Showing posts with label ADP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADP. Show all posts

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Indicators as Future Guides - Weekly Blog # 808

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Indicators as Future Guides

 

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

 

 


Since before humans began recording history, they looked to the past to predict the future, believing the Powers (God or Gods) would repeat.  This belief was fortified by the introduction of numbers which repeated. Thus, as numbers were collected to create past performance records, humans arranged them into groups of indicators to predict the future.


The problem with this approach is that we treated the collected numbers as indictive of the future. Numbers that are an incomplete historic record are an abstraction of the events. Missing from the scores are two critical elements.

  1. What else was simultaneously happening was rarely recorded within the same or relevant time period.
  2. There was little if any documented notation regarding motivations. So, we do not know why certain things were done.

 

Despite these drawbacks we enshrine indicators as the proximate causes of people’s actions. This is particularly true in using historical actions to settle contemporaneous actions in legal disputes, e.g. The Prudent Person rule.

 

(Commercially, I am happy with the reliance on past data, for it encouraged the desirability of past mutual fund performance, fee, and expense data. However, my stack of losing racetrack tickets demonstrates that the past is not the absolute prolog for the future.)

 

Nevertheless, in the absence of “divining rods” indicators are useful devices in looking for future guidance, or for a good crutch.  To reduce my reliance on placing too much importance on my investment thinking, I examen numerous indicators, and where possible what else was happening at the time, trying to ascertain motivation. From my handicapping experience, I am aware that popular choices pay off less than choices that are less popular.

 

The following, in no specific order, are some indicators I look at each week and my reactions to them.

 

Transaction Volume Location

This week on the NYSE, 77% of traded shares declined, with only 59% declining on the NASDAQ. (I believe there is currently more transaction volume by both the public and less experienced managers on the NYSE. Note, NASDAQ prices gained more this year and thus have more to give back if we are in a general decline.)

 

Corporate Announcements

Korn Ferry*, a major employee sourcing firm announced that it was dismissing 8% of its work force. (If their corporate clients were planning to hire soon, they wouldn’t be letting people go. ADP* also forecast a      decline in customer’s payrolls, which hurt their stock. Additionally, UPS predicted lower shipment volume coming from China, suggesting retail merchants are cutting back.

(* Owned in personal or managed accounts, not recommended.)

 

Congressional Indicators

A split Congress is expected to last at least through the next election. With very little legislation enacted, Democrat inflationary actions and Republican deficit cuts are unlikely to materialize.

 

Future Investment Performance

Double digit equity performance is not normal, and triple digit performance is even less so. The better performing ten-year university records are in the high single digits. 12% of American taxpayers had a net worth of over $1 million net, with the bulk of their assets in securities and their homes. Current private equity and debt investing is on average producing low single digit returns. Private investments are showing signs of aging, relying on raising new money from the public and newly managed accounts that were formally paid commissions. New and less experienced managers are entering the business.

 

Current Prices

The weekend WSJ publishes the price moves of securities indices, currencies, commodities, and ETFs. I track the % up vs. down to get an overall feel for the 72 investments. This past week only a 1/3rd were up. Of interest were the top/bottom two, Nymex Natural Gas +9.14% and Lean Hogs +6.75% vs. -6.29% for the S&P 500 Communications and -6.19% for the Dow Jones Transportation. (This suggests to me that these extreme prices are the result of sudden news items. With 3 of the 4 extremes in the +/- 6% range, it suggests this is a normal move for surprises.

 

Working Conclusions

  1. The general primary trend is moving down.
  2. In a bear market there are sudden rallies.
  3. Long-term investors should look to buy opportunities that will be different than past winners over the next ten years, or possibly five. There will be material restructuring of society, the economy, and the leadership of many political, corporate, education, and non-profit groups.

 

Share your thinking with us.

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Changing Steps - Weekly Blog # 807

Mike Lipper's Blog: Change Expected - Weekly Blog # 806

Mike Lipper's Blog: Stock Markets Move on Expectations - Weekly Blog # 805

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Sunday, October 1, 2023

Prepare to be Bullish, Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 804

 



 Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Prepare to be Bullish, Long-Term

 

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

 

 

  

(N.B. in classical documents was a Latin warning for the reader to be prepared for elements of disbelief. Subscribers are likely to disagree with some or all points made. Nevertheless, they should be digested, even though they might question your firmly held beliefs. Some of these thoughts might even reinforce your own beliefs. In medieval courts there was often a paid clown or “fool” who might cleverly utter some thoughts that no one else would dare say. Perhaps, this is the role of this blog.)

 

Focus on the Finish Line

Almost all commentary about the market, economy, and individual prices without attempting to identify the end period outcome is lacking. One lesson from the racetrack was the order of finish from a particular race. The payoff parade was the actual running of the race, not any of guessing, analysis, or handicapping bettors did before the race.

As both an investor and a registered advisor, I attempt to make a guess at either the actual or relative return after an extended period. The minimum time period I am comfortable using to make an investment decision is five years. One reason I pick five years is a lesson learned at the track about the element of surprise, or “racing luck”, in any given race. In longer races there is greater opportunity to recover from a surprise than in shorter races. The second reason to focus on a five-year period was highlighted by the communist party. (I suspect they copied various business plans in the 19th century by instituting a 5 year political term.)  Many CEOs also negotiate a five-year term with their board of directors for incentive compensation. 

 

2028!?

Most money in the securities market is invested to meet retirement obligations or long-term capital expenditure needs. Those responsible for attempting to meet these needs should be judged by their performance over longer periods.

 

While you can never clearly identify the type of period we are presently in, I think it is the responsibility of the investor to make his/her best guess, as the type of market will probably impact the results.

 

2022 Change

While no single event is likely to change the direction of society or the economy, there is often a headline occurrence which can serve as a useful label. The single change that became a turning point for me was the COVID Pandemic. The Black Plague occurred centuries ago, and there were serious pandemics in the Spanish Flu in the1920s. However, for the most part pandemics in the modern era have been rare.

 

The reaction by the US government, led by the teachers’ union, materially changed the progress of society. Focusing exclusively on the securities markets, 2022 was a down year, due to curtailment of work and formal education. Governments rarely let a crisis go to waste and by 2023 government expenditures and curtailment of selected industries had enhanced inflation. Appropriate parallels were made with FDR’s elongation of a recession into a depression. 

 

First 9 Months of 2023

Perhaps it is ironic that little New Zealand’s central bank was the first to call for a 2% inflation goal and have its current indices generate a minus in front of them. The US may not be far behind, with Real Estate -5.4%, Consumer Staples -4.76%, Healthcare -4.09%, and most concerning, the S&P 500 equal weighted up only +1.79 %.

 

Where’s the Upside?

Almost all life is cyclical, with the largest gains resulting after major declines. The longer the current period of stagflation, the longer the hidden actions of building future earnings power will be at work.

 

On a longer-term basis, continued federal government deficits are a symptom of important twin deficits. Capable management throughout society, and the inability of the educational system to produce students suitable for current jobs. From pre-K to PhD, schools are producing unmotivated students who are ignorant of the world and irresponsible, primarily due to the views of their instructors.

 

Parents and employers are slowly exerting pressures for change, while businesses are evolving to meet the current needs of their customers. A non-recommended example is ADP, a company in our private financial services fund. The company started 74 years ago as a payroll service business. Today, with over one million clients, they have evolved into a Human Capital Management business providing a much larger contribution to their clients. 

 

The Public Accounting Oversight Board has stated that they are finding an alarming number of errors in audits. We are finding the same trend in providing many services to clients, which presents an opportunity. One other opportunity might be the mismatching of expected industrial demand for “modern” cars, data centers, and equipment to change the climate. To support these efforts there is a need for large quantities of high-grade steel production and there are no provisions to expend production.

 

Savings, possibly the biggest contributor to the value of stock prices in 2028 will be in the hands of a new generation of political leaders and managements of profits and non-profits. Hopefully they will make better decisions than in the recent past.

 

Please share with me your thoughts.

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Selling: Art & Risks, Current & Later - Weekly Blog # 803

Mike Lipper's Blog: Investment Thinking During a Lull - Weekly Blog # 802

Mike Lipper's Blog: Need For a Correction Decline - Weekly Blog # 801

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Saturday, December 3, 2022

Week Divided: Believers vs Investors - Weekly Blog # 762

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Week Divided: Believers vs Investors

 

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

            

             

 

You Are What You Read

Early last week US stock market indices rose gently. The pundits’ view inflation as having peaked globally, with “factory gate and commodity prices, shipping rates and inflation expectations have begun to subside”. The Federal Reserve is expected to reduce the acceleration of interest rates shortly.

 

Meanwhile, Washington was simultaneously trying to avoid a national rail strike by imposing additional costs on the railroads. These costs would be imposed on all using freight delivered by rail and would encourage others to raise labor demands, which if successful would lead to higher prices.

 

If there is going to be a recession, believers think it will be short-lived and shallow.

 

What causes Inflation?

Inflation is created by demand exceeding available supply. Rarely it is caused by free markets working on their own.

 

Our current inflation started with the last two Presidents who for political reasons flooded the economy with grants. These grants were beyond the immediate need of the unfortunate who required help. This approach is hardly new, it was implemented in ancient Greece and Rome and is still practiced in numerous countries today. These grants avoid the laws prohibiting bribery but encourage dependence on elected officials or parties.

 

On day one the current administration went even further by restricting supply. They first killed the pipelines then implemented regulations forcing providers to raise prices to cover government mandated expenses.

 

To avoid taking responsibility for inflation the Government turned to the Fed, utilizing it as a hammer to beat down the rate of inflation. The Fed was like a person given only a hammer to build a home, they only had the ability to use interest rates to curtail demand.

 

Business leaders eventually recognized that curtailed demand would likely lead to lower revenues and consequently started to cut back on their current and future labor force.

 

One example of this is the broker/dealer community. While an index of publicly traded broker/dealers is close to its all-time high, leading firms are laying people off. Evidenced of this can be seen in a recent statement by the CEO of Morgan Stanley. (Stock is held in our financial services fund)

 

This message is being read and acted upon. ADP in their latest survey indicated that private sector employment is at the lowest it has seen in two years. (Also held in our financial services private fund)

 

What Does the Data Say?

While both concurrent and lagging indicators are slowly rising, the leading indicator is dropping.

 

IBES, via Refinitiv, is predicting S&P 500 net income will show a -3.6% decline in the fourth quarter. The first three quarters in 2023 will be +0.7%, -0.9%, and +3.5%, respectively.

 

Bank of America’s reminds us that December will most likely be an up month. Nevertheless, they predict a global recession, the reopening of China, and re-shoring in Europe and the US in 2023.

 

Two Other Views

Market indices are being influenced by their leading components. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is the best performing index. It is both closest to its former high and has the biggest gain from its most recent low. The DJIA performance has been driven by its goods producing and selling companies, which are not normally its best investments.

 

The Standard & Poor’s composite index is market capitalization weighted. Something that is most useful to investment institutions managing large single portfolios, deemed to be high quality companies.

 

The NASDAQ Composite is now made up of companies that for one reason or another don’t list on the “big board”. In terms of the number of shares traded it is the largest stock exchange in the world, followed by the London Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is third on the list, but probably has more capital listed than others.

 

Nevertheless, the NASDAQ often leads the US and many other exchanges in terms of performance. Perhaps it is due to the fact that it has younger and faster growing companies. (We also own its shares in our financial services fund.)

 

I pay particular attention to NASDAQ performance compared to the NYSE. I noted with some concern that the NYSE had 89 stocks achieving a new high and 44 a new low on Friday. The NASDAQ had 97 new highs and 128 new lows. Since the NASDAQ has more listed companies, I am not disturbed by the number of new highs. Unless this is an aberration, the sharp difference in the number of new lows relative to the number of new highs could be a warning. I will follow carefully

 

One of the most thoughtful large mutual fund management companies is the Capital Group in Los Angeles. It has been investing beyond US borders for many years and summed up why in the five points listed below:

  1. International investing is about companies not countries.
  2. A strong US dollar won’t last forever. (Dropping recently)
  3. Dividend opportunities are greater outside the US
  4. New economy depends on old industries
  5. Not all of the best stocks are in the US

 

This is why I believe it is prudent to have some money invested beyond US borders.  

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: This Was The Week That Wasn’t - Weekly Blog # 761

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

 

 

 

 Did someone forward you this blog? 

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Copyright © 2008 - 2022

 

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

  

 

Sunday, August 14, 2022

TIME TO PRUNE? - Weekly Blog # 746

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

TIME TO PRUNE?

 

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

 

 

 

Season & Direction

Many businesspeople and some investors normally consider changing plans in September, focusing on the ends of December and January. Many will include the results of the mid-term elections in their timing decision.

 

Some merchants will focus on the end of January, which ends the retail trade year. With possible inventories out of balance and some uncertainty over shipments, particularly from Asia, there is a premium on having the correct inventories to sell quickly, utilizing a diminished senior sales staff.

 

Like Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett, my preferred holding period is forever. In my humble experience, there are times when it is wise to consider pruning the portfolio. Since the earliest investors were farmers, periodic pruning was normal. Even the best portfolio managers follow professional gardeners and prune their portfolios. A good portfolio is more than an accidental collection of securities. A sound portfolio should work well in most non-extreme markets.


As a contrarian I do not accept we have entered a new “Bull Market”. I believe a new market cycle begins from a prior market’s beginning point. In this case, from its prior peak. What we are currently experiencing is a normal rally in a “bear market”. The main reason for this belief is that we have not even begun to address many of the causes of the last bull market’s problems, other than simply prices.

 

I regularly admit that I can be wrong. I urge investors to keep their pruning instruments handy on the chance that I am correct and equity markets decline. Pruning is a necessary tool for the survival of successful portfolio managers.

 

The Need to Prune

The reason one prunes is that it is an essential first step in repositioning the portfolio. The timing of the decision is not necessarily dependent on knowing what to add to the portfolio immediately.

 

There are two motivations to prune. The first is to reduce the level of panic when the market is in freefall. The second, which may not come from the first, is to build a buying reserve. Opportunities are easier to judge when one does not have to decide what to sell before you buy.

 

Voluntary & Involuntary Pruning

Since we have established the necessity to prune, the first way to do it is by the calendar, and the second is by the performance of the market.

 

I have already suggested a calendar prompt, which may be particularly apt in this troubled year. Using September as a month to make financial decisions may make unusual sense. It is the end of the US federal fiscal year and the beginning of the fall shopping season.

 

Some pundits are saying we have entered a new “bull market”. However, history suggests that a new bull market is usually led by new groups of stocks.  The current leaders appear to once again be large-cap technology growth stocks. Going back to the old leaders suggests many of the pundits are failing to look for new leaders, ignoring many fund managers signaling caution.

 

One quick filter that could suggest candidates for pruning is measuring the growth of operating earnings between pre-COVID 2019 and 2021. If these operating earning did not rise 10% or more, an analyst should question a replay of old leadership being conducive to doing well.

 

There are other filters such as evaluating whether the management of competitors has deteriorated or improved, and/or whether price and volume has materially changed. The key is to find some reason to do what racetrack handicappers do, which is to throw out a particularly bad race in assessing the future.

 

I have been a beneficiary of the involuntary pruning of positions held for some time, which made me question why they were continued to be attractive. (Please do not treat these examples as recommendations, which should only be made based on client needs and temperament.) The following discussion of five occurrences result from my background in the financial services industry, although the lessons can be profitably used in other sectors too.

 

ADP>CDK Global

I recognize my investing should be broader than the more familiar targets of mutual fund management companies and broker/dealers. Automatic Data Processing’s (ADP) historic basic business was relieving companies of their payroll processing and payment responsibility. They replaced commercial banks who initially dominated the field. ADP had superior data skills and a lower cost structure. They also learned the wonders of “free float” from Warren Buffett. Earning short-term interest on the payroll account. Since I was convinced the number of payrolls in the US were in a secular growth pattern, this stock was a good “common denominator” base position for a financial services fund.

 

As is often the case when one buys a good company, there may be a “kicker” in the purchase. ADP purchased or originated other financial services activities. but As good as many of these were, they were not as productive as ADP itself. Their usual approach was to spin-off these companies to their shareholders, and a number of good ones went public.

 

One of these spin-offs was CDK Global, which provides data services to automobile dealers, automating their sales and service appointments. The number of individual auto dealers has been dropping and the number of larger multiple brand dealers has been growing. (Berkshire, Alleghany, and the Washington Post, among others, are aggregators.) As CDK’s European business was in the process of being sold, its US activities sold separately at a good price. Thus, we involuntarily had a cash infusion during the “bear market”.

 

I kept ADP, who used its strong connections providing payroll services to assist clients in their hiring of financial services and other specialist. By the time this pattern became visible, they were already developing the business of “renting” employees to their clients and others. Initially it was in the financial services business but expanded to other fields as well. This “PEO” business made continued ownership of ADP even more attractive.)

 

Little “Berkshire” Joins the Big One

Alleghany Corp was the old Kirby family holding company with a long history of owning interesting companies, including IDS the forerunner of today’s Ameriprise. Alleghany is largely an interesting collection of casualty insurance companies, plus a collection of minority interests in a wide portfolio of ventures. Alleghany’s capable CEO recently retired and was replaced by a former CEO of General Reinsurance, which was acquired by Berkshire Hathaway. Alleghany is very familiar to Berkshire, so it was an easy decision for Mr. Buffett to make a cash acquisition offer for Allegheny to close later this year, at a record price. (No competing bid came in!)

 

Aetna>CVS Health and Eaton Vance

Two other holdings got new owners through a stock deal because they recognized a major change in the natures of their businesses.

 

As a newly married young US Marine Corps officer I purchased a life insurance policy. When I entered the financial services field, I realized I had bought the wrong product from Aetna if I didn’t die early. Years later it became clear to me that the cost of selling insurance was too expensive. Aetna’s management saw the same thing. They realized the healthcare industry had much better prospects, as did their competitor Cigna. Aetna bought the larger CVS drug store chain. By combining its healthcare funding and processing capabilities with the store fronts. It then put medical professionals in the stores. and They were better addressing the needs of the public than by serving each of them separately. (In previous blogs I mentioned three major sectors growing less efficient and not doing a good job: schooling, defense, and healthcare. CVS health is addressing some of the issues involved with the latter, which is one of the many causes of inflation and lack of growth.)

 

Eaton Vance is one of the oldest US mutual fund management companies. They have been one of the more innovative management companies developing new vehicles for institutional and individual investors. But the game has changed. Their original base was being one of two Boston based investment advisors dealing with rich clients and offering funds for the related but less wealthy retail accounts. They sold their mutual funds and closed-end funds through commissions salespeople at major brokerage houses. The business changed with individual brokers restyling themselves as wealth managers, earning annual fees rather than commissions. These wealth managers have inserted themselves between the fund complex and the ultimate client. This has had two effects. The wealth manager feels compelled to prove his/her worth by having an opinion separate from that expressed by the asset manager at the fund company. All money management accounts lose money for the provider of investment services on day-one of the relationships with the client. The client moves into a profit position with the asset manager over time. There is less effort in managing the account than getting it. In practice, the money stays with the wealth manager for less time, so the economic value of the relationship declines. In addition, Eaton Vance’s competitive strength is in sophisticated fixed income and tax managed products. With interest rates going lower, their book of business was becoming less profitable. A merger into Morgan Stanley locked in their largest wire-house distributor and opened international distribution opportunities.

 

Thus, each of these involuntary prunings helped the owners of the accounts I manage.

 

Weekly Insights

  1. The US Treasury inverted yield curves persist, with the 2-year yield higher (3.257%) than the 10-year (2.848%) and 30-year (3.117%). The bond market still sees a recession.
  2. In a volatile week, the best performing mutual fund investment objective was Natural Resources +8.24%, with General US Treasury -2.36% being the worst for the week ended Thursday.
  3. The weekend edition of The Wall Street Journal tracks the prices of 72 stock indices, and index funds, commodities, and currencies. 93% were higher, catching Friday’s exuberance. The two that generated losses of 1% or more were the WSJ Dollar Index -1.05% and the Russian ruble -2.77%. Both could be of significance.  

 

 

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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/08/investors-politicians-other-children.html

 

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/07/time-to-be-contrary-weekly-blog-741.html

 

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/07/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

 

 

 

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, October 31, 2021

Securities Analysis as Taught Leads to Volatility - Weekly Blog # 705

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Securities Analysis as Taught Leads to Volatility


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




The long-term history of making money in the market is not  following the majority  with their money. In simple terms, choosing not to conform with what others are doing. Winning in the market means converting some of the wealth of others, often the majority, to our own. This maneuver requires using different approaches and tools than others use.

 

Sector Bets Fail to Produce Top Results

The academic course on Securities Analysis is taught as a companion course to accounting, or worse, macro-economics. Both work on past history and have precious little to do with future movements of companies, stocks, or economies. More useful studies would instead focus on profits and securities. 

All too often securities selection processes screen for companies which appear to be in the same industry, as measured by misleading government data. As a junior analyst I was assigned the steel industry. I quickly discovered that although the number of steel companies was small, it was a mixed bag of companies. You could divide the group by the location of their headquarters and proximity to critical resources, usually coal, or to a growing customer base. In this case an investor did far better with Inland Steel, based in steel-short Chicago, rather than in Pittsburg and West Virginia coal country. 

Another worthwhile distinction was the cost and quality of labor. In the early days of the externalization of producing payrolls, commercial banks were prominent. However, overtime they lost market share and eventually lost the entire market to independent payroll service providers who provided better services. They provided more help filing payroll tax returns and offered lower prices, due to their labor not being paid bank-type overhead. Today the payroll market is dominated by service companies with extensive and modern computer systems, which are good at servicing. (Our accounts own ADP.)

A final example is computers. Many of the large industrial companies manufactured the early computers, the biggest and best being IBM, a stock my grandparents owned. The key to their success was not only adequate technology, but superior leasing prices and great sales engineers. IBM’s top salesman regularly presented to Wall Street and was a missionary sales person. However, the industry changed from massive main frames taking up large airconditioned rooms, to desktop personal computers whose parts could be produced in low-cost regions of the world and could be assembled elsewhere. 

Dell started out by taking customer orders for computers which could be customize and air shipped to customers. Today, many believe Apple (owned in our accounts) is the leading company. This is the result of the late Steve Jobs’ focus on style and ease of use. His most important achievement however was handpicking his successor, Tim Cook, an expert known for supply management and development. What relatively few investors appreciate is its global network of Apple Stores and a growing mail order business generating repeat business, essentially building its own annuity business. (Remember, US automakers had market level price/earnings ratios when customers replaced cars every three years with newer models.)

Less popular ways of analyzing securities included: 

  • Paying more attention to insufficient supply than excess demand.
  • Focusing on differences in manufacturing approaches and costs.
  • Understanding the personalities of key operational people vs known leaders and their educational biases.


We Don’t Create Winners, Losers Do

No matter how prescient and bright we are, to have great results we need others to create attractive entry prices and unreasonably excessive exit prices. Utilizing these as working assumptions, I am getting nervous about the flow of institutional and individual money in private equity/debt (private capital). For many years there were more good private companies offering participation in their attractive futures than potential investors. They attracted investors with relatively low entry prices. 

Recently we have seen a reversal, with a huge flows of institutional and individual money seeking to exit the public markets and enter the private markets. By definition, entry prices either directly rose or the firms had to carry senior debt prior to generating private capital returns. There is so much reversal of traditional roles that one of the oldest buyout firms, with a great long-term record, is converting some of their US and European investments to a publicly traded fund. For some of its investments Sequoia is trading up in liquidity.

One of the disturbing concerns in the privates market is the number of new advisers that have entered the market. They have increased the number of funds and are spreading the investment talent more thinly. In response, T. Rowe Price, an experienced investor in privates, is buying an existing manager to get the necessary talent in an increasingly competitive market. (Owned in Financial Services Fund accounts)

A number of well-known university and institutional portfolios have announced performance in excess of 40% for the fiscal year ended June 30. Some are probably reporting private investments with at least a quarter’s lag. (My guess is performance for the year ended March was better than the year ended June 30.) Most investors did not do as well and consequently some are likely to pile into an overheated private market with scarce investment talent. The history of investment returns is that it is extremely rare to find a manager who can consistently return over 20%, which is roughly three times the growth of industrial profits. The organizations that reported 40%+ profits undoubtedly benefitted from lower entry prices and better terms than is currently on offer. 

I am a long-term member of the investment committee of Caltech, an internally managed investment account with a talented staff. They have put a cap on their exposure to buyouts and venture capital. I applaud this decision because of the history of hedge fund performance. It shows that even very good hedge funds suffer when a minority of hedge funds experience serious liquidity problems. This was in part because of debt, but some of their holdings were also owned by trading interests desperate to liquidate some of their excessively leveraged holdings created by falling prices. This is a classic example of others causing some investors to have poor results.

Moody’s is also concerned about the rapid growth of inexperienced managers offering private capital vehicles. The credit-rater was criticized for the exponential growth of CMOs. (Moody’s recovered, and just this week was selling at a record stock price. Moody’s is owned in our managed and personal accounts.)


Historical Odds of Equity Bear Market

There is wisdom in the saying that history does not repeat (exactly), but rhymes. The ebb and flow of markets are driven by emotional excesses, with investors reacting to various stimuluses. I previously mentioned a successful pension fund manager liquidating his equity portfolio after it gained 20% in a calendar year, reinvesting the proceeds at the beginning of the next year. He produced a record absent of large losses, with reasonably good gains on the upside.

We may be approaching a “rhyming event”. I feel more confident taking a contradictory view when it is supported by large scale numbers. The US Diversified Equity Funds (USDE) have combined total net assets of $12.4 Trillion, representing 2/3rds of the aggregate assets in equity funds. According to my old firm’s weekly report, the year-to-date average gain was +21.01%, vs a 3-year average gain of +19.21%, and a 5-year average of +16.76%. More concerning is only 4 of the 18 separate investment objectives within the USDE bucket produced over 20% 5-year annualized growth rates. Of the 14 Sector Equity funds, only 2 grew +20%, and only the World Sector Fund average gained 20%+. At the individual fund level, only 3 of the 25 largest funds produced 20% growth rates. During the same 5-year period, the average taxable fixed income fund gained 3.34%, and the average high yield bond fund grew 5.47%.

Recently, a number of endowments reported gains of over 40% for their June Fiscal years, driven by successful private equity/venture capital investments. Some of these private investments were reported on a logged basis. Remember, in many cases they had spectacular performance through March, and have been relatively flat since then.

The cyclical nature of human emotions suggests that when earnings growth does not support lofty valuations, we are likely to have a “rhyming event”.


What do you think? 




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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/are-we-listening-as-history-is.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/guessing-what-too-quiet-stock-markets.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/what-is-problem-weekly-blog-702.html




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