Showing posts with label Deflation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deflation. Show all posts

Sunday, February 25, 2024

Caution: This Time Is Different - Weekly Blog # 825

 

      


Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Caution: This Time Is Different


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

   

 

       

Warning

The standard excuse for breaking the historic pattern of following precedent is the current situation being fundamentally different than the past. The break in historic pattern makes it appropriate to not copy the past pattern of each substantial rise and decline.

 

The problem with the old pattern is that it is two dimensional. If it is going up, it will next go down. However, the next driving direction may be diagonal or a collection of reversing diagonal moves.

 

Worst News for The Leadership

One or more diagonals will upset political leadership, leaders of business, military, non-profits, education, and others in a position of responsiveness. One example is the CEO of Walmart, the largest retailer in the world. He noted that in the general merchandize category the US was in a deflationary price trend. However, in the grocery category the prices of some items like eggs, apples, asparagus, blackberries, paper goods, and cleaning supply were simultaneously rising. (The first four items are classic supply and demand oriented. The last two have significant manufacturing cost elements in their cost structure.) Is Walmart suffering from inflation or deflation?

 

There is a third input caused by substitution. Packing fewer items in a smaller package lowers the price but increases the frequency of purchase. Still another substitute would be lowering the quality of goods and services sold, such as producing less powerful batteries for hand-held devices.

 

Consumers and Investors Are the Real Losers

The unsuspecting real losers are consumers, investors, and any on the receiving end of actions served up by organizations relying on classically trained economists. They make these judgements about the quantity of goods and services. (Have you noticed the dexterous taste of meat and other agricultural products due to cost-cutting providers!)

 

There Are Other Numbers that Drive Investment

There are often other reasons companies are acquired. This week it was announced that Capital One, a Virginia Bank with a very large credit card business, is attempting to buy Discover Financial (*), also a very large credit card bank. If permitted, the transaction would create a card processor as large as Mastercard and Visa. This could change the entire credit card and consumer bank businesses.

(*) Owned in personal or managed accounts)

 

On Saturday, Berkshire Hathaway (*) issued its annual report and shareholder letter. (A copy of my internal reaction to the letter is available to our blog subscribers by sending me an email at AML@Lipperadvising.com) The shareholder letter mentioned that their BHE owned utility served the population of ten midwestern and western states. (To the best of my knowledge this is an unrecognized and unused asset which could be of great marketing value in the future. It is the sort of non-balance asset that represents hidden value not tabulated in government records.

 

Another example of a business asset transforming into a financial asset capable of changing the nature of competition in the securities markets surfaced this week. This was captured in the following headline from the Financial Times “S&P Global nears deal for Visible Alpha in effort to compete with Bloomberg.” (Shares in S&P Global are owned in proprietary accounts.) Visible Alpha collects research reports from major Wall Street firms and distributes them electronically. It thus attaches additional value to research, beyond that provided by the originating firm and their direct clients. If the deal goes through the consortium of firms will probably pass the proceeds back to the issuing houses, partially converting an expense item to a capital item.  

 

A “Smart Money” Bet on Market Direction

Regular readers of this blog know that my primary investment academy is the racetrack. Always trying to improve my results I learned to look at what I thought was the “Smart Money” at the track. Applying that principle to investing I see a decline as the next major move, for the following three reasons:

  1. Both the Chairman and President of JP Morgan Chase have recently sold some of their shares. In the case of Jaime Dimon, it is his first recorded sale. Since he bought some shares in the public market, I assume they will represent a portion of what he sells. The President sold some earlier in the year.
  2. Berkshire has been a net seller for the last four quarters, including two stocks that we own, BYD and Apple.
  3. Many industrial/service companies have issued layoff notices and/or have delayed start dates for new recruits. These are significant. My guess, many of these companies have found it difficult to hire the right people over the last couple of years. In many cases, new employees take one or more years for their employers to earn back what they are paid. With a layoff today probably costing future profits well into next year, it is likely a well thought out decision.

 

I consider all of these to be bright people and consequently advocate building up trading reserves. However, I also recommend maintaining significant permanent equity positions, as I could be wrong.    

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: What Moves the Stock Market? - Weekly Blog # 824

Mike Lipper's Blog: Picking Winners/Avoiding Losers - Weekly Blog # 823

Mike Lipper's Blog: Is This “Bull Market” Real? - Weekly Blog # 822

 

 

Did someone forward you this blog?

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Changing Steps - Weekly Blog # 807

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Changing Steps

 

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

 

 


Reason for Cycles

Throughout human and geological/climatic history one can detect repeated periods of similar, but not identical elements. These periods are often immediately opposite prior cycles. Humans tend to be coin flippers. On the one side is greed and on the other is fear. Both are motivated by a desire for qualities we don’t have in sufficient quantities, the assurance of safety from others. The longer we suffer from the perceived deficit, the greater the perceived need.

 

In the natural world dominant forces are eventually met by counter forces, which brings them back to some form of equilibrium. Both written and geological history record frequent but irregular cycles. History records the existence of cycles, but not the motivations that created them. Literature about historic events tries to fill this gap, although it is disadvantaged by those hoping to curry favor with the winners and their write ups.

 

Futurists

Many people are content to take one day at a time and not focus on the future. Those of us responsible for doing something today for future beneficiaries recognize that we will be judged by the conditions that exist when beneficiaries get “their” assets. We are thus cursed by future perceptions of how we deal with investments today.

 

Where Are We?

Many of us have traveled with children or other impatient people who repeatedly ask, where are we? Or worse, when will we get there? In truth, we don’t know. It is the same in dealing with investors, or worse, their “gatekeepers.”

 

Tell The Truth

Most of the time in traveling through the investment cycle we don’t know where we are going or when the cycle will end. My approach is to share my current thinking, including identifying many things that I don’t know. I always try to look for clues that could possibly identify a change in direction.  I risk will be wrong some of the time before I recognize my mistakes. I believe we are in the early stages of an important change in the behavior of this cycle.

 

The Beginning of a Cyclical Change

(I hope my clients and beneficiaries forgive me for not getting the right decisions quickly enough.)

 

Evidence List

  1. Lowest number of sales of previously owned homes since 2011.
  2. Yields on 30-year Treasuries have broken above 5%.
  3. Change in Leading Indicators, -9.67% for last 12 months.
  4. Private Equity and Credits are struggling to find new clients, including the public, which is usually a sign of increased risk.
  5. Fixed income-oriented funds have lost money for 3 years, some for 5 years. Funds invested in alternatives, value, and small company growth, are also struggling to perform.
  6. If October stock and equity fund performance ends with a decline, the major averages will have declined for 3 months. The equally weighted S&P 500 Index has fallen this year.
  7. It is possible the average stock may finish down for the year, completing a 3-year period of stagflation.
  8. At current or higher interest rates, money previously invested in stocks may get invested in bonds, both by the public and by pension/retirement funds.
  9. We are seeing signs of deflation in that sales discounts are showing up. Some may conclude President Biden is repeating FDR’s mistakes, which won’t end well and may possibly include a war.

 

Shopping List of Potentials

A number of well-known, former leading companies have new managements who have shifted their focus from building returns for shareholders to instituting policies that appeal to socially oriented institutions. This is particularly true for financial service companies, a sector likely to see more concentration. It is probably too soon to buy them, as they are likely to have a few more periods of less than good earnings ahead of them. These companies will either shrink to unimportance or will be better served by new management and owners.

 

Currently, most small companies are valued at half or less than large companies in terms of P/E or Price/Book value. These small companies are often better managed and more focused on investment returns. They could be the source of critical people and the attitudes needed for a turnaround.

 

Question: Are you looking for turnarounds?

 

 

 

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

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

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Prepare to be Bullish, Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 804

 

 

 

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 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, October 8, 2023

Stock Markets Move on Expectations - Weekly Blog # 805

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Stock Markets Move on Expectations

Commodities Move on Transactions

Most Economics Relate to Needs

Politics Rotate on Vote Guesses


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

 



Variables

These are among the more significant variables that investors and the rest of society juggle in reaching investment decisions. Most investors focus their attention on only a few variables. Some use just one, like price charts or reported earnings.

 

Perhaps my lack of confidence in understanding the complete details of variables drives me to look for correlations, which is why I ponder many variables. This tends to result in the creation of diversified portfolios of funds and individual securities. Because my clients and I invest to meet a number of different needs, our investments are focused on several time periods.

 

With these thoughts as guidelines, I’ll share a number of factors I am concerned about that leave me worried. I expect the future to include numerous changes, with some coming as surprises. My portfolios are likely to be fully invested, with a willingness to shift elements when I become more convinced of the wisdom of future actions.

 

The tragedy in Israel is too new to take into proper perspective. Thus, I am excluding it from this blog, but not from my mind.

 

List of Worries (Not in rank order)

  1. The number of small company bankruptcies is rising, along with general error rates. These are some of the critical connecting points in our society and likely to have larger repercussions.
  2. The drop in food consumption at low-end retail outlets suggests budgets are getting stretched.
  3. Jaime Dimon’s 100-year prediction of a 3 ½ day work week leaves too much time for troublemaking.
  4. Those with advanced degrees have lost confidence in colleges/universities. Students graduating with degrees, including PhDs, have no job opportunities for their degrees. (All the nobility were blamed, and many executed during the French Revolution.)
  5. A little more than half of mutual fund peer-group averages have generated losses over the last 3 years. (There is a risk of people refusing to invest.)
  6. As developing nations mature, they attempt to import replacement of some of their imports, which reduces world trade.
  7. UPS and FedEx often sell at discounts. (Deflation)
  8. 75% of the items listed in the WSJ weekend prices declined (Deflation)
  9. The S&P Goldman Sachs Commodity Index rose +4% in September. Due to dollar strength, Energy and Metals rose +3.5%, with Agriculture falling -4.35%. There may be some speculative input in these numbers.

 

Critical Questions:

  1. What are the indicators you are watching?
  2. What do you think?
  3. Will you share your thoughts?                                                                          

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Prepare to be Bullish, Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 804

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

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

 

 

 

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 – 2023

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.