Sunday, March 22, 2026

Bifocal Analysis: Short & Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 933

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Bifocal Analysis: Short & Long-Term

 

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

 

 

 

Short-Term

The data is so negative that brief and violent rallies are to be expected. Net stock selling has consistently outpaced buying for each of the last four weeks. For example, 85% of the NYSE stocks and 81% of NASDAQ stocks fell in the latest week. As Barron’s noted “cash is looking more appealing since stock market hedges, bonds, and gold are no longer working.” Employers are barely replacing the more expensive retiring labor in most manufacturing functions.

 

There is a new player in the game, private credit. For the most part issuers of private credit instruments don’t qualify for bank loans, and they don’t have long credit histories either. Much of this paper is held in new funds, which are being sold to retail channels. When one of these loans gets in trouble it is referred to as a “cockroach”. Jaime Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase (*) warned that where there is one “cockroach” there is likely to be more.

(*) JPM shares are owned in managed accounts.

 

Market analysts are concerned that the S&P 500 Index has been locked in a narrow 300-point band for the last four months, with optimists and pessimist exchanging positions. This week, the lower boundary line was briefly pierced. If the “500” drops 3% more, then the 400-point range will become a difficult region for the market to rise beyond for quite a period. This fear may briefly spark some rallies from the derivative and short players.

 

Longer-Term Implications of History

One purpose of recorded history is to explain what happened, at least in the eyes of the winning survivors. The survivors, or their intellectual heirs, construct rules as to why certain actions are repeated. If there are enough repetitions the rules become dictum, even though the battle conditions are different. We are taught from a very early age to follow rules without an understanding of the conditions that created them. This blind acceptance of rules has led to occasional great mistakes in politics, the military, sports, families, business, and of course investing. Historic labels often become shorthand for rules. For instance: Adam and Eve, George Washington, the NY Yankees, Democrats, Republicans, Chopin, etc.

 

As has been noted before, I learned basic analysis at the NY racetracks. One great lesson from racing lore was Man of War, which had 25 winning races in a row but lost his last race to an unknown horse named Upstart. Proving unexpected things can and occasionally do happen. My self-appointed task at the track was to guess the chance of the unexpected happening.

 

Applying the racetrack experience to investing I looked at the historical record of Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger for stocks and companies in which to invest. In an oversimplification there were at least three characteristics the winners had in common, the nature of customers, the characteristics of the workforce, and the discipline of integrity. (I suspect the last was penned by his long-term counsel and director Ron Olson, a fellow ex-trustee of Caltech.)

 

If the US stock market does decline materially in the period ahead, I will try to apply the track lessons learned. Charlie Munger taught Warren Buffett it was better to buy a good company at a reasonable price and not wait for a cheap price. For many years there were great companies we didn’t own because they were selling way above a reasonable price. I expect a number of these “beauties” will be available at reasonable prices during the next depression.

 

Next Depression

I don’t know when it will happen but based on human nature, I expect it to happen. The US has had only four Presidents that were restructurers: Andrew Jackson, Teddy Roosevelt, FDR, and Trump. Below are some parallels to the 1930-1942 depression:

  • Each challenged the constitution and fought with the courts
  • Weakened the controls on the banks
  • Set the stage for war
  • Weakened the currency
  • Encouraged the retail public to invest in speculative vehicles
  • Changed how the US was governed
  • All Presidents, except Andrew Jackson, were involved with Japan

No historical comparison is identical, and the future may be different than the past, but odds favor a closer similarity.

 

Please share your views, there is much to learn.

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: This week’s Dichotomy/Bifocals Needed - Weekly Blog # 932

Mike Lipper's Blog: Premature: Buying Program to Begin Soon? - Weekly Blog # 931

Mike Lipper's Blog: Expectations Changing? - Weekly Blog # 930

 

 

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