Sunday, January 28, 2024

Worth vs Price Historically - Weekly Blog # 821

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Worth vs Price Historically

 

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

 



Merchants Needed

Despite what many believe is the oldest profession, growers and herders were the first tribes to survive. As both tribes frequently had more of their own product than necessary, they needed to exchange their excess production with members of the other tribe. Both tribes were skilled in their own production but did not fully understand the other tribe’s costs. Initially, the agreed price was in terms of quantities between the two commodities (x sheep for y bales of cotton).

 

Fairly quickly, solely mathematical terms of exchange (3x for 5y) became insufficient in terms of defining the starting quantity and conditions of transfer. The exchanging parties often did not know or trust the other party. Thus, there was a need for a middleman to determine an agreed price between buyer and seller. The middleman would necessarily be known or recognized by the would-be traders as someone who could be reasonably trusted and was capable of developing accepted terms of trade.

 

With buyers and sellers geographically separate, both in terms of distance and possibly language, the value of a somewhat trusted third party became even more important. Still further elements became essential, a recognized type of money, or later, credit.

 

Over time, the third parties evolved into merchant houses or merchant banks. When dealing across borders and cultures the participants were often happier if the money or credit exchanged was issued by a bank, especially if the bank backed by a government with a wealthy family behind it. At this point these transactions utilized money in the form of coins convertible into known quantities of precious metals.

 

Foreign Exchange

When the western world was ruled by Rome, the value was understood to represent an understood bundle of goods and services. This worked well when the government controlled the coinage. A problem arose when government expenses for war or extravagant expenses rose beyond an acceptable level of taxes paid. A conflict that exists today.

 

Governments addressed the problem by gradually debasing the currency, such as substituting copper and other base metals for precious metals. As governments did this differently, the purchasing power of their money became dissimilar to one another, both in ancient times and today.

 

Those who suffer from a liberal arts education are taught incorrectly that the English Magna Carta was forced by the public on the English king. The real cause resulted from the Barons revolting against the increased tax load on their land. The increased tax load was caused by the expense of the Crusades and the ransom paid for the release of their king who was held hostage in Europe.

 

Today our federal government is changing the rate of taxation and how it is applied to both income and estates. Since foreigners derive earnings from activities and trade in the United States, they react by reducing their exposure to the US dollar, reducing its value. This is currently an issue for an investment committee on which I sit. In looking at our portfolio and foreign expenses at the last meeting, I suggested we begin tracking the changing value of the dollar. It is also something I need to do in looking at portfolio selection.

 

A Historic Portfolio Change

(Please do not take this discussion as a recommendation, as that requires careful analysis of the needs of an account. T. Rowe Price is held in a personal account and some client accounts.)

 

The man, T. Rowe Price, started his investment counsel firm in 1937, a year of a few months of gains in a period of stagflation. Mr. Price was one of a few managers investing in growth stocks at the time. Sometime after the conclusion of WWII he became concerned that the inflationary habit had taken over management of the economy and by 1979 he was disturbed about how the US was doing. He started managing money to graduate from FDR’s New Deal, implementing a philosophy he called New ERA in a new fund concerned about government led inflation. In 1979 George Roach became his assistant, and I believe in 1997 he became the portfolio manager. He later became President of the firm. George kept with Mr. Prices’ concerns, but he allowed the rest of the firm to continue with their growth stock orientation, which produced a very commendable record.

 

Prior to December 2023

The T. Rowe Price New Era Fund was managed with extreme consciousness of inflation. This translated into investing in common stocks of companies expected to rise in the future as inflation rose by investing in assets, not earnings. Most followers of the New Era fund viewed it as a commodities fund because that is what the portfolio looked like.

 

Shinwoo Kim has been the portfolio manager for New Era since 2021 and has been with T. Rowe since 2009. He has proclaimed that commodities have been and are in a long bear market ever since he became portfolio manager, but that changed in December. On the first of December hea as portfolio manager of New Era affected a considerable change in its portfolio, returning it to Mr. Prices’ basic concerns.  

 

Kim feels the US has migrated to a world where inflation and excessive federal government spending is the principal driver of investments. After ten years he has concluded, and convinced the rest of his investment committee, that the commodity cycle is about to change. He expects future investments to benefit from cyclical earnings growth, which will produce better results than ownership in highly valued assets.

As a natural resource fund New Era has not done poorly, compounding at +2.97% compared to the average Natural Resources Fund’s +2.69% over the past ten years. I suspect this outcome was largely the result of its yield, not earnings or Price/Earnings expansion and/or P/E expansion. (The result was not measured against the changing value of the dollar.)

Economists have tagged the price of copper as Dr. Copper. As the price of copper has performed better than most economists over time. The use of copper by the electrical/electronic industries and construction activity gives its use a cyclical growth trend. Other structural changes expected to benefit the portfolio include Uranium and US shale production. The fund believes the long-term outlook for production in Marcellus/Utica as well as Permian is understated. Additional attractive areas for investment include industrial gases and pipelines. (This brings to mind Berkshire Hathaway- a position owned in our personal and managed accounts)

 

 

 

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Mike Lipper's Blog: 2 Media Sins Likely to Hurt Investors - Weekly Blog # 820

Mike Lipper's Blog: “SMART MONEY” Acts Selectively - Weekly Blog # 819

Mike Lipper's Blog: Solo Messaging is Meaningless - Weekly Blog # 818

 

 

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Sunday, January 21, 2024

2 Media Sins Likely to Hurt Investors - Weekly Blog # 820

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

2 Media Sins Likely to Hurt Investors

 

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

 

 

 

Media Motivations

  1. Almost everyone likes to make people happy.
  2. Unlike in the past, some have recognized that good news sells more advertising than bad news.
  3. Most media swings from the political left.
  4. The media thinks as consumers do, not as investors do.

 

“Americans Feel More Optimistic About Economy”

“Feeling Sunnier on the Economy”

The first headline is from Saturday’s Wall Street Journal in the “news” section, not the editorial page. The second is from the Washington Post,

the DC trade press.

 

First Sin

The WSJ newsroom pitching to their perceived audience ignores the dichotomy between the “happy talk “generated by Washington and news of layoffs, closings, and bankruptcies. (Risks to readers losing jobs and eventually investment money.)

 

Economic stimulus through executive order or budget manipulation is used to inflate the economy. It is structured to buy votes from specific segments of the population. Businesses are simultaneously laying-off people, closing facilities, and cutting back on expansion plans. These businesses do not think the future looks good.

 

My guess is that business leaders are processing the math something like this. Actual or expected sales are not growing at all when price increases are deducted. Lay-offs of 3% are largely replacements for retirees, or for bad hiring decisions. Reductions of 10%+ are an expression of lower expected demand, or anticipation of unfulfilled expected improvements in the quality of work. For example, regularly cutting the bottom 10% of people to improve production at all levels. (This has been the annual policy of Goldman Sachs and others, even before receiving lower overall fees for their work.)

 

Since the beginning of recorded history, we have experienced expansions and contractions, or if you prefer booms and recessions. The last three administrations have added to expansions through inflationary spending. Government spending was less than the private funded expansion, although that is no longer true considering accelerating deficits. Thus, we are due for a contraction. In some ways the sooner the better, as it will help reduce the cumulative deficit accumulation. The exact timing of this contraction is beyond the skill level of most prognosticators. However, we should be forewarned that this is not what the media is currently doing.

 

Second Sin

On Friday the S&P 500 Index slightly exceeded its two-year old record. (There was no acknowledgement in the press concerning the calculation being market capitalization weighted. This means that the index is weighted and influenced by a minority of the universe. In other words, by the majority of the money, not the majority of investors. This distinction favors those trying to raise taxes and political contributions.)

 

Some believe this is a sign of a new bull market, as investors have profits in a minority of the S&P 500 stocks. Recent trading provides some perspective. On Friday there were 2918 stocks traded on the NYSE, of which 855 “big board” stocks declined. (More than the entire S&P 500.) The highest price for the NASDAQ Composite Index was on November 19th, 2021. So, it is not yet a bull market for NASDAQ stocks. As of Friday, 4412 NASDAQ stocks traded compared to 2918 on the NYSE.

 

I consequently do not consider the market being at a new high, as most stocks are not at a new high. Furthermore, older market analysts believe a former turning point must be exceeded by at least 3% to signify a continuing move. To illustrate the importance of this test. The price hit a high at the end of 1929 and did not return to that level until September 1954, or about 25 years later. (No warning from the media and other prognosticators.)

 

Some Do Pay Attention to Warnings

In many ways the game of professional football is similar to professional investing. This week Jason Kelce, center for the Philadelphia Eagles and the least well-known football brother, announced his retirement. He is reportedly in good health, although he is concerned for his young daughters and the rest of his family. His concerns center around chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a mental health condition believed to come from head injuries. CTE is something an all-pro center could get. Stage 1 of the injury can produce depression, anxiety, and impulsive/aggressive behavior. (For many years as an investment adviser to the National Football League and the NFL Players Association who had retired players as trustees, I have witnessed such behavior.) His retirement probably cost him a few very high paying years, hopefully in exchange for many more years with his young daughters. SIMILAR HOPES ARE WISHED FOR INVESTORS OVEREXPOSED TO INVESTMENT RISKS.

 

For A Long-Term Estate Portfolio

One should not focus primarily on today’s purchase price, but a believed future value that addresses your heirs’ future needs. Today’s prices represent opportunities to both earn and lose money. Focus on unpopular securities to reduce the potential size of losses, and hopefully increase the chance of big returns. Part of the difficulty in implementing this effort is that it requires someone who is already skilled in this art form. It requires time and patience to do the necessary research yourself.

 

I am willing to incur the expense of using others for most of the work, including the impact of investor flows by others. The following list of geographic locations for investment came from a recent contact with a fund that searches for these types of investments. The following list is a source for beginning a research effort, not a buy list.

 

Emerging Markets, Kazakhstan Telephone, Platinum, Palladian, Potash, South Korea, Uranium, Copper, Gold, and Chinese Securities (CSI-300 at a 5-year low)

 

Selection Concept

Passive funds have attracted more assets than active funds. Many passive funds are required to keep their portfolios in-line with an index, requiring them to buy when nervous holders are selling, and sell when their holders are buying. Assuming these movements come in waves and that many waves are emotionally driven and wrong. Does this represent a trading opportunity, as excessive trading is not well thought out? This may particularly be worth a try when only 17% of portfolio managers expect a hard landing. Another curious opportunity, long-term institutional favorite Morgan Stanley fell -4.2% and Goldman Sachs rose +0.7% (Both are owned in personal accounts and GS is in both personal and client portfolios.)

 

Question:  How are you thinking about your investments for the next year, versus how you’re thinking about your long-term investments? 

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: “SMART MONEY” Acts Selectively - Weekly Blog # 819

Mike Lipper's Blog: Solo Messaging is Meaningless - Weekly Blog # 818

Mike Lipper's Blog: Our Wishes & Perspectives - Weekly Blog # 817

 

 

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Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Sunday, January 14, 2024

“SMART MONEY” Acts Selectively - Weekly Blog # 819

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

“SMART MONEY” Acts Selectively

 

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

  

 

 

Dull Week with Some Clues

The stock market from mid-December through this Friday was flat, except for an early bubble in January. (I suspect the NASDAQ price surge resulted from the replacement of some holdings sold for tax purposes in the fourth quarter.) Market analysts suggest a flat price pattern might represent the smart money either accumulating or distributing meaningful positions. This suggests prices will either move up sharply or fall rapidly after a period of time. I will attempt to examine what I perceive as clues to future major moves.

 

NYSE and NASDAQ stocks declined for four of five days in the latest week. The DJIA rose for three days and the more professionally followed Dow Jones Transportation Index fell for three days. As a contrarian measure, analysts watch the latest weekly summary survey published by the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII). In the latest survey, participants raised their 6-month bullish prediction to +48.6 % or double their bearish guess of +24.2%. (Lucky for those who work in the market and those who live off of it. Individual investors have a good long-term record. From a contrarian viewpoint following them has value, because they are wrong at critical turning points.)

 

The number of publicly traded companies has been dropping for many years, mostly due to acquisitions, not failures. In 2023 there were 15,766 IPOs vs 17592 the year before. More significantly, the money raised dropped to $170 billion from $242 billion.

 

There are several thoughtful columnists who occasionally focus on financial history. John Authers of Bloomberg wrote “America is disinflating…disappointingly slowly.” He believes a major future expansion would require more problems than are currently visible. James Mackintosh of the WSJ warns investors that the market goes up and usually produces satisfactory returns in most 20-year periods. There are a few times it does not. (It’s important to remind investors that there can be times when investors won’t be bailed out in a given 20-year period. I wonder if that is why 30-year bonds and mortgages were created.) I believe he would have more confidence in recoveries if interest rates were set by the market and not by government fiat.

 

One problem with many economists, both within and outside government, is that they do not have enough appreciation for lessons learned from Asia and the Middle East. For example, we don’t seem to appreciate the products and technology that came to the West along the Silk Road. The following is a list of products or services that traveled the series of trans-Asian roads:

 

Silk, Hemp, Cotton, Wool, Paper (Paper Money). Fireworks (Explosives). Gunpowder, Tea, Horses, and algebra from India.

 

Working Conclusions

Recognizing that I don’t know what the future will bring, I turn to my investment/betting framework for a relatively conservative perspective. For the time period ended early 2025, I suggest there is a 60% chance of a significant US equity decline. The decline will perhaps be in the neighborhood of 20%, with an outside 50% chance of a full depression with an 80% drop. There are also two other possibilities at 20% each. First, a 5-7-year period of stagflation, and second, a 20% chance of below 4% GDP growth.

 

For estate planning purposes with a 30-year outlook, expect equity returns to be in the 5-9% range.

 

Your Thoughts?

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Solo Messaging is Meaningless - Weekly Blog # 818

Mike Lipper's Blog: Our Wishes & Perspectives - Weekly Blog # 817

Mike Lipper's Blog: Dangers “Smart Money” & Thin Markets - Weekly Blog # 816

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

 

 

Sunday, January 7, 2024

Solo Messaging is Meaningless - Weekly Blog # 818

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Solo Messaging is Meaningless

 

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

  

 

 

“The Floor” No Longer Helps

Years ago, on both the New York and London stock exchanges, it was normal for members to query the assigned market-makers for a supply/demand picture on a stock they were trading. When the system worked, specialists supplied the size of supply/demand and their opinion on the next expected price needed to clear trading levels. This system worked reasonably well until the “upstairs” trading desks of some member firms began competing for institutional size orders.

 

At that point floor specialists believed they no longer had an exclusive information advantage. Consequently, when approached for a “picture” on a stock, they were reluctant to reveal any orders left with them. It quickly became clear from their responses that they were describing their own positions, or “talking their own book”. This was far less helpful in understanding where the real market was and the prices necessary to clear nearby trading levels. Over time, this left the floor to the upstairs trading desks for stocks with institutional size interests. This led to a situation where those without good relations with the institutional trading desks were at a disadvantage. Increasingly they were isolated from the flow of business.

 

The same thing happened to the distribution of news on the economy, where the distribution of economic news became increasingly biased. Today’s biases are so strong that a substantial amount of the current “news” has lost its usefulness for investment decision making, or should have.

 

A Small Example with Larger Implications

Friday’s trading was lack-luster. The three most popular stock indices, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Standard &Poor’s 500 Index, and the NASDAQ Composite, all moved fractionally. The movement was so small that the combined three movements only totaled 0.34%. The Wall Street Journal ran the headline “Major Indexes Eked Out a Gain…” (The WSJ is better than its competitors.)

 

My problem with this is that the Russell 3000 gained the very same 0.34%. (The Russell 3000 tracks the performance of the 3000 largest stocks, including those in the DJIA, the S&P 500, and most of the NASDAQ.) The person writing the headline at the WSJ was giving some comfort to bullish investors and those on the political left.

 

The Missed Opportunity: The Dichotomy

The WSJ also published articles on three other factoids:

  1. “Supermarket giant drops Pepsi and Lays over price increases”
  2. Xerox cuts workforce by 15%.
  3. WSJ weekly prices of commodities, stock indices, ETFs, and currencies had only 16% of them rising.

 

The dichotomy is that while most of the left-leaning media is full of happy talk about expanding the economy, businesses are cutting back on people, locations, inventories, and some prices. One might say they are preparing for a recession, or stagflation. The bulls and bears not talking to each other, which is not a sound position for making investment decisions.

 

Stocks to Buy for Different Times

 In the WSJ weekly price chart, the fifth largest gainer was Healthcare. This is a sector heavily owned by institutions which has not seen many gains. Money-making opportunities look good considering the increasing amount of healthcare needed to be funded, independent of the cyclical economy for pharmaceuticals and health related services.

 

Once the economy bottoms Energy producing corporations will see demand rise, which should last for several years. One way to play this is through accounts + personal holdings in Berkshire Hathaway. (BRKA & BRKB will benefit from a large portfolio of petroleum stocks and ownership of operating utilities.)

 

We also serve investors who have multi-generational payments ahead of them. One of the few ways to play this is through stocks and funds invested in Africa and the Middle East. One of the classical ways to invest is to buy sectors under current price pressure. We think the Chinese region is well worth developing a long-term investment view.

 

Let’s Learn of Your Views.

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Our Wishes & Perspectives - Weekly Blog # 817

Mike Lipper's Blog: Dangers “Smart Money” & Thin Markets - Weekly Blog # 816

Mike Lipper's Blog: Searching For Answers - Weekly Blog # 815

 

 

Did someone forward you this blog?

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.