Showing posts with label Baltic Dry index. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baltic Dry index. Show all posts

Sunday, April 13, 2025

An Uneasy Week with Long Concerns - Weekly Blog # 884

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

An Uneasy Week with Long Concerns

 

 

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

 

                             

 

The Week that Was

Harkening back to an old London-based television program focused on the week’s changes, the following items of interest and perhaps importance crossed my computer screen:

  1.  Two brief bear-market type rallies.
  2. The US dollar broke par on Friday, finishing at 100.102. (Marcus Ashworth of Bloomberg believes that as much as some try to find a successful substitute, it can’t be found.)
  3. Price signals – The Baltic Dry Index fell to 1274 vs 1729 a year ago; The ECRI industrial price index fell to 113.27 or -4.33% from a year ago. (This index measures the prices of industrial materials needed for production e.g. metals.)
  4. Only Precious Metals and Dedicated Short mutual fund averages gained for the week ended Thursday.
  5. Volatility increased in the week, with InfoTech stocks leading with gains of +9.67% while the Hang Seng Index fell -8.47%. (Normally the high/low spread is closer to high single digits than 18 percentage points.)
  6. Market liquidity may be a major contributor to the market indices ranking year to date; DJIA -6.94%, S&P 500 -10.43%, and NASDAQ -15.14%.
  7. Both analysts at Morgan Stanley and those contributing to Seeking Alpha Quant Ratings downgraded mid-cap investment bankers and mid-sized fund manager stocks. (Compared to their larger peers they rely almost exclusively on their brains, rather than a combination of brains and capital.)

 

Longer-Term Implications

  • Howard Marks believes we have seen the best economic period in history.
  • Marcus Ashworth believes we have entered the beginnings of a new phase this week.
  • President Trump has told associates that he can tolerate a recession, but he is afraid of a depression.

 

Question: Do any of the elements mentioned in this blog aid or lead to a change in your thinking?

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Short Term Rally Expected + Long Term Odds - Weekly Blog # 883

Mike Lipper's Blog: Increase in Bearish News is Long-Term Bullish - Weekly Blog # 882

Mike Lipper's Blog: Odds Favor A Recession Followed Up by the Market - Weekly Blog # 881



 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2024

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Do You Believe Congratulations Are in Order? - Weekly Blog # 706

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Do You Believe Congratulations Are in Order?


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




Interpreting US Stock Market

Various US stock indices reached record levels last week. Does this indicate a new “bull market” or a new phase in an old one? Based on recorded history, the choice is not based largely on one’s political views, but on long-term earnings trends, dividends, and how they will be priced. While the precise answer for any future date is uncertain, the specific date is irreversible. Our job as risk managers is to guess the correct strategy today, although most long-term investors are somewhat reluctant to make major changes. 

Some investors weigh losing any significant money to the market or taxes as much more important than the write-down of inventory prices. Investors should adjust the importance of these factors in making tactical and strategic decisions. Absent these hurdles, investment decisions should be based on odds and penalties. 

Odds should be based on selected histories. For example, at the racetrack one tends to place more confidence in a horse that has developed a consistent pattern around the track. This is relatively easy to do with securities, as prices normally have a cyclical pattern. The more difficult decision is assessing the penalty for being wrong. This decision becomes easier if a specific portfolio structure is introduced, as discussed below:


Burn Rate Portfolio

In addition to anticipated future payments we should set aside a reserve for unexpected non-market related contingencies. The sum-total should be put in what insurance companies call, a “side pocket”. The critical question is how long a period of unfortunate markets the side pocket should cover before the main investment portfolio once again produces wealth for future needs. As mentioned last week, history does not exactly repeat, but rhymes. Apart from a grossly mismanaged recession in the early 1930s, most recessions end in three to five years. One might therefore want to use a five-year plan.

In today’s investment environment, one should not put the entire “burn rate portfolio” in cash. Inflation will erode the purchasing power of the dollar relative to the currencies of countries supplying our needed products and services. The most critical rule for the reserve account is being liquid. Some of the money may be needed in five working days, some within a month, and almost all within a quarter. 

Depending on the size of the account, I would be inclined to invest 50% in well-diversified, conservatively valued equities, or well-chosen mutual funds. The bulk of the remainder should be invested in high-quality corporate bonds, with maturities spread over the next five years. A relatively small amount should be invested in a retail US Treasury Money Market fund. The most important next step is to create a separate side pocket from your investments accounts.


Investment Accounts

In today’s environment the only portion of the account not invested in equities is a timed buying reserve. The key is to invest this cash out of the market, reconstructing a different buying reserve at least annually. Within the diversified investment account, one should have some market price sensitive stocks, usually selected from cyclicals. Another portion, depending upon the comfort level of the investor, should be invested in time sensitive investments, often secular and explosive growers. 

We cannot avoid being international consumers and investors today. Bear in mind that the general history of wealthy investors is to choose some investments less influenced by local governments. Within the investment account there is room to invest both aggressively and conservatively through individual equities and or mutual funds. (Because of my background of globally following fund and fund like vehicles, I rely more on funds.)


Brief Comments of Interest

  • The Chinese government has proved it can mobilize the civilian portion of its economy for war, if needed.
  • Judging by changing price/earnings ratios, stocks within the DJIA are more cyclical than those in the NASDAQ composite.
  • Growth and value stocks within the S&P 500 have performed about the same year-to-date, 30.4% vs. 31.2%.
  • A president of a long-term, low turnover fund stated that his fund’s performance of 20%+ was “not good enough”. Our analysis suggests 20% is difficult to repeat every year.

The following groups of stocks are up from their 2011 lows: S&P 500, Russell 2000, Russell Growth, Russell Value, MSCI World ex USA Small Caps, Consumer Discretionary, Consumer Staples, Financials, Health Care, and Materials.

The only three stock sector mutual fund indices generating performance over 30% in 2021 are: Lipper Financial Services +39.72%, Lipper Global Natural Resources +33.25%, and Lipper Real Estate +30.49%. Among the commodities funds the winners were: Energy Funds +84.16, Specialty Funds +44.27%, Base Metals Funds +32.22%, and General Funds +31.45%.

Four observations from T. Rowe Price:

  • The Delta variant spread appears to have peaked
  • Corporate and government debt levels are elevated
  • Chinese regulatory actions have likely peaked
  • The Baltic Dry Index recently dropped from its precipitous rise 

Of the 25 best performing funds for the week, there were 13 small caps. Additionally, 31 of the 32 S&P Dow Jones global indices were up for the week.


Question of the Week: Any changes in strategies contemplated? 




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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html


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




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 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, September 23, 2012

Investment Lessons of the Week


Previously I have written about the eventual trap of arrogance. Most politicians, and many investors will not admit to making critical mistakes. I try to be different. The only thing I promise each of our accounts is that I might make mistakes that hopefully I correct before there is too much pain. My main defense against arrogance is that I try to learn something new every single day. I have suggested this pattern to my children and grandchildren. The power of the new idea, new view, and new approach is that it forces one to relate the new with the old - and that becomes a challenge to many of our beliefs. Just this week, I have knowingly been exposed to at least five new elements to my thinking. All of these have a global context.

Logistics lead, but need to be interpreted

Last week I commented in my blog about what I learned from our visit to Mount Vernon. First, that steamship volume was increasing and that I saw many trucks from logistics companies going south on the Interstate Highway. This week a friend of mine noted that in September, the Baltic Dry Index moved from 662 to 778. What was even more encouraging is that the spot rate for the largest-sized vehicles carrying dry cargo (for example, iron ore) skyrocketed from around 2000 to 7600 this week. I believe the surge noted in iron ore shipments is due to the announced efforts to build many subway systems throughout Chinese cities. (As someone who for most of my life lived in and around New York City, the idea of relieving the roads of the clogging, expensive, and pollution generating car traffic seems to be a great idea.) To me the materially-increased infrastructure investment in China is a very practical stimulus that will use imported iron ore to make steel in local Chinese mills, a very intelligent way to address its economic slowdown.

A careful searcher for truth will almost always find some contradictory evidence. One of the oldest of all technical (market) indicators is the belief that the Dow Jones Industrial Average cannot make and hold new high levels if the Dow Jones Transportation  Average (which used to be composed of just railroads) does not confirm by making its own new high. The belief is that if the two indexes diverge they will have to find a bottom before there can be a successful sustained new high. This week the Norfolk Southern Corp. lowered its expectation for the current year’s earnings. The Dow Jones Transports declined on this news. The decline’s impact on the industrials needs to be put into perspective. The railroad is one of the largest shippers of coal in the country. Just as governments can attempt to make companies grow; e.g., solar and wind power, it can force lower sales of others. The Obama administration, along with much lower natural gas prices, is making coal an unattractive fuel for our electric utilities. Fuel for the electric utilities is not being delivered by train, but by pipelines, barges and other vehicles. Thus, as of this week I believe that we are seeing some resurgence in industrial activity, which the stock market is already discounting.

Cash to stock is becoming an easier switch

Last week I attended two investment focused meetings. In the first a large regional bank gathered some of its best potential and actual investment clients to a private lunch to hear my views on investing. They would not have taken time from their busy day if they were not already investing in equities or considering it. In our conversations they recognized that long-term they needed to be significantly exposed to the world of stocks, perhaps through funds. Everyone at the lunch could recite, in detail, their concerns about the stock market, but they still came and stayed for two hours.  One evening last week I was at a post-meeting dinner for a board on which I sit. At one point during the long dinner, a very successful second generation Wall Streeter leaned over to me to tell me he had not bought a common stock for his own account for over two years and now he was ready to buy. I suggested that he call a mutual friend of ours with whom he had successful business dealings, to help him reenter the market. He noted on his pocket pad to call our friend in the morning. These two instances suggest to me that the historic pattern of people coming into the stock market as it goes up is holding. While some of the easy money has already been made in the low volume markets, there will be opportunities at higher prices.

‘Tis the season to be “Vixed”

Many commentators have spent much time noting that there appears to be a low level of fear expressed in the options on the S&P 500 as captured in a traded index with the symbol of VIX, (CBOE Market Volatility Index). If one reads Randy Forsyth’s article in Barron’s Friday September 21, we should be prepared for problematic markets. I have lived through the October “crashes” in 1978, 1979, 1987, and 1989 but not the big one of 1929. What I had not compiled were the other autumn events that were dangerous to one’s capital base. As today’s global stock markets are reacting to government manipulated fixed income markets, recognition of the following Autumn occurrences is important:

1.    September 24th 1869: the US government sold gold  to break the “corner” that was attempted by Jay Gould and Jim Fisk.

2.    September 20, 1873: the New York Stock Exchange closed due to a panic.

3.    September 21, 1931: Great Britain’s suspension of the pound’s link to gold.

4.    September 21, 1985: the so-called Plaza Accord broke the ascent of the US dollar. (Too bad to bring that wonderful grand hotel into another round of government manipulation.)

5.    September 16, 1992: The withdrawal of Sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism and reportedly a huge winning bet by George Soros.

6.    September 23, 1998: the culmination of the Asian currency crisis which began in July 1997.


7.    September 11th, 2001: the attack on the World Trade Center in NYC.

8.    September 15th 2008: the collapse of Lehman Brothers followed the next day by the near collapse of AIG.(These were much more significant in the global fixed-income markets than in the stock markets.)


Long-term fears and where you hold your investments

Ray Dalio, the founder and co-CIO of Bridgewater Associates in an interview with CNBC  had some dark thoughts. His fear is that after a ten to fifteen year managed depression (austerity without growth), that the social tensions between various economic and ethnic classes in southern Europe may produce an appeal to some strongman/woman to take over and solve the problem; e.g. the appeal that brought Hitler to power. Much closer to home, a savvy investor shared her concerns with me. She is worried that in the US (and by some extent in other Western countries and Japan) that the medical and related costs of keeping the elderly will be too much for the younger tax paying generations to tolerate. A financial class war is what she is predicting.

I asked this smart, experienced lady how she was preparing for this with her portfolio today. In general she had foreign investments for 30-40% of her portfolio. But the bulk of the rest was in multinational companies. She uses Coca Cola as an example, which gets most of its earnings from outside the US. I am not sure that her strategy will deliver against her fears or those of Mr. Dalio.

For many years I have complained to various fund managers that displayed their portfolios on the basis of the statements they receive from their custodians. The custodians list securities on the basis as to where the entity is legally domiciled. From an analytical standpoint, I am interested where the company is making most of its operating profit. That is the country or region which will have, in general, the biggest impact on sales and operating earnings. For regulatory reasons I will probably won’t win this argument with published reports but with careful analysis I can probably guess the key sites of operating earnings power which should help in determining the strategic value of the investment. However, the concerns expressed by the lady and Mr. Dalio raise another issue.

If our current fears turn us into a refugee mentality, it is not where an entity makes its money that is important, but where are the assets and where can they be traded in a period of distress. If these fears become somewhat more widespread, we may see wealthy US investors move to vehicles that are beyond the problem areas.

Which comes first: weak currency or weak military will?

A study of history suggests that a weak military will eventually invite others to seize our assets and possibly our lives. Often the decline in military willingness to aggressively defend its homeland comes from a policy of weak currency management as it attempts to take market share away from trade counterparties by having lower prices than they do. For a generation we have seen that many Europeans will not support a strong military; e.g. in the Balkans, and we also see that the value of their currencies decline. While much has been written about Quantitative Easing Infinity,  in terms of US stimulation, on a longer-term basis the decline in the value of our currency is in effect a weak dollar policy. Combining our planned Asian withdrawals and defense expenditure cutbacks, a weak dollar policy is going to invite more trouble. As much as we don’t like to be negative, maybe we need to pay more attention to our worriers.

The bottom line: be careful and stage your money into equity vehicles with some concern as to where your assets are being housed.

What Do You Think?

In London

I will be conducting interviews and investment manager meetings in London during the week of October 8 - 12.  If you would like to meet to discuss investments, client strategies or one of my blog topics, please email me at aml@lipperadvising.com .

Blog email        
Email deliveries of my blog last week contained only the post’s title with a hyperlink to the complete blog, requiring readers to make an additional click. Unfortunately, Google changed its procedures without notifying us.
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