Showing posts with label Great depression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great depression. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Increase in Bearish News is Long-Term Bullish - Weekly Blog # 882

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Increase in Bearish News is Long-Term Bullish

 

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

 

                             

 

Another Term for History: Uneven Cyclicality

In describing the behavior of people and other animals the terms of optimism and pessimism are appropriate, particularly the extreme emotions in overcoming risks. These actions drive all kinds of markets, including climates. Extreme increases and decreases occur irregularly, with people forgetting the pain caused by collapses.

 

We may currently be entering a negative economic cycle, possibly caused by an exaggerated political cycle. The biggest danger in focusing on the probable down cycle is retreating from a continued effort to search for early up-cycle clues.

 

A lawyer who practiced at a bank during the Great Depression mentioned that he hired workers every day to work on bad loans. During this period there were some activist investors who purchased defaulted securities, hoping to hold them for a partial or full recovery of face value. Some of the more well-known players were Ruth Axe, Max Heine, Ben Graham, and David Dodd, among others. Current conditions are not yet at this level of pain, but some smart people are examining the potential for such a period, both in the U.S. and elsewhere.

 

What is Happening Now?

Moody’s (*), in its latest proxy statement, predicted a continued multi-year decline. PIMCO is reluctant to buy long-term US Treasuries. Small and Mid-Cap stocks are dropping more than large-cap stocks on down market days because there is only liquidity in large-cap trades. This suggests that sizeable positions may have to be held until there is a sustained recovery.

(*) Owned in client and personal accounts

 

The two major consumer confidence surveys showed sharp drops in their March reports. One long-term negative factor facing the US is the relative unproductiveness of the entire educational process for investment capital. In the public school system, the number of administrators has increased eleven times the rate of growth in the number of students. (Sitting on a number University boards I have seen the same tendency at their level.) The mental health needs of the students have almost become a sub-industry. Many homes are not effective educational sites either.

 

What are the Investments Prospects?

As someone who basically learned analysis at the New York racetracks, I turn to the availability of numbers and ratios. Most dollars invested in equities are for funding needs beyond ten years. Consequently, I am using the median investment performance of the larger peer groups of mutual funds for the last ten years, as shown below:

    Large-Caps      8.50%

    Multi-Caps      7.92%  

    Mid-Caps        7.57%     

    Small Caps      6.82% 

    International   5.19%

(I think the overall range of 8.50% - 5.19% is a reasonable compound return for the next 10 years, considering the two years of 20% or more in the last 10 years. However, I don’t think the rank order of the peer groups will work out the same as it has in the past. Large-Cap performance is too heavily dependent on a concentrated group of high-tech companies. Small and mid-caps should benefit from buyouts and the movement of talent from larger companies to smaller companies. International funds may be the beneficiary of reactions to US government actions. I recently added Exor, the Agnelli family holding company, to my personal portfolio.

 

With so many controversial views expressed, I am interested in learning your view.

 

 

 

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

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: “Hide & Seek” - Weekly Blog # 880

Mike Lipper's Blog: Separating: Present, Renewals, & Fulfilment - Weekly Blog # 879



 

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Sunday, April 23, 2023

Early Stages of a New Grand Cycle? - Weekly Blog # 781

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Early Stages of a New Grand Cycle?

 

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

 

 

 

Travelers Note:

Many who speak of future seminal changes don’t recognize where they are. This is understandable, as it is difficult to identify where we are in the development of trends, let alone where we are going.

 

Whether or not you agree with my perceptions, they may be useful to you in gauging where we are in the progress of time. Please share your views with me. You can’t avoid thinking about the future if you invest in securities. But by not investing at all you are letting others decide you and your family’s fate. No investment isn’t an investment.

 

Reliance on History

The main tool we have in thinking about the future is our perception about our collective past. We selectively use our less than completely accurate perceptions of the past in projecting our futures. While our learned or experienced views of the future can be helpful, they won’t give us a completely accurate map of the future.

 

The worst remembrance that some seniors have is a period labeled the “Great Depression”. In thinking about the future, my analytical training suggests that this is a useful model for the worst that might befall us. We hope we can survive a similar period and therefore we can deal with whatever may come.

 

Where are We?

Remember this question when traveling with young children? We may remember a partially inaccurate statement from a nearby authority-figure making a guess. This was not an attempt to misinform, but a quick estimation of what was known or believed. We do the same today in addressing the future, using a selection of factoids that lead to a satisfactory conclusion. I follow this learned pattern.

 

When I look at the array of information before us today, the following elements are part of my thinking:

  • The best single predictor of the future by a mass of decision-making people is the general price trend in various US markets, utilizing the median performance of US Diversified Equity  Funds (USDEF). Measuring from the peak on 2/19/20 to last Thursday, there was a compound gain of +5.93%. (True, from a subsequent bottom on 3/23/20 the gain was +23.31%.) However, for the last 2 years the average USDEF lost -1.14%. These are pretax and pre-inflationary returns. Obviously, retirement capital during this period was not augmented by positive real performance. For the last 52 weeks, results were even worse -6.59%. In the current year through Thursday, 7 out of 108 fund peer groups lost money, with the same number gaining over +10%. I am guessing the median fund probably produced about +5%, adding little to retirement accounts after taxes and inflation.
  • Perhaps the most depressing news came over the weekend in a NY Times column titled “Why Money Market Funds are now Leading the Pack”. They are referring to money funds attracting more assets than any other type of fund. This is typical of a bottom, which comes at the end of investment cycle before a new cycle begins.
  • These two elements suggest a lot of investors, both individual and institutional, expect a lengthy period of stagflation. We have had two extended periods of stagflation, during the depression and during portions of the 1970s and 1980s.
  • Today we are seeing two types of behaviors we saw during the Depression.
    • Empty apartments or floors being temporarily used for parties or other short-term uses.
    • Broadway shows picturing past happier times.
  • Last week 8.8% of NASDAQ listed stocks hit new lows vs. 2.9% for the NYSE. The NASDAQ led the NYSE on the way up and is still up +17.15% year to date. We should consequently expect it to lead going down.
  • There are another two Depression era trends currently reappearing. A speed up in the replacement of CEOs and new ways of doing business. Apple* is an example of the latter. They are offering a cash savings account, not an insured deposit relationship. During the Depression, FDR started the FDIC to protect the bank assets of small depositors. While most people thought the accounts were backed directly by the government, losses were socialized by the remaining banks when the FDIC bailed out the banks. (This privatized the loss in the same way JP Morgan did in the 1907 Trust company panic.) Apple’s current move is backed by Apple, the largest company by US market capitalization. 

*Shares in Apple and Berkshire Hathaway are owned in personal and client accounts. Apple shares are the largest public investment owned by Berkshire Hathaway.

  • Inflation is caused by excess demand not being consumed by the domestic economy. Throughout history wars have contributed to inflation, as the government spends money not supplied by the domestic economy. Spending on climate change, poverty, and similar expenditures also add to inflation. Short-term interest rates only directly impact short-term borrowing, having only a modest impact on national inflation.

 

Working Conclusion

While it is not absolutely certain we will have a major economic decline, it shouldn’t be discounted.

 

After depressions there is always an expansion to look forward to.

 

Thoughts?

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Pre, Premature Wish - Weekly Blog # 780

Mike Lipper's Blog: 3 PROBLEM TOPICS: Current Market, Portfolios, and Ukraine- Weekly Blog # 779

Mike Lipper's Blog: What To Believe? - Weekly Blog # 778

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Sunday, October 24, 2021

ARE WE LISTENING AS HISTORY RHYMES? - Weekly Blog # 704

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


ARE WE LISTENING AS HISTORY RHYMES?


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




Pseudo Historians?

Whether we appreciate it or not, we are pseudo-historians because we store knowledge of our experiences, thoughts, or what we’ve learned from others directly or through the media. We call this “Memory”. Recall some important incident that happened to you ten years ago. If it is a pleasant memory, we delight in it and it takes up more space in our memory bank than unpleasant memories. Notice, as we get older and have more memories there is little recognition of mild events. Also notice that when discussing a specific memorial event with someone who experienced it with you, the details are somewhat different than yours. As you discuss the slightly different shared views of the past, it would not be unusual to see that you have sugar coated certain aspects. 

Welcome to the world of the historian and notice how two competent people observe the same thing differently. (My personal Queen, my wife, just reminded me that the Queen of England has said “recollections vary”.) Furthermore, most histories are written by the victors or their supporters. Typically, many are called victors for taking some small part in a victory. There are far fewer histories written from the losing side. Few want to be tagged as the reason for defeat. (I wish business schools had extensive courses on commercial failures, as they would be much more instructive than accolades not fully deserved.)

Why am I focusing on the way we learn from historical rhymes in this investment blog? Typical investors believe they have past knowledge they can use to make future decisions. I believe they are not paying sufficient attention to the past, as most investment disappointments are regularly repeated. 


Why Now in October?

One of the curses of history is tied to the seasons and sporadic rotation. Without the same cyclicality of the earth’s rotation, we humans evaluate history to understand why we are in our current condition. This coming week on October 28th & 29th, 92 years ago, became known as Black Monday and Black Tuesday. Over those two days the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 24%, with volume reaching the unheard number of 16 million shares on Black Tuesday. As early as March 25th that year the Federal Reserve warned of excessive speculation. The stock market had been rising for 9 years and had gained 10 times its starting level. Various pundits proclaimed the stock market had reached a permanently higher plateau. (My grandfathers’ brokerage firm was preparing to retire and was closing client margin accounts.) In addition to investment speculation, the farm community was carrying excess debt due to unexpected crop price declines. (There is a debate as to whether the stock market break was the cause of the Great Depression. It potentially resulted from the loss of confidence that swept the nation, as only16% of the US population was invested in the stock market.)


What About Today?

I have little confidence in my or anyone else’s ability to regularly predict the future of markets consistently. What I attempt to do is gather relevant information that may provide clues as to the future. The following list of inputs is not an attempt to persuade, as in a “Ben Franklin sales pitch” which always has more favorable elements. The data points should be noted, but not weighed, as the unknown future is not as much a mathematical game as a psychological one. The following is my list of items that can lead to an investment decision:


Positives in favor of continued US stock Market Gains

  1. For the markets to move higher, the old Dow Jones Theory requires the Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJTA) to confirm the gains of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). In the latest week the DJIA gained 108 points and is close to a new record high. The DJTA simultaneously rose 383 points from a lower base. Railroad and trucking companies are transporting more freight out of burdened ports. Airlines are benefiting from increased domestic/international business travel and are additionally profiting from freight business diverted from ships to meet seasonal supply demand.
  2. This week, investors using the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) showed their bullishness by pushing 401 stocks to new highs vs 108 to new lows.
  3. In their sample weekly survey, the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) raised their bullish prediction to 46.9% from 37.9% the week before.
  4. The market has been in a constrained trading range for more than six months. The loss of political confidence has led to a loss of investor confidence, resulting in a massive amount of uninvested cash waiting for a signal to invest.


Negatives Against Investing Now

  1. Twenty-two out of 88 mutual fund investment objective averages have risen over 60% since March 23rd, 2020, most being the more popular fund categories. Historically, performance exceeding 20% per annum is unsustainable. There are two ways to correct this condition, lengthen the flat period or endure negative performance.
  2. For the week, the number of new lows on the NASDAQ was 340, more than three times the number of new lows on the NYSE. Due to the relative absence of passive investors on the NASDAQ, I believe their investors are savvier than those on the NYSE, whose investors are more sensitive to volatile cash flows from passive funds and public investors.
  3. The discussion of Black Monday and Tuesday, plus the length of time since the bottom in 2009, reminds me that excess speculation often leads to a market correction. The big difference between now and 1929 is the big debt bulge not covered by flows is in the government sector (federal, state, and local). Current corporate debt in unprofitable companies is also a problem. 
  4. While public participation in the stock market is much higher than the 16% in 1929, it is comprised mostly of retirement accounts. In the past they have not been particularly sensitive to market moves, but growth in the lack of confidence could see dramatic changes.



Please share with me which you see first, a 50% rise or fall?  

 



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

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


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/the-confidence-game-weekly-blog-701.html




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All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, February 7, 2021

Adjust Investment Tools for Next Phase - Weekly Blog # 667

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Adjust Investment Tools for Next Phase


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




As Rules Change, or are Better Interpreted

For many years to the extent possible, I managed the Defined Contribution Plans for the NFL and the NFL Players Association. At the time of each Super Bowl, when asked which team I was rooting for, I replied “for those in the black and white uniforms”. I hoped the officials would see all the relevant plays and correctly interpret the changing rules of the game. As it turns out, that was good training for watching the constantly unfolding investment games between buyers and sellers, various regulators, shifting weather conditions, injuries, mistakes, and pure luck. None of the results were pre-ordained and would be argued about for many years into the future. I approach each market and market phase with the same weariness in preparing for the next market phase. Part of the preparation is examining the terms used to describe the game, and when appropriate improve definitions. This exercise may be particularly important this year, as it appears we are close to a crossroad.


Enthusiasm vs Crumbling Underlying Structure

Many global stock markets are rising in February, despite the historical odds that after a decline in January there is only a 22% chance that the remaining eleven months will produce a profit. The general media, revealing their political views, interpret the various executive orders and other political pronouncements as accomplishing their goals, and see an economic expansion beyond the release from the lockdowns. It could happen, but the odds of complete success are unlikely. 


The current small-cap +5.03% and emerging market +3.07% leadership in January is like other late stages of the past. Fixed income funds often lead equity funds in terms of direction. For the year through Thursday night, the average S&P 500 Index fund was up +3.16% vs -2.95% for the average General US Treasury mutual fund. Another worrisome note is the size of margin debt, which perhaps due to short squeeze actions has reached record levels.


A good investor should look beyond stock prices to see a different economic view, which I attempt to do. Large futures speculators are increasing their shorts in copper, Eurodollars, S&P 500 minis, emerging markets, and US Treasury bonds. In recent blogs I mentioned the Industrial Price Index rising compared to a year ago and this week it accelerated to a gain of +33.18%. The bond market recognizes these tensions and the yield curve has continued to steepen. Even the Congressional Budget Office sees that inflation will likely be over 2% by 2023. (My guess is that it will be a lot sooner, raising the cost of financing the politically generated deficit.)


Understanding the Tools of Security/Fund Selection

Headline writers and many marketeers prefer short words to describe complex tools, e.g., “growth” and “value”. These create good pictures or charts, with ever rising growth and ever declining value. Would it be so. As with the changing weather at a football game, conditions change, as do the useful definitions of terms. 


Speculators essentially bet on what others will pay for their shares, bonds, or loans in the future and a successful speculator primarily knows his/her markets. An investor is a partial owner of a company that at some point could be purchased by a knowledgeable buyer. It has been the motivation of buyers and sellers in marketplaces around the world since recorded time. Perhaps in response to the “great depression”, securities analysis became a separate academic subject, distinct from older economics courses. 


Benjamin Graham was a successful analyst/portfolio manager/investor. He was also a good writer as an adjunct professor at Columbia University and worked with Professor David Dodd in writing the first textbook on Security Analysis. Graham and Dodd were primarily interested in avoiding unnecessary investment losses in their writings and emphasized the use of financial statements, particularly balance sheets. In early editions of their six-edition book, they emphasized anticipated liquidating value, an issue appropriate during a depression.


While Ben Graham is often erroneously called the “Father of Security Analysis” and the first value investor, this is not where he and his partners in a closed-end fund made most of their money. The fund became a dominant shareholder in an insurance company which had no real equity left on its balance sheet. What it did have in this period of substantial unemployment was a customer base of relatively low wage employed government workers. They saved and ended up controlling Government Employees Insurance Company (GEICO), which Warren Buffett analyzed and eventually bought outright.


Years later I personally had the honor of taking the Security Analysis course under Dave Dodd, but I disagreed with him and believed that growth was an important factor in choosing investments. He  quickly shut me up by indicating how much money they had made on their investments. Years later, as a small entrepreneur, this led me to include growth and more importantly the evaluation of key people in making successful investments. (In evaluating three cases, one had to be closed, another was key to a bigger product, and the third was very successful). As a side matter, I was particularly pleased to receive the Benjamin Graham Award from the analyst’s society in New York for a private matter requiring some investigative skills a few years ago.


Today, when I review financial statements, particularly the footnotes, I have little confidence they will reveal the “true value” of the company. We live in a litigious world and accounting practices are designed to protect the accountant, the underwriter, or the company itself against lawsuits, rather than to ascertain value. However, there are some very good analysts that are pretty good at finding the range of values for a company. These analysts don’t publish their work, as they are employed by investment bankers, private equity funds, or serial acquirers. While they don’t publish, the price of their bids and deals are known, and this sets the market price for similar deals. If I can’t get enough data, I use the multiple paid for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization on successful bids. 


To understand value investing, one needs to understand where the current market is and what is best indicated by the price of deals. These in turn are influenced by the level of interest rates used to discount future growth and the cost of acquisition.


How to Measure Growth

Many believe that any number larger than the previous number is growth. For valuation purposes however, what is useable are growth comparisons. They should deduct inflation, exclude acquisitions, currency changes, and the impact of changes in regulation or competition. To me, each period may be different, so a long period growth rate can be misleading. 


I like to see the consistency of growth rates. There are times when highly variable growth rates leading to above average long-term trends are valuable and times where a more consistent return is more valuable, particularly for accounts that have finite payments requirements. (For mutual funds, we measure both total return and consistent returns.)


What about both Growth and Value?

In truth many companies go through periods of growth and value. IBM, before it changed its name and was under Tom Watson’s management, had so much debt that it was viewed as an underwater stock. Years later, it became the prime example of a growth stock and later still its growth slowed to the point where at times it was viewed as a value stock. Because of various recent changes I don’t know how to characterize it. What I do know, is that past financial history is not of much use to an outside investor. 


Since many companies go through numerous growth and value changes, I favor looking at many periods. However, it is more important to look at changes within the company, including the people hired at the senior and entry level, changes in product/service/prices, and the reaction to competition/regulation.


Conclusions

1. Look at how things are, don’t overpay for history.

2. Expect surprises!

3. Take partial positions initially.

4. Admit mistakes quickly and serially.


Your Thoughts?




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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/01/is-gamestop-missing-event-weekly-blog.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/01/are-we-strolling-promenade-deck-of.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/01/contra-messages-weekly-blog-664.html




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Copyright © 2008 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, February 2, 2020

Significant Turnaround? Two Fearful Histories - Weekly Blog # 614




Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

Significant Turnaround? Two Fearful Histories

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



Current Pictures 
All three popular US stock market indices have price charts indicating a top of some magnitude. Market analysts view these tops as a sign of a reversal of a major trend. The questions facing investors today:
  1. Is this a correction of perhaps 10% and an opportunity to buy a favored cheap stock?
  2. Is it a cyclical top with a potential decline in order of magnitude of about 25%?
  3. Is it a less frequent structural change that might cause a displacement of 50% or more?
2020 is still very young, but current markets as reflected through mutual fund performance are showing dramatic trend divergences. Year-to-date through last Thursday, the only mutual fund investment averages above 4% were: Global Science & Tech +4.86%, Large Cap Growth +4.09%, and the more domestically oriented Science & Tech +4.07%. Declining Equity Mutual funds were Natural Resources -8.38% and Basic Materials -5.15%. Commodities declined even more: Energy -11.35%, Basic Metals -7.18%, and Agriculture -5.02%.

After generating net sales earlier in the year, High Yield mutual funds and ETFs suffered significant redemptions this week, while higher credit bond funds continued to draw positive net flows. The Wall Street Journal' s weekly chart of 72 securities indices, currencies, ETFs, and commodities, only saw 24% of them registering gains. The spread between the price of gold and gold mining stocks also narrowed. These data points are  not encouraging for those looking for higher stock prices.

The task for professional analysts and portfolio managers is to examine the current data and look at possible alternative future directions. Most bright futures take care of themselves and the job is simply trying to optimize the rate of return. The less frequent downsides need to be reviewed more carefully, because for professionals there is much greater career risk.  The owners of capital need to blame someone other than themselves for major declines, but often take all the credit on the upside! I therefore periodically examine the chances of cyclical and structural declines, without excessively focusing on when they will occur.

What's Wrong? 
A top followed by a significant decline is usually identified with an event that focuses people's attention, although it often has little to do with the underlying cause. How the underlying cause for most wars is explained is a classic example. For example, school children are taught that WWI began because of the shooting death of Austria's Archduke by a lone anarchist. The truth is, the balance of power keeping competing nations in check after the Napoleonic era was breaking down. The growing strength of Germany, combined with weaknesses in France and Russia, led to them creating self-defense alliances with weaker states. Note, hostilities did not begin until six months after the tragic murder. It was the movement of Serbian troops threatening Austria that brought Germany and Russia into military conflict.

Somewhat like the US entry into WWII being caused by a single attack on Pearl Harbor, resulting in a Declaration of War by the US against both Japan and Germany, plus Italy. The Coronavirus is similarly be blamed for the decline in most stock markets around the world. The virus has led to one hundred or more deaths of the thousands infected. Unfortunately, there will be more, but it will eventually be contained and cease to be a problem. What it has done is to dramatize the importance of China to World Trade. Although China has contributed about half of global GDP growth, it still represents a relatively small number. The markets were showing weakness for some time before the advent of the virus and many industrial stocks and commodities were flat or declining in the latter part of 2019, if not before.

The 1929 peak in October marks the begin date of the Great Depression, but few realize that by December 1929 the Dow Jones Industrial Average had fully recovered. (Perhaps, there is still hope for stock traders this year.) There are always a number of factors that contribute to making a top and its subsequent decline. The current ballooning expansion of credit is one of the conditions shared by events leading up to the 1929 crash. "Bubble or Nothing" is the title of a study by The Jerome Levy Forecasting Center LLC, which makes the following observations:
  1. The last three US recessions were ended by ever larger inputs by the federal government.
  2. Economic recoveries were successively smaller after each recession.
  3. Private credit has expanded at a faster rate of operating assets and operating income.
  4. Most national governments are already operating with a deficit.
I would add that astute bond investors are already conscious of these conditions and are shifting their purchases to the highest quality non­-government issues, reducing their immediate commitment to high yield. Also, I find it very interesting that the performance spread between the price of gold and the price of gold mining shares has narrowed. In the modern world, other than when currencies become worthless, the main reason to buy gold is in anticipation of inflation. However, there is none in the government published data.

What to Do?
  1. History has favored buying high quality and holding it for long periods of time, if it remains high quality. 
  2. For US individual investors, the step-up at death is one of the best ways to pass wealth on. (That may not always be the case!)·
  3. It does not mean we all abandon buy and hold strategies and become traders. However, it does force investors to focus on the timing of planned cash expenditures. 
  4. The size and composition of the payments reserve needs attention, recognizing that guessing the future is fraught with mistakes. Based on present conditions, I suggest that payment reserves for the next five years be invested only in high quality paper, with up to 50% in maturities under one year. 
What about Long-Term Money? 
The history of greed and fear cycles indicate we cannot avoid periodic tops and declines. I suggest that intermediate length accounts be prudent and hold reserves of at least 25%, with maturities of five to seven years as a limit.

For those investments meant to be long-term or legacies, recognizing that within a generation you are likely to experience a structural top. As long as there are sufficient payment reserves, I would not add any additional reserves, except for those who can use opportunity reserves effectively. Many fiduciaries can't or won't.



Congratulations to Clark Hunt for his team winning the Superbowl, demonstrating the value of teamwork.



Question of the Week: What is your sense of timing as to the market and how is it expressed in your portfolio?



Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/01/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/01/is-it-always-brains-over-flexible.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/01/architectural-sway-points-and-current.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 - 2019
A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved
Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, January 5, 2020

How Much Will Markets Decline: 10%, 25%, or 50%? - Weekly Blog # 610



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

How Much Will Markets Decline: 10%, 25%, or 50%?

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



The next unknown is no longer a question, securities markets will decline. Some are now focusing on signs that most securities markets are showing an increased potential for decline. I therefore turn to an even more difficult question of how big the decline will be. Based on history, the size and length of the decline will likely set up the size and duration of the following bull market.

Size and Duration of Slump Influences Recovery+ Subsequent Growth 
One can divide stock markets falls into three categories: correction, secular, and fundamental. Each are different because their causes and impacts are different. One of the most difficult tasks for professional investors is to prepare for a decline before it happens. Most investors firmly believe that a current trend is their friend and choose not to prepare. They believe that predicting a decline is impossible. Furthermore, they believe that they will see early evidence of a decline and will be able to exit with relatively small losses from peak prices. The truth in markets and sports is that all trends eventually stop, often abruptly. What is particularly costly is the belief that the current decline is only temporary and not a cause for action.

With those thoughts in mind I’ll examine the most frequently occurring, and in many cases the most painful type of correction. Enthusiastic investors are the major cause of market corrections. They ride an upward trend of expanding price valuations that get way ahead of fundamentals. For example, many stocks have recently gained over 20%, even though earnings were likely to be down in the fourth quarter. They are also likely to be down in the first quarter of the new year, contributing to the mid-single digit gains expected for 2020.

A market correction is often not tied to an economic contraction. Paul Samuelson, the great MIT economist, is quoted as saying "The stock market has predicted nine of the past five recessions". Typical market corrections are of the 10% magnitude and only last a couple of months. In the history of market analysis, often called technical analysis, the fall is due to "weak holders selling to strong holders at discounts". The painful part of the process is not the relatively small losses sustained by the weak holders, it’s the much larger opportunity loss of missing out on the recovery and subsequent growth thereafter.

Less frequent declines occur when upward earnings and economic trends are temporarily interrupted. If the pause is caused by a specific event not expected to be repeated, long-term investors will stay committed. The problem is that what was first believed to be temporary often stretches out over time. If corporations and other investors begin to believe that a major change has occurred and their expectations of future cash earnings from their investments decline, it may cause a change in investment policy.

As many secular trends will reassert themselves, the pause should be tolerated without investors being shaken out of their positions. Demographics, education, and health are likely to be such trends. Secular changes usually happen slowly but can be recognized after a few years. There are often a couple secular changes within a decade that are capable of taking the large-caps that dominate the popular averages down about 25% from their peak levels.

The largest decline by far is caused by fundamental changes in the structure of society. A good example of this was the Great Depression, which has some parallels with conditions today. In the 1920s the WWI peace dividend freed up capital markets, encouraging both individuals and corporations to take on substantial debt. This led the politically sensitive farm community to increase production with borrowed money. Additionally, public utilities evolved into highly leveraged holding companies and Wall Street brokers enticed new investors to jump into "The Radio Boom". Each of these inputs, and others, were eventually dealt with by unwise federal government actions.

Against his own instincts, President Herbert Hoover signed a material increase in tariffs designed in part to help and protect farmers. It however also led to a major drop in world trade, particularly for labor-intensive manufactured products. One of FDR's many new regulatory agencies, the Securities & Exchange Commission, worked with an activist Federal Reserve and raised the collateral requirements for margin. While the number of radios around the world continued to grow, their prices fell. RCA, the highest quality stock in the Radio Boom, declined and did not return to its former peak until the color television expansion in the 1960s.

These and other federal government actions probably turned a secular decline into a fundamental slump, lengthening the depression from its probable end in 1937 and delaying its recovery until the WWII expansion beginning in 1942. Depending on what indicator is used to measure the decline, an important fundamental change could reduce prices by more than 50%. In the case of the Great Depression, prices collapsed by 95% in some cases, if they weren't totally wiped out.

Are there parallels today? The sharp decline in farm income spurred on by NAFTA and tariff changes could be viewed as politically motivated, as is the global impetus to lower interest rates. While the S&P 600 small-cap index was the best performing major stock market index for the decade just ended, it was the worst performer last year. The winner was large caps, with the DJIA and S&P 500 led by their mega-caps. Information technology stocks were up 50% in 2019, about double the average return of US Diversified Equity Funds. Different periods produce different results. The S&P 500’s best decade was 1950-1959, gaining +19% compounded. The worst decade was 2000-2009, losing -0.86% annualized.

Help may be on the way from the private sector if the governments around the world don't interfere. Long-term interest rates are starting to rise and at some point they may exert some discipline on the leveraging going on. However, stock markets have not done well historically when central banks have responded to political pressures and made cheap credit plentiful. As equity owners, we are better served by borrowers being disciplined and managing their debts prudently.

Symptoms More Important than Temperatures 
Experienced medical personnel are guided more by a patient's symptoms than by temperature, pulse, and blood pressure readings, as people and conditions can be dramatically different. Consequently, as an analyst I pay much more attention to symptoms than a specific numerical reading. Everything about modern living and markets happens at different rates of change (10% for corrections, 25% secular interruptions and 50% plus for fundamental change). The markets don’t readily march to a calendar either, even tax dates are only momentarily important. In evaluating stock markets, it is much wiser to watch people and how they react than fixate on specific numbers.

Contrarian Interests 
For investors not involved in competitive races, utilizing a streak of contrary thinking can lead to smaller losses and bigger gains over the long-term. On a given day a slow horse can be a winner if it is just a little faster than the others. I often see a change of leadership between small and large-cap securities, also emerging markets and venture capital investments. The most profitable bets are often contrary to the size of their flows. Consequently, I would now bet on energy stocks vs. information tech, small vs. large-cap, emerging markets equity vs. venture capital. Contrarians generally suffer smaller losses.

Question of the week: 
Do you know more contrarians who are currently broke or formerly wealthy individuals who are now broke?



Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/12/repeat-past-history-probable-or-just.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/12/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/12/faulty-decision-processes-at-change.html



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Copyright © 2008 - 2019
A. Michael Lipper, CFA

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Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Contrarian Observations, Not Predictions, But Concerns - Weekly Blog # 573



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Contrarian Observations, Not Predictions, But Concerns


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



Contrarians look at the world differently, searching for misleading, generally accepted view-points. My purpose is to not to be contrary, but to look for opportunities to reduce risk and make an unexpected profit. While one of the maximums of trading is that “the trend is your friend”, the contrarian believes that all trends eventually end. After the trend ends there is a shift in direction, often a dramatic one. This week’s blog looks at several current observations that could be sign-posts for a change in direction. The prudent investor should consider these to be possible early warnings signs.

Long-Term Observations
Through the 18th of April the average US Diversified Equity fund gained +15.86%. This rise is significantly higher than the 2019 earnings per share projection for the underlying stocks in the portfolios. If there were no further performance gains by the end of the year, the performance comparison versus the historic gains of the S&P 500 since 1926 raises some questions. Of the 92 completed years, only 42 or 45.6% were better than the 4 ½ months of this year. An actuary would question further progress in 2019.

In reading “The Unlikely Reformer”, a book by my friend Matt Fink. In the book he discusses the history of Carter Glass (Glass-Steagall, Federal Reserve Act, Securities & Exchange Act of 1934). The book makes much of his deep concern for the amount of bank issued credit used for speculation by Wall Street. Today there are some that are similarly concerned, but not about the retail credit used in buying stocks. The concern is about the build-up of corporate credit, which has been issued under very liberal terms for acquisitions and buy-backs of common shares. One of the multiple causes of the Great Depression was the explosion of credit. Some see a similar pattern regarding the explosion of credit issued largely outside of the banking system. 

Intermediate-Term Concerns
Two mouthpieces are telling us not to worry about inflation.
  • Robert Kaplan, the president of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, ex Goldman Sachs partner and Harvard Business School Professor stated, “No Threat of Inflation”. 
  • Bloomberg Business Week’s cover asks, “Is Inflation Dead?”. 
There is an old Biblical Expression “Man plans, and God Laughs”. One of the things I learned from the racetrack is that occasionally a long-shot wins. Surprises are normal in the history of economics, business, politics, and markets. Though the rate of inflation has been low for many years, I suspect it may not continue.

There has been wide dispersion in the performance of equity mutual funds for the five years ended April 18th. The average S&P 500 index fund gained +11.31% annualized, while the average Financial Services Fund gained +8.37% and the average International fund gained +3.33%. Looking to the future, the odds of a similar performance spread and rates of gain are at best questionable.

Shorter-Term Questions 
The three stock price composite indices around the world currently performing best are Shenzhen +38.8%, Shanghai +30.5%, and NASDAQ +20.6%. All three indices are fueled in part by a combination of technological products and services, easier credit, and IPOs. Are these gains sustainable?

A partial answer to the question above is reflected in the two largest ETF short positions as a percent of the shares outstanding: iShares China Large Cap 17.3% and SPDR Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond 17%. I don’t know whether the bulk of these holdings are for hedging purposes or directional bets in a speculative Market.


Question of the Week:
Did anything happen last week that is causing you to change your investment positions or attitudes? 




Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/04/not-yet-peak-luck-lessons-weekly-blog.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/04/investing-in-quality-for-growth-or.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/03/investment-committee-and-investors-be.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 - 2018
A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved
Contact author for limited redistribution permission.