Sunday, November 27, 2022

This Was The Week That Wasn’t - Weekly Blog # 761

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


This Was The Week That Wasn’t


 Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018 –

            

 

 

In the earlier days of popular US television there was a program of satirical commentary. It was an American version of a British program with the same name, abbreviated TWTWTW.

 

Looking for leads related to writing my weekly blog I studied the four-day Thanksgiving week and concluded there really wasn’t much there. Evidently, much of the normal global trading around “turkey day” saw volume at about half its normal level.

 

Nevertheless, there were some snippets which may point to significant trends in the coming weeks. I found the following briefs of possible value in thinking about future periods:

  1. The dollar index has dropped to 105 from 115 recently.
  2. Taxable bond fund inflows were the largest since the week of January 8th, 1982.
  3. The 2-year treasury yield remained stable at 4.48%, while 10 and 30-year rates were 3.70% and 3.75%, respectively.
  4. S&P warned that the corporate default rate could double if inflation remains high.
  5. Goldman’s strategist believes the bear market would last into ’23.
  6. B of A predicts 2023 gains of 25% for copper, 15-20% for gold, 12-13% for US investment grade bonds, 7-8% for US Treasuries, and 5-6% for oil.
  7. My son Steve commented for Royce Partners that small-caps on average gain 12% and 16 % in even numbered years during the November-April period. (These are Presidential and Mid-term years)
  8. Howard Marks reminded us of the inevitably of change. He also commented that the private equity and venture capital markets are too crowded. (Remember the losing percentage of favorites at the racetrack.)
  9. China Region US registered mutual funds were the worst performers in the shortened week. (Over the weekend there were riots in the industrial and financial capital of Shanghai and elsewhere. These riots were the response to hardships caused by lockdowns to prevent COVID-19 spreading. (Apparently the Chinese vaccine is not as powerful those produced in US and Europe.)

 

Many will view this list as bearish but recognize that pundits and at least half the politicians are bullish. They believe we have seen a stock market bottom and are discounting a rising economy. It is possible they may be correct.

 

To those who have studied economic and market history it would be ironic if they were right, as it would be just a matter of time before a major recession/depression occurs. Societies often need these dislocations to initiate the kind of structural change necessary to correct for deep imbalances.

 

Please share your thoughts with me.

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: Trends: Deflation, Stagflation, or Asian? - Weekly Blog # 760

Mike Lipper's Blog: An Informative Week with Many Questions - Weekly Blog # 759

Mike Lipper's Blog: Are You Getting Value from Numbers? - Weekly Blog # 758


 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 - 2022

 

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, November 20, 2022

Trends: Deflation, Stagflation, or Asian? - Weekly Blog # 760




Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Trends: Deflation, Stagflation, or Asian?

 

 Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018 –

            

 

Disturbing Data 

Some baseball umpires call balls and strikes as what they should be, how they see them, or what they are. Market and economic observers are like umpires. A majority tend to be in the first group, believing the next major trend will have inflation under control and stock prices rising. As a long-term investor and manager, I am caught between the latter two choices, seeing the future as presented, or as it is or will be. 

 

I am interested in what readers believe the future is likely to be. 

 

Current Data 

Government economists see an approaching pivot in the economy resulting from the only inflation tool at their disposal, interest rates to constrain demand. (Not a more useful approach of augmentation of supply i.e., more domestic energy and less restrictive regulations.) Market bulls see a stock market led by the DJIA industrials, +17.48% from its bottom, as the beginnings of a new “bull market”. I see a rally in a bear market, with the natural leader being the NASDAQ, with a gain of only +7 %. 

 

Current Data Forecasting Problems 

For most of this year the interest rate spread between 2 and 10-year US treasury bonds has been inverted, a historic predictor of recession. The current yield on the 2-year is 4.51%, which is higher than 10 and 30-year rates. 

 

The weekend edition of the WSJ showing prices of securities, commodities, and currencies was extremely volatile, with 65% declining. Furthermore, the weekly posting for the ECRI industrial price index showed a year over year decline of -12.9%. While not conclusive, these readings suggest that when our inflation ends it will begin a deflationary cycle very few are expecting. 

 

2023-2024 Views 

As to the future, I am not sure what I see.  I have respect for the very bright people at Goldman Sachs. (A holding in our private financial services fund and other accounts.) In their latest economic projection, they see US GDP only producing a +1.0% gain in 2023, increasing to +1.6% in 2024. 

 

Whenever I see a projection below 3%, I remember all the times small gains didn’t happen for operational, weather, and other unpredictable reasons. With larger gains there is room to absorb surprises. 

 

The second and more dangerous Goldman projection was the beginning of a dreaded period of stagflation. In the US, we have had two periods of stagflation lasting more than ten years. Stagflation is a period of rising inflation with generally flat profits, which could be caused by higher effective federal, state, and local taxes. While it is probably too early to adopt a stagflation portfolio strategy, it is not in my opinion too early to begin researching the composition of such a portfolio to carry one through such a period. 

 

Goldman believes there is some good news for investors in 2023 and 2024. Economically, they see China’s growth rising to +4.5% and +5.3%, respectively. They also see India’s economy growing +5.9% and +6.5%, respectively. While we have some exposure to India in our personal portfolios, it represents less than our exposure to China. This is because of the different level of efficiency and integrity, but we could be wrong. At any rate, US funds invested in the China Region were the best performers this past week. 

 

The Stock of T. Rowe Price is still Teaching 

In the last edition of the blog, I wrote about T Rowe’s stock price going up from $103.71 to $133,34 in the week. At the same time daily trading volume expanded from 1.7 to 5.5 million shares. I commented that this demonstrated the lack of liquidity for a NYSE stock. On Monday this week the stock opened at $131.02 and ended at $125.50, essentially the same level it began the week before, $125.84. The big difference was trading volume. The prior Friday it was 5.5 million shares, followed by 3.2 million shares on Monday, and 1.5 million shares on Friday. 

 

The lesson is that if you are anxious enough to raise your price you can find liquidity. Trading liquidity disappears with the absence of demand. (Some of the liquidity is supplied by the short side.) It was clearly a week where patience and discipline paid off. 

 

Beware of What you Believe 

My sharp-eyed brother reminded me that the perception of half the start-ups not making it to five years was based on a Small Business Administration study relying on data from telephone companies. Many of the start-ups were dissolved, acquired, or moved without maintaining their phone number. We are not doubting the risks involved with both small companies and start-ups. But we should always investigate the source of the data to make meaningful decisions. 

 

What is your current view of the future?   

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: An Informative Week with Many Questions - Weekly Blog # 759

Mike Lipper's Blog: Are You Getting Value from Numbers? - Weekly Blog # 758

Mike Lipper's Blog: Rarely Found Different Thoughts - Blog # 757

 

 

 

 

Did someone forward you this blog? 

To receive Mike Lipper’s Blog each Monday morning, please subscribe by emailing me directly at AML@Lipperadvising.com

 

Copyright © 2008 - 2022

 

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

  

Sunday, November 13, 2022

An Informative Week with Many Questions - Weekly Blog # 759




Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


An Informative Week with Many Questions

 

 Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018 –

                   

 

 

CPI Thursday Morning Pivot or Rotation? 

The readings for the Consumer Price Index and its components were announced before the market opened on Thursday. They were not as high as many expected and market participants treated the less bad news as good news. Many chose to believe the less bad news would embolden the Fed to reduce the size of expected interest rate increases. In effect, the Fed was expected to “pivot”, messaging the market that inflationary increases would be reduced. Their enthusiastic response to the gap opening of the market was not narrowed on either Thursday or Friday.  

 

Market analysts believe that price gaps must be closed before the market can move in the direction of the gap. Most of the time this is the case, but not always. It may take a while. 

 

Market pivots tend to be infrequent, and partially reversed quickly. They can have limited long-term predicative value. However, they can be an early identifier of a meaningful rotation. In this case, the odds seem to favor this pivot not being a significant rotational change. My thinking is based on two inputs. 

 

1.  The mid-term election was largely motivated by a vote against the other side’s leaders and not by a vote in favor of positive growth strategies. Both parties have leadership problems. The Democrats have no fresh leadership with a significant following. The Republicans in some cases did not field attractive candidates and did not match the opposition’s operational talents. With the House of Representatives in the hands of the Republicans, I expect little in the way of new legislation. Many of the expected Executive Orders will also wind up in court. Stagflation will likely be the result. 

2.  Transactional volume will likely be less than expected in a normal bull market. Numerous brokerage firms, investment advisers, and investment bankers, are cutting back on lower producers or those too well compensated.

 

T. Rowe Price Lessons for Investors 

(The following discussion should not be interpreted as a recommendation. T. Rowe is an old personal holding. I have known its CEOs going back to Mr. Price. The firm is investing its capital on broadening its domestic and international marketing and is also developing new distribution channels. Doing so will take time and money to reach the firm’s desired profitability levels. A topic I can address off-line.)

 

T. Rowe Numbers for the Week ended November 11th

  • Opened $103.71, closed $133.34 
  • Monday-Wednesday share volume in millions of shares:  1.74, 1.85, 1.86 
  • Thursday and Friday share volume: 4.49, 5.55 
  • Weekly Price Gains: DJ Asset Managers Average +13.92%, T. Rowe +28.57% 
  • Institutional Ownership 77.12 % 
  • Top 4 shareholders own 26.62 % 
  • Thursday’s gap of 5.48% not closed on Friday 

 

While the company is listed on the NYSE, it is essentially an institutional stock owned in some respect by competitors. The size of the price gap and above average gain demonstrates the lack of liquidity on the upside. I don’t know what the liquidity and potential price gap will be on the downside.  

 

Another hint of the professional market dominating the NASDAQ marketplace were the weekly declines as percentage of shares traded: 21.16% for the NYSE vs. 32.85% for the NASDAQ. 

 

Other Thoughts of the Week 

  • The IMF believes 1/3 of the world is in recession 
  • 7 out of 10 large battery producers are in China 
  • With the 2-year and 30-year US Treasury yields at 4.32% and 4.08% respectively, it suggests the minimum expected return on high grade paper will be required for a long time by investors. Could it also mean that this is the maximum safe distribution from high quality accounts in order to preserve principal? 

 

Should real estate investing be divided between current income production and the conversion profits from changing the nature of the property? 

 

Historically, roughly half of small businesses fail within five years. Isn’t it likely this will increase during a period of stagflation? Small company investing has traditionally produced higher returns when large companies are having problems during a stagnant period. However, there will also be offsetting small-cap losses during the period. 

 

What are Your Thoughts? 

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: Are You Getting Value from Numbers? - Weekly Blog # 758

Mike Lipper's Blog: Rarely Found Different Thoughts - Blog # 757

Mike Lipper's Blog: Current and Future Views are Confusing - Weekly blog # 756

 

 

 

Did someone forward you this blog? 

To receive Mike Lipper’s Blog each Monday morning, please subscribe by emailing me directly at AML@Lipperadvising.com

 

Copyright © 2008 - 2022

 

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.