expected political turmoil. Their excuse for this
questionable decision was TINA, There Is No Alternative. Over the last fourteen
months this excuse has given way to another symbolic abbreviation FOMO, Fear Of
Missing Out. During these last fourteen months and the first week of January, 2018,
the S&P 500 has not had a single month decline. Momentum has become the
mantra for the buyers as well as the larger audience of holders. In the last
calendar year the leading investment performance factor within the S&P 500
universe has been the momentum stocks that gained 28.27%.
Will
it Continue?
This
week we had two very insightful experts publish their views of the year ahead
with clues beyond. Byron Wien published his annual ten surprises that he
believes have at least a 50% chance of happening and that his wide circle of
global contacts believe have less than a 33% of happening. One of his surprises
is that the market will take a 10% correction during the year. He thinks that a
recession will not surprise us until at least 2019. Further he recognizes that there may well be
other surprises during the year that none are expecting. Nevertheless, one
could interpret his views that stocks markets in general will be well behaved.
The
second very worthwhile piece published this week was by Jeremy Grantham of GMO.
Jeremy by nature tends to be on the bearish side. Thus it is a bit surprising
that he entitles his piece “Bracing Yourself for a Possible Near-Term Melt-Up.”
While he does acknowledge that we could have a 20% decline that he believes
would be helpful, he also does not see a near-term recession. Like Byron he
sees the S&P 500 as going well into the 3000 territory. B/t/w, his firm has
an equity fund that is among the leaders in the institutional league.
The
odds are that these two gentlemen will prove to be correct and I hope so.
However, when I mention odds I am force to think of the lessons that my
experience bought at the major New York racetracks which can be briefly
summarized as follows:
1. Past performance is good to organize one’s
memory, but can be less useful in predicting the future.
2. Each race (Market) is different with
different horses and conditions.
3. Different odds lead to different earnings.
4. It is not the number of wins that counts, but
the size of winnings taken away.
5. As a
contrarian one can win more money by occasionally betting against the crowd.
Good
News: Historical Trends to Apple Store
One of
the reasons to own rather than loan is that over long periods of time human
life is generally getting better. Most of the time we don’t get this message
from our political leaders and their supporting pundits. If there weren’t
problems to be addressed we might not tolerate governments and their expenses.
Thus, we do not see a lot of publicity about the long-term progress we have
made some of which from an article by Max Roser can be shown below:
· Since 1990 there have been 130,000 people fewer in extreme poverty every day.
·
Globally in 1800 there
were fewer than 100 million that could read. Today 4.6 Billion can read.
·
In 1800, 43% of the newborns
didn’t see their fifth birthday. In 2015 child mortality was down to 4.3%.
Improved health and nutrition has made us taller and smarter.
·
These and other
positive trends are continuing and accelerating.
Part
of the reasons for this progress is due to technology which marches to its own
drummer. Technology itself is driven by the desire for increased profit. I refer to profit
not in an accounting or monetary sense, but a desire to improve one’s own life,
often to improve the lives of ones for which the individual cares.
This
thought occurred to me this weekend when I accompanied my wife to the Apple
Store at The Mall at Short Hills. It was by far the busiest store in the mall
with both customers, salespeople, support staff, and in effect, trainers. It
only took a little more than an hour to exchange her watch for a different
model and synchronized it with her iPhone. During that time I had a chance to
look at a very diversified group of customers waiting patiently to be served
and an equally diverse sales and service group on a packed sales floor.
What occurred to me is that we were experiencing an ecosystem which is building loyalty and a knowledge base both for customers and a helpful, well-trained sales force. In many ways each person in the store was looking for ways to improve his or her condition in a personally profitable way. (The visit made me happy that I have been a very long-term shareholder in Apple and reinforced my faith in their eco-system in spite of periodic hardware and software glitches.)
What occurred to me is that we were experiencing an ecosystem which is building loyalty and a knowledge base both for customers and a helpful, well-trained sales force. In many ways each person in the store was looking for ways to improve his or her condition in a personally profitable way. (The visit made me happy that I have been a very long-term shareholder in Apple and reinforced my faith in their eco-system in spite of periodic hardware and software glitches.)
The
potential of Apple and its good competitors to deliver very useful products and
services addressing many of our unmet needs suggests to me the rate of human
progress will accelerate in the years ahead and will probably benefit my
grandchildren, great grandchildren and their children.
Accelerating
Momentum: Incomplete
In a
market that relies on sentiment to drive its momentum, one can not wait on
published financial and economic results. One should be paying attention to
what consumers at all levels and investors are doing as well as saying.
Recently I have been commenting on the AAII weekly survey of a sample of its
members. As I have said previously, a normal distribution of the individuals'
opinion is roughly 40% bullish and 30% each for neutral and bearish. This week
the bullish reading exceeded 59% and the bearish number was about 15%.Two weeks
ago the numbers were 50% and 25% respectively. Clearly a symptom of
accelerating momentum
The
siren of the rising stock market has not sucked in all the available money that
is fearful of missing out. The banks (particularly the small and regional banks)
have not lost cash deposits to the stock market. As a matter of fact, this week
the average money market account dropped its rate to 0.30% from 0.33%
the week before. The drop may be caused by less demand for loans or possibly
that some banks were bulking up their cash items for year-end statement
purposes.
Some
market observers and I are carefully watching the yields on treasuries. Each
major stock market decline had rising yields as money sought safety away from
actual or perceived credit risks. Some feel a ten year yield above 2.50% could
be alarming.
What
to Do?
If economist
Jeremy Grantham is correct that we are in a “melt-up” and there will be a 20%
decline before the eventual recession which could trigger a bigger decline one
may want to shift some of one’s equity positions into highest available
quality. That would not have hurt you too badly in 2017 when the quality
component in the S&P 500 gained 19.51%.
At
this time large market caps with reasonable balance sheets yield above the ten
year treasury. Not a great deal of actively managed investors and high market
liquidity can be used as bond substitutes. Because we can always be surprised I
would own a bunch of these. They may include AT&T, GM and GE plus a few
others. If one becomes addicted to investing in quality stocks for the long
run, there are more in the small cap arena than elsewhere, but these are for
investing not cyclical trading.
Question
of the Week: Do you agree or disagree with my analysis?
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A. Michael Lipper, CFA
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