Showing posts with label Jason Zweig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Zweig. Show all posts

Sunday, October 20, 2024

Stress Unfelt by the “Bulls”, Yet !! - Weekly Blog # 859

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Stress Unfelt by the “Bulls”, Yet !!

 

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

 

 

 

One measure of future dangers is the length of time identified stress points are ignored. Often, the longer the period of being unaware of increased risk levels, the greater the damage. The reason for this is that more assets are committed, so more damage is sustained. Somewhat like a pain in the mouth or heart.

 

The following stress points are in plain sight and should be diagnosed, even though some may not lead to sustained account damage or damage to clients’ capital. However, the real damage of a meaningful decline is often the lack of confidence to take advantage of the recovery. The following concerns are not in any particular order.

  • Pet owners are trading down.
  • PPG is selling their original business.
  • As mentioned in the FT, “Corporate debts as credit funds allow borrowers to defer payments using higher cost payments in kind “PIK”.
  • McKinsey is cutting their workforce in China.
  • There is an assumption that the first Fed rate cut is the beginning of a rate cycle of lower rates.
  • After all the government spending (election-focused bribes), the civilian labor force is only up 0.48% year over year, while government payroll is up +2.26%.
  • Barron’s 10 high-grade bond yields declined -27 basis points compared to a gain of +8 points for medium-grade bonds. (Wider spread for added risk?)
  • Consumer confidence fell 5.37 % last month.
  • The percentage of losing stocks compared to all NYSE stocks was 1.7% vs 5.1% for NASDAQ stocks.
  • Jason Zweig in the WSJ quoting Ben Graham “Investing isn’t about mastering the market it is about mastering yourself.” I agree and I pay a lot of attention to what Jason and Ben say. (I was given the Ben Graham award as President of the New York Society of Securities Analysts (NYSSA)).
  • P&G noted that their customers in the US and China were switching to cheaper brands.
  • In the 3rd quarter, American Express* had revenue gains of +8% and earnings gains of +2%. (A classic example of the cost to produce a revenue dollar becoming more expensive. (*A small position is owned personally.)
  • Volkswagen is closing German factories for the first time since 1938.
  • In Europe, some are starting to watch for disinflation. (Disinflation is much rarer than inflation and is much worse, as people reduce or stop spending.) 

 

Most current global political leaders are ignorant of micro-economics and thus can’t grasp macro-economics. They are not wholly responsible for this condition because their teachers didn’t understand them either. We will all pay the price for this ignorance.

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Melt-Up, Leaks, & Echoes of 1907 - Weekly Blog # 858

Mike Lipper's Blog: Mis-Interpreting News - Weekly Blog # 857

Mike Lipper's Blog: Investors Not Traders Are Worried - Weekly Blog # 856



 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2024

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, March 13, 2022

Building Your Future Winning Portfolio - Weekly Blog # 724

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Building Your Future Winning Portfolio


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




Personality Shapes Portfolio Architecture 

One hurdle we give little thought is the modern mass production of clothes, foods, jobs, schools, and financial instruments (portfolios). Staunton Military Academy and the US Marine Corps were contributors to what I am today, but like everyone else I want to be unique. In that search to find myself, both my wife and I have turned to history to learn how others developed their identities. 

Focusing on how others have navigated their successes and failures, I am particularly interested in learning how to minimize losses. Large failures are typical of those who have achieved measurable success. Psychologists who measure the impact of winning and losing believe we feel at least twice as bad from losing. (I believe some of us feel even worse about losses. Losses delay our commitments to successful actions and use up some of our precious time.) People experience both successes and failures and some learn from their defeats, using that knowledge to build subsequent victories. For example, both George Washington and Abraham Lincoln suffered multiple losses before their victories. 


We Alone Are the Senior Architect of Our Investments 

While we may consult with various professionals, family, and friends, we are ultimately responsible for creating our investment portfolio and our lives. I have prepared an a la carte menu for you to choose from that is specific to meeting your investment personality needs. Instead of each alternative having prices or calories as a guide, I list a very rough risk/return identifier. (Through your own experience you can modify my judgements.) 


A la Carte Menu of Portfolio Vehicles 

Type             Risk Orientation

All on a single bet      Favored by entrepreneurs (Henry Ford 

                         was twice bankrupt before success) 


Concentrated holdings    Limited number of large bets with 

                         common risk characteristics 

 

Actively managed fund    Account/fund of less than 50 names 


Passive Index Fund       Fully invested + low turnover 


Combined Approaches      Risk avoidance limits upside 


Personally, I plead guilty to the last choice. Our big positions are centered on domestic and international financial services companies and funds. I use actively managed funds and fund management companies when I do not have confidence in particular companies, but believe their focus is correct. In doing so I use a fund or fund like vehicle as a common denominator play. 


Types of Declines and Expected Influence Structures 

The US stock market has been in decline for some time. In some respect you could go back to 2019 or earlier. The expansion of the NASDAQ Composite since the financial crisis may have ended in November 2021. Using that as a measure we have entered a bear market for at least two days, but it is not yet convincing. Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 have entered a correction phase, falling more than 10%. (The media called both the bear market and correction phase but cannot tie it to an economic or market measure.) Nevertheless, this may be a good time to assess the types of market declines and appropriate tactics and strategies: 

Correction Phase - According to S&P, the market is up +9% one year later. 

Bear Market - One year later the market is up +13%. (To the extent that the market indices represent one’s holdings and the account is eventually taxable, it doesn’t make sense to liquidate unless there is a specific problem that questions the future of the company. Most, but not all recessions lead to bear markets, so it is not a specific call for portfolio action. 

The real risk is an activist top-down government taking a normal cyclical decline and turning it into an active depression lasting a couple of years or more. If this is expected, the proper strategy is to cut expenditures as much as possible and shrink the portfolio in terms of capital commitment, but not names. In The Wall Street Journal, Jason Zweig recounts the incidence of Sir John Templeton buying 104 stocks trading for under $1.00, including 34 that were in bankruptcy. This was in 1939 before the US entered WWII. After the war he made a profit on 100 of the positions. (I do not expect a similar experience for the country, the market, or an investor, but the lesson shows the value of long-term investing, staring with low prices on the NYSE.) 


Which is Best Now? 

History does not offer a direct parallel. The closest that I have seen is the 6 months prior to the declaration of WWI. The immediate causes were the weak, isolationist, attitudes of the US government, plus the assignation of the Archduke, which was part of the unrest in Eastern Europe. Our fear is China supplying military goods to Russia as requested. This conceivably could bring a third world war.  

In deciding what to do, I suggest putting both the stock tables and the annual reports down. Evaluate your holdings as companies. Would you like to own all the company and never sell it? Warren Buffett views companies based on whether your children would be buyers of their products or services. 

After many successful years of investment, you may have an oversized highly profitable position and may have large loss positions to “harvest”, if you don’t think they will recover. These losses could be used to bring balance to your portfolio by recognizing the losses and simultaneously reducing some of the overweight positions in your winners. The freeing up of cash from both losers and slightly reduced winners creates a fund for reinvestment at a time when prices are reduced. 


Final thoughts: Understanding that making a series of correct investment turning point decisions is very rare, allow yourself to make mistakes, learn from them, and generally stay the course.

  



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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/03/does-decline-influence-recovery-weekly.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/02/successful-investing-expects-unexpected.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/02/we-are-progressing-weekly-blog-721.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, January 10, 2021

The Wisdom of 3 Wise Men - Weekly Blog # 663

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


The Wisdom of 3 Wise Men


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



                   

Those who spend a great deal of time, energy, and emotion investing are truly “career” investors, whether they do it for a fee as a professional agent or as a personal investor. The successful ones focus on areas beyond security selection, including policy decisions. They are scouts leading away from capital destruction and toward capital appreciation. To do this, their natural position in the march of time is to be way ahead of the parade of followers of current trends. Successful investors are often lonely, fearful of falling into an avoidable trap, often searching for clues that others have found.


US investors will suffer a new government beginning in ten days, made up mostly of career politicians who participate in a former government producing slow, uncertain growth and loss of relative strategic power. Asia, particularly China and to a lesser degree India, plus the Middle East and Africa, represent challenges and opportunities likely to drive higher investment returns relative to those in Continental Europe. Under these circumstances, as a contrarian, I am paying attention to three investment wise men.


Jason Zweig wrote in this Weekend WSJ, “In theory investing is all about markets: in practice it is more about marketing.” Jason was addressing the old tale that stocks and funds are not bought but are sold, largely based on the marketing of past performance. The easy approach for salespeople and others is to extrapolate the immediate past. In the commodities markets, which often exhibits long trends, there is the motto “the trend is your friend”. My study of sports, economies, politics, and markets is that all trends either end disrupted or exhausted. The longer the trend, the more competitive forces will seek to replace the presumed longevity of the trend.


Jeremy Grantham of GMO points to the career risks of being too premature about future drastic changes in direction. He was admittedly three years early before the Japanese market topped out. In another instant, he lost half his clients in one strategy by being premature. The lesson here is to gradually withdraw and add to various sectors or philosophies. While it may be emotionally satisfying to go “all in” or “all out”, it is extremely arrogant in terms of career risk. We should also remember that the prime function of markets is to create humility. We can be wrong.


Benjamin Graham has been called the Father of Security Analysis and was a successful fund manager with both wins and losses. He said “Never mingle your speculative and investment operations in the same account, nor in any part of your thinking”. I don’t remember when I came up with the idea of creating sub portfolios for different purposes, but earlier he was focusing on different approaches for different investment purposes. At the racetrack it is called “different horses for different courses”. 


I often advocate sub-portfolios for different time periods to meet spending needs. As the weakest securities disappear in terms of impact over time, the longer a portfolio functions the greater the odds of success. Almost all the accounts we have held for twenty years or more are profitable. Under today’s conditions of increased uncertainty, I wonder whether two new sub portfolios should be set up. 

  • The first would have a four-year duration based on the probability that much of what the incoming administration accomplishes will be reversed by a new administration in 2024. I am particularly focused on tax rates and regulations. 
  • The second trading portfolio would have a one-year focus based on the effective timing of new legislation and executive order implementation. It would trade on the rumors of the progress of various political actions. 


Despite the financial media focus, the bulk of equity investments are long-term, both for retirement and estate building purposes. We have just finished an above average ten-year period where US Diversified Equity Mutual funds averaged an annual gain of +12.69%, with the median fund rising +11.71%. To do better than these results one needed to be invested in growth-oriented funds, which were more volatile than other stock portfolio peer groups. I have doubts that the next ten years will be as good as those in the past. Considering my outlook for interest rates, inflation, the value of the dollar, demographics, and technology, performance of no more than half the level of the last ten years might be viewed as heroic. One might even predict a lower return. (Interestingly, if we did experience a low ten-year growth rate, the following ten-year rate would probably be much higher.)


Current Updates

  • For the first week of 2021, the average S&P 500 Index fund gained +1.30% vs +2.59% for the average US Diversified Equity fund, continuing the pattern of underperformance delivered in the last half of 2020.
  • The AAII weekly sample survey of its members’ views for the next six months is 54% bullish and 26.6% bearish. Market analysts treat this as a contrarian indicator. 
  • An interesting mathematical insight is that these ratios are approximately 2 to 1. They are in the extreme range and I would not be surprised if they reversed, with the S&P Index funds doing better and the six-month trajectory of the market doing worse.
  • The JOC-ECRI Industrial Price Index remains stubbornly high, generating a +26.6% gain year over year.
  • Truck tonnage carried is moderating an early spike.
  • The S&P 500 was up for the first five days of 2021 and more often than not that heralds a positive year. The full month of January is a stronger predictor.


Critical Question:

Do you regularly examine your investment policies or is most of your attention spent on security selection?




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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/01/anticipating-topping-us-stock-market.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/12/stud-poker-new-swamp-game-weekly-blog.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/12/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 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

                   


Sunday, May 3, 2020

Time to Change Investment Strategies? - Weekly Blog # 627



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

Time to Change Investment Strategies?

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



Investment strategies of long duration become habits, and it is difficult to change habits. One should not attempt to change habits or strategies on a whim. A change should be carefully considered. In weighing choices, the factors leading up to a decision are usually mixed. Further, the timing of both the decision and the execution of the change should receive the same level of thought. The reason there is a question mark in the title, is because it is a question some of our accounts are grappling with. I hope by opening the discussion I can elicit some answers from our subscribers.

While we should periodically review all our investment strategies, it usually happens after a report of past performance, a change in client wishes or circumstances, or some major pronouncement or event. Today, none of these circumstances are pressing for a decision. However, my training in the US Marines is to always look at the horizon and prepare for change.

Why Now?
There are some elements that could suggest a change of investment strategy or reinforce the present strategy for each account. The following are these elements:
  1. Are we in a “bull market”? Using popular measures, we had a one-month “bear market” which made a bottom on March 23rd. It was followed by a rally, which through May 1st has seen the following gains: DJIA +27.60%, S&P 500 +26,52%, and NASDAQ +25.42%. Some suggest the minimum gain for a bull market is 25%. By that definition we are in such a market, although it is not universally believed.
  2. The so called “fear index” of market volatility, as measured by the VIX, is currently almost three times what it was a year ago (37.19 vs. 12.87) when the indices were close to what they are today. 
  3. Warren Buffett sold all his positions in the four largest airlines at a considerable loss, without negatively commenting on their managements. He felt he could not clearly see their future after exiting the COVID-19 trauma. (More on him and Berkshire Hathaway (*) later in this blog.)
  4. As noted in prior blogs, the recovery rally has plateaued, at least for a while. Market analysts believe more time needs to pass before a likely successful assault on the old peaks.
  5. I am hearing of some investors selling their equity positions once prices reach their breakeven levels.
  6. According to my old firm, investors poured $83 billion into Money Market Funds this week. This happened the same week the average S&P 500 index fund gained +4.13%. In a sharply rising stock market, fully invested index funds with lower expenses are difficult to beat. Nevertheless, 36 different equity investment objective averages rose more than the funds invested in the index. The leader, Small-Cap Value Funds +11.02%, has frequently lagged in the recovery.
  7. The redoubtable Jason Zweig in Saturday’s Wall Street Journal quoted Benjamin Graham, “the chief virtue of rebalancing is that it gives investors something to do”, questioning the efficacy of automatic rebalancing.
COVID-19 Possible Future Impacts
While there have been numerous other plagues impacting the known world, this is the first time societies have voluntarily closed. This is also the first time we live in a world with effectively no electronic borders. The plague spreads through air travel and I, like Warren Buffett and others, wonder what the world will look and function like after we are free to leave our homes and eventually travel. Not knowing does not completely excuse us from making multiple plans to deal with the world as it evolves, while markets react and overreact. I appeal to our subscribers to review the following list of possible impacts, then suggest appropriate strategies that agree or disagree with them.

Possible Future Concerns to Investors
  1. Paying for what we have already spent or promised. Tax revenues will likely go up when we reach what used to be called full employment. Until then, governments at all levels will face increased expenses. Increased expenses are likely, as reserves will be needed to address future plagues of the same and/or different types. These substantial costs will likely be paid either directly through official taxes, or unofficial taxes known as inflation.
  2. “Sheltering in Place” may have permanently changed our collective attitudes toward real estate space. As an analyst I wonder whether modern society has become too square-foot demanding. This will likely impact offices, plants, stores, hospitals and healthcare spaces, government offices, homes, second homes, and educational locations. (I am concerned about these possible trends and how they impact the organizations I work with. I am a trustee of Caltech and the Stevens Institute of Technology, a participant on Atlantic Health System’s investment and finance committee, and a member of the Board of Advisors for Columbia University Medical Center.)
  3. Along with most developed economies, we will see increased costs to keep seniors healthy and voting.
  4. With the growth of video entertainment and conferencing, what is the outlook for travel, business, and entertainment?
  5. Can the bulk of American youth compete in a world of younger, harder working, better educated, frugal, and more disciplined people who are paid less? The answers will be found in our homes, schools, and extra-curricular activities, including jobs. These concerns will need to be addressed at all levels, from pre-kindergarten through graduate courses. At the University level the financial crunch will hit as early as this fall. Moody’s (*) has downgraded the entire educational sector to negative outlook. The Financial Times noted that 64% of university presidents said “long-term financial viability is their number one concern”.
  6. This pandemic will probably force many contracts for insurance, trade, and work to be rewritten, leaving some organizations financially naked to these risks.
  7. In a more electronically connected world, the viability of advertising supported print media is likely to be threatened. The level of adverting dropped even before the lack of fact checking and bias put into question the implied endorsement of the publisher to adverting copy.
Learning from Berkshire Hathaway.
On Saturday, instead of being at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting in person with my wife and one of my sons, I listened to it on my iPad. We have been going to this event for about 10 years, not only because some of our clients and personal accounts hold the stock, but to learn more about investing from Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger. In addition, because of the breadth of products and services sold by the company’s subsidiaries, it is a quick but incomplete review of the underlying US economy. After listening to Saturday’s meeting I wrote a brief note titled “Is Berkshire Hathaway the Ultimate Trust Stock” to our investment clients that are holders of the stock. If any subscribers to this blog want a copy, please email me.

(*) Owned in corporate or personal accounts.



Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/04/large-opportunities-and-risks-weekly.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/04/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/04/long-term-investors-mistakes-ahead.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.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Two Questions: Length of Recession, Near-Term Strategy Choices - Weekly Blog # 600






Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Two Questions: Length of Recession, Near-Term Strategy Choices


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



Authors Note # 1 
This is our six hundredth blog. I hope you have gotten some worthwhile ideas to help with your investment responsibilities. My goal is to provide at least two ideas a year that make you think about your process, either differently or more thoroughly. As we are approaching our 12th year, I want to thank our subscribers who have shared their thoughts with me. These thoughts have helped me to reach our goals. I also want to thank my two editors who have been long term associates, the late Frank Harrison and his successor Hylton Phillips-Page. They have turned into English my too long Germanic sentences.

Length of Next Recession 
Any study of nature and economic history will show repeated periods of expansion (fat years) and contraction (lean years). In studying history, I believe they are not only inevitable, but required. It is important to separate economic contractions, which we call recessions, and market crashes. They are often in close proximity to one another, but not always. Economic recessions have a much greater impact on investment portfolios than so-called stock market crashes. For example, while much media focus continues to be on the October 1929 market crash, there is little mentioned that by December of that year the Dow Jones Industrial Average had risen back to its October levels. Thus, the crash was a technical dislocation and was not in itself a cause of the recession, or the psychological term that’s been applied, The Great Depression.

The historic reasons for contractions after periods of expansion, either in nature or economics, is an unsustainable expansion. There are many causes for unsustainable expansions:
  • Changes in climate
  • The outgrowth of war on both the victor and victim
  • Confusing secular growth with cyclical growth to meet a temporary demand vacuum
  • Too low or too high prices
  • Leaders of governments and/or businesses attempting to extend a tiring expansion
  • Loose credit that keeps both companies and individuals seemingly solvent, but creates zombies awaiting bankruptcy
  • Excess capacity creating excess supply, driving prices lower among competitors 
If recessions are inevitable, what is the question for investors? 
The question is the time span of the recession. Most modern recessions, as reflected by the stock market, have a duration of about 2 years (1-3 years). Considering the folly of those who have been correct in spotting a price peak and then have being wrong about the bottom and subsequent tops, I will not attempt to call an end to the current dance.

Considering my focus on long term investment accounts, it raises some questions. Does one stay with sound portfolio holdings enjoying the expansion, on the belief that their past gains will carry them through a roughly two-year decline. While not publicly admitting that this is their strategy, most individuals and institutional investors are currently following this strategy. There are however other issues that should be examined:
  • The current US stock market expansion is over ten years old.
  • Governments around the world are actively pushing nominal and inflation adjusted "real" rates down, creating zombies out of both corporations and individuals who should be exiting their debt. 
  • Not fully understanding that technology drives prices down, changing purchasing habits and creating deflationary trends which are often elements of a financial collapse. For example, there were those who believed we had seen peak auto production in the 1990s in Japan and in 2016 in the USA. These beliefs resulted from changing demographics, living habits, ride sharing, and the growth of US public transportation. Without a strong auto industry politics would change, as well as many other things. 
If our next recession lasts five or possibly ten years, shouldn't we be change our portfolios?
The problem with equity type risk in stocks, high yield bonds, and private equity/credit, is what to change it to? While mutual fund investors are not always right, it is interesting to note that the largest net flows are currently going into money market funds, followed by high quality commercial bonds.

As usual, Jason Zweig of The Wall Street Journal had some things to ponder. He reported that in 1929, on the basis of the radio boom, the Radio Corporation of America had a price/earnings ratio of 73 times and a price to book-value ratio of 16 times. Amazon, because of the promise of "the Cloud", recently had the same numbers if not higher.

Author's Note #II 
In the early 1960s I was a young analyst awaiting the boom in color television. After many years it finally happened, with RCA rising above its 1929 peak. The color television boom grew slowly because of the difficulty in producing acceptable quality television picture tubes. There were only a handful of suppliers and RCA was late in converting one of its factories in Pennsylvania to a color picture tube plant. Thus, I and many analysts visited the plant, followed by lunch with their management at the local country club.

The meeting date was November 23rd, 1963. It began and effectively ended with the announcement that President JFK had been shot and later died. Clearly, there were lots of unanswered questions at that time. One that struck me came from a well-know, but nameless analyst “what was happening to stocks on the American Stock Exchange?” This was significant because the largest manufacturer of color tubes was listed on the ASE. My guess is that he personally held that speculative stock with a large borrowed balance. The markets quickly closed to prevent a panic which would have wiped out many, including those on borrowed margin.

It was a very silent time on the train ride home from Pennsylvania that night, but it gave many of us a real understanding of the risks we were taking and how volatile markets can react to the unexpected. This kind of experience shapes one’s thinking for a lifetime. The US markets reopened the following Monday morning to reassure buyers.

Near-Term Strategy Choices 
In my role of selecting mutual funds for clients, I am always looking to balance the risks and rewards of investing. My associate Hylton and I do this is by reading financial documents and visiting many successful managers. This weekend I reviewed the strategies of a number of successful managers. I am happy to have a discussion with subscribers to see if any of these strategies fit within their responsibilities. The following list is not in preference order, but in the order of when I read their latest report:
  1. Import substitution (A bet on lessening globalization)
  2. Mid-Cap Opportunities (Not particularly unexploited)
  3. Better stock prices in China (Taking advantage of retail selling)
  4. Overweight financials (Contrarian bet on rising interest rates, which seems inevitable)
  5. Market share can be better than reported earnings if it is profitable and leads to higher EPS
  6. Cautious on momentum (already happening)
  7. Illiquidity is expected to get worse
  8. Investment decisions are based on current prices, not macro views. 
  9. Absence of bargains (Warren Buffett's complaint) 
Questions for the week: 
What portion of your portfolio could successfully survive a long recession?



Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/10/things-are-seldom-what-they-seem-weekly.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/10/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/10/contrarian-bets-and-other-risks-weekly.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, October 20, 2019

"Things are Seldom what they Seem" - Weekly Blog # 599



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


"Things are Seldom what they Seem"


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



Premise 
Things are seldom what they seem is an appropriate maxim for military reconnaissance, home buyers, merger & acquisition specialists, political and security analysts, and most importantly long-term surviving investors. When surface observations prove to be accurate, popular rewards tend to be small and when they are wrong the penalties can be large. This week I share three instances where a deeper understanding of what is popularly "known" are examined more broadly.

"Informed Prices" 
On Friday the Dow Jones Industrial average fell 255 points, with 67 of those points in the last half hour. Before using these "knowns", one should examine the makeup of the numbers and their implications. First, almost two-thirds of the decline was caused by just two stocks, Boeing and Johnson & Johnson. Boeing's fall is particularly significant because the DJIA is a price weighted average and it’s fall disproportionately impacted the result, as it is the highest price stock in the index.

As an analyst/portfolio manager, the larger implication lies in reviewing the investment selection criteria. Statistically oriented pundits and marketers generally want to sum up the company's results using factors such as changes in earnings, returns on equity or capital, revenues, or book values etc.

Both the price declines of Boeing and J&J were responses to internal disclosures. In Boeing's case it was a reaction to emails from the chief pilot expressing doubts on the Max 737. In J&J's case it was the discovery of a single batch of contaminated product. Neither of these disclosures were or could have been captured by any known factors. Ever since investors have compared investments and managers they have utilized screens to highlight and understand differences. Rarely was success the result of one management being smarter than others, it was often due to comprehending what was not captured in the statics, i.e. patents, customers, locations etc.

In the following market factors for the week I found issues of future importance, which I would be happy to discuss further with subscribers:
  1. There were price gaps from earlier in October in all three major stock indices.
  2. There were differences in the patterns of the high/low ratios for stocks on the two stock exchanges - NYSE 303/101 and NASDAQ 197/230
  3. On the NYSE the volume of shares going up was very close to the number of shares going down.
"Plain English" can be Plain Wrong 
Jason Zweig, in an always interesting column in The Wall Street Journal, described attempts by a member of Congress and the SEC to force mutual funds to issue a new four-page document in "Plain English". Ironically, this is an effort to correct errors of judgement by both the Congress and the SEC. A generation or two ago there used to be an active retail market for investments in most cities and towns in ground floor stock brokerage offices. Their longevity was a testament to the value they were providing. They existed because busy people who recognized their lack investment knowledge needed help, the situation is no different today. In many cases the customers', man or woman, provided good service to the investing public and many of their recommendations proved to be profitable for both the investors and the brokerage firms. I believe the average retail investor's returns were superior to those of today, in part due to lower interest rates. Perhaps unconsciously, the SEC destroyed this setup by removing fixed commission rates. (That is not to say that there weren’t some abuses and bad judgments made.)

The SEC has faith in the disclosure of "facts", and numbers are even better. For a while it considered requiring funds to publish their beta numbers, urged on by the late and sometimes great Jack Bogel. Luckily, the requirement was dropped after being ignored and considered something of questionable utility. (It could have had some value as an annual or market phase measures.) Digital representation are an attempt to capture reality. While most critical decisions are reached through analog searches and comparisons, JP Morgan himself said that he did not lend based on collateral, but on character. The new document cannot correct for a poor education. Many successful investors learned early about budgeting their time and resources, without which no four pager or four thousand pager will produce on average, winnings.

When someone asks for my help with their investments, the first thing I should ask is how much time they intend to devote to investing. For those devoting "twenty minutes or less", I suggest that they either find someone they trust to manage their money or just accept one or more fixed rate investments. For the remaining few, I would be happy to introduce you to the multi-level set of investments arts.

"Follow the Leader" is Chasing one's Tail or Worse
As someone, with the help of a great staff, who probably created more lists of leaders and laggards than perhaps any other person, I can appreciate the media and spectators knowing who are at the "tops of the pops". Unfortunately, people don’t evaluate all the short to long-term time periods, or how quickly a name rotates from the leaders lists to the laggard roster. That is a mistake, but it is even worse to not notice the change in market conditions.

As an outsourced chief investment officer and a member of non-profit investment committees, I have seen a growing share of assets devoted to private equity and debt. In a recent article in FT WEALTH devoted to Family offices, a survey showed that over 80% are using private equity investments through funds or fund of funds. They are following the lead of certain Ivy League universities which have been investing in private equity for two generations. In the early years these schools produced results superior to the public market. At one of these investment committee meetings the members were presented with a book authored by one of the in-house chief investment officers, highlighting his success in investing in privates. That was then, today most of the former leaders have completed a year where in aggregate they underperformed the public market measures. What happened? The structure of the market was changed dramatically by the SEC’s efforts to make investing easier.

The way investments are taught in most places focuses almost entirely or totally on the issuer of the securities. However, the company is only one of five forces on the price and utility of investing in the security. The others are the needs of the customer, the compensation for marketing, the profitability of the firms that provide investment management, investment banking and trading, the changing nature of the exchanges, and the attitudes of the reviewers/critics.

The combination of generally declining profitability caused by the SEC’s elimination of fixed rate commissions and the long-term decline in real interest rates altered the commercial needs of the players other than the issuer and dramatically changed the market for privates. For over two generations brokerage firm equity/agency commissions were unprofitable. Their profits came from net interest on margin loans, dealing spreads, underwriting, financial advisory activities and investing for their own accounts.

This led the institutional sales force and eventually the retail sales force to shift to the sale of private securities, either individually or in packaged products of funds. In order to supply their sales forces, many firms got into the business of underwriting or offering private securities. They were often directly or indirectly paid in shares of the products they were selling. While a couple generations ago there were only a few in these markets, now almost all the firms that have survived are there.

At the same time successful managers of private venture funds were regularly coming to market with new merchandise. Owners of private companies therefore had many underwriters and investors competing for an interest in their companies, leading to higher prices. That was sustainable if these companies went public at sufficiently high prices to create profits for all who participated in the build up to the sale. It all worked as long as the IPOs rose in price long enough for all the willing restricted stock to be sold. In 2019 we have seen some IPOs break below the offer price and some have been withdrawn.

I have witnessed first-hand the success that Caltech's investment staff and appropriate consultants have generally had with their privates. They have worked long, hard and smart. I am convinced that there are few groups that have a similar dedication to this effort.

One of the general lessons in investing is that it is difficult to make meaningful gains in crowded trades and they can be very unprofitable if the crowd attempts to stampede out.



Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/10/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/10/contrarian-bets-and-other-risks-weekly.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/09/mixed-near-term-after-recession.html



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Sunday, September 22, 2019

Capital Cycles Changing? - Weekly Blog # 595



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Capital Cycles Changing?


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



                             
The critical lesson of living we must deal with is that all of life is cyclical. As investing is an abstraction of living, investors must deal with cycles. Our cycles occur along the spectrum of capital, going from capital appreciation to capital preservation or from highlighting goals of success to those of survival. A somewhat parallel spectrum is arrayed between “growth” and “value”, as we choose to define them. It is often useful to determine where we are in the spectrum by relating current values to those at the extremes. The activists believe they can consciously time their movement from one extreme to another, while  historians are generally more comfortable mid-range. This dichotomy was evident during the past two weeks.

Where Are We Going?
Far too many words have been written recently giving directional advice without understanding where we are in the investment and market cycles. The distinction between the two related cycles is that investment cycles begin with intelligent and prudent transactions, while market cycles record sudden shift in prices. Somewhat suddenly two weeks ago, “value” stocks and funds began performing better than the prior leaders marching under the banner of “growth”.  This past week the momentum in favor of “value” was absent or subdued. This is not surprising as growth has been a consistent winner for ten years and in the first four days of the week transactional volume was low. “It takes a long time to turn a battleship” was one of the lessons taught us in the Naval Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (NROTC).

Is There a Change Happening?
When one is in a turning phase it is almost impossible to be certain of the future direction. Is it a ninety degree, one hundred and eighty degree or three-hundred-and-sixty-degree turn? There are at least four bits of evidence that something out of the ordinary is happening.
  1. Falling prices have seen more volume than those rising in this week’s transactions. (More dollars are leaving than coming into the market.) 
  2. On Friday there was a surge in the transactions of asset management stocks, e.g. T. Rowe Price (*) traded almost 3 times its average volume of the prior four days.
  3. High-quality debt yields declined more than intermediate-quality debt based on the latest week’s yields. (Bond prices move inversely to yields, so the desire to own high-quality paper with reduced income is a sign of concern for both bond and stock prices.)
  4. WeWork’s proposed IPO price, after dropping by two-thirds, was withdrawn. (In the weekend edition of the Wall Street Journal, my friend Jason Zweig intelligently questions the myth that private investing produces better results than publicly traded investments. The significance of this belief is that many tax-exempt institutions and wealthy individuals have put substantial amounts of their capital into private securities, believing that their lack of liquidity and disclosure are exchanged for better performance, often caused by their  IPOs. I am familiar with several cases where this didn’t work out.)
(*) T. Rowe Price, the premium publicly traded asset manager, is in both our Financial Services Fund and personal accounts. They are predominantly an investor in publicly traded securities. However, in some of their funds they have been an early investor in private companies. The maximum share that I have seen in their equity portfolios is 7% in privately held securities. Many of these have been good investments and losses have been small over the many years they have been investing in privates.

What is “Growth” and “Value”
Investors use labels as an abstraction to convey a series of integrated, complex concepts. The essence of “growth”, “growth stock” and “growth stock fund” is the rising of stock prices above those found in the general stock market on a secular basis over multiple market price cycles. This definition ignores both short-term and economic cycle price swings around an upwardly sloping trend line. Another way of expressing this concept is that growth companies have profitable products and services, which are met with increasing acceptance by both customers and investors. There is a problem with that definition in that the label is unlikely to be permanent for all time, due to its dependence on the perceived ranking versus their competitors. However, some companies have appropriately maintained the label for a long time. The trick for investors is to identify when that the label is slipping. Renewed, skeptical analysis is needed.

There are many ways to define “value”, because value is in the eye of the beholder. The original investors were the primary investors betting on the success of the venture. The follow-on investors were cashing out the originals and had to question the offered price relative to other alternatives. The second set of investors thought of value in terms of a discount relative to present prices. The history of Security Analysis is that it was developed as an offshoot to accounting. The original course by Ben Graham and Dave Dodd started with the analysis of the assets behind bonds, which were selling below both their maturity price and the statement value of the assets. We were taught to schedule the cash conversion schedule of the assets. Greater weight was readily given to  assets converted to cash, like finished inventory vs. plant and equipment etc. This led to a group of buyers who were labeled “net-net buyers”. Ben Graham, Warren Buffett and the late, great Irving Kahn were some of these.

Because of a much higher level of public disclosure and computer searchable financial statements, there are relatively few net-net opportunities in most developed countries markets. In its place some have used the discount from book value or net asset value for fund vehicles as a substitute. For the most part this has not worked particularly well because balance sheets record historic asset acquisition prices adjusted for annual depreciation and impairment costs. Book values are rarely written up according to accounting and regulatory rules. Recent attempts to capture the discount on closed end funds has not been successful. First, it takes time, effort, and often money to displace the present management. Second, there is likely a difference in price form the last sale at the end of a day and the actual price received in liquidation.

So Where Are the Value Opportunities Today?
There are quite a few that are the equivalent of Sherlock Holmes in the mystery of the dog that didn’t bark. The focus should be on what is not on the balance sheets of both assets and liabilities. One example is real estate for an operating company. Royce & Associates (**) has a fund that invested in Steinway, the concert piano manufacturer, which was not growing. However, uncaptured on its balance sheet was the air rights above its low-level 57th street show room and their large facility in a rapidly changing section of Queens. This proved to be very profitable when the real estate was liquidated. Much like a chain of cigar stores on many prominent corners in Manhattan, which lost money as tastes shifted, but had very long-term leases on their stores.

Today, in many companies the most valuable asset is the lists of customers and what they purchase. Two examples are stocks that I own personally, neither of which I expect to liquidate even though they have understated book values. Apple’s one billion customers names and spending habits proved that an asset could predict future sales, much like when car owners traded in their vehicles every one to three years. Another company that is assembling a combined customer information databank is CVS, which is combining its pharmacy and health insurance customers. Not only are there repeat business opportunities, but the potential to identify new demand as new drugs and services are developed. I suspect Amazon could create the same type of value, which is essentially a derivative of DE Shaw’s ability to predict market prices.

Is There Another Approach?
Believing in cyclicality, I often look at the worst performing investment objectives compared to the best. (This works for a group of funds, but not necessarily for individual funds where differences in skill levels are apparent.) In the last five years the average growth fund of all sizes, both domestic and international, averaged a gain of +7.57% compared to value funds which gained +3.50%, or effectively half. Thus, one can see my initial attraction to the possible shift in favor of value. Even with this instinct when investing new money we are more weighted toward growth for long-term accounts, but we are slowly increasing our exposure to value. The reason for the slowness is that we could still have another strong bull market led by growth. We are very close to record price levels, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average behind -1.55%, S&P 500 -1.12% and NASDAQ -2.55% from their record highs. We are paying attention to the NASDAQ as it is the most speculative of the indicators and is the one that has recently shown significant selling volume.

(**) My son who is the senior investment strategist for Royce Associates and was not involved in that decision.

Need Help?
If you would like to discuss any of these thoughts or how to structure your portfolio, please contact me.



Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/09/concentrate-or-diversify-2-questions.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/09/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/09/excess-capital-less-equity.html



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Sunday, March 17, 2019

LONG-TERM TRENDS MAY NOT BE A FRIEND - Weekly Blog # 568



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


LONG-TERM TRENDS MAY NOT BE A FRIEND


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

                     
     
“Big Mo” in the political world, “The Trend is your Friend” in the commodities world, and momentum investing are beliefs in continuing that which is into the future. Certainly, various media pundits stress current trends. Salespeople of all stripes find it is easy to sell their wares by highlighting current conditions. As a contrarian investor I am delighted to see great levels of enthusiasm for the currently popular, because it leads to significant mispricing of both rewards and risks, creating opportunities for the careful investor. For those swept up in what is currently popular, it should be a well-earned learning experience.

Faulty Long-Term Predictions
This week there were two very relevant notices in the press. The first was a statement by Ajay Sing Kapoor, an analyst at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch. The statement said “There is really no permanent trend just lazy intellectuals confusing a long cycle for a perpetual-motion machine.” This is a useful insight in the climate change debate. One of the best market analysts I know grew up on a farm which he has owned for 30 years. He mentioned the feast and famine cycles experienced while living there, much like the biblical seven fat years followed by seven lean years. 

The belief in long-term trends is present in today’s investment selection, which focuses of selected factors based on selected histories. The strongest of these is the belief that changes in earnings per share will dictate the price of the shares. This was true even when I was a junior analyst at a trust bank, where investment leaders used the change in reported earnings per share to make investment decisions. Even then I was suspicious, feeling that reported earnings were the result of both controllable and uncontrollable forces. It is only later that I became more conscious of the changes in Generally Accepted Accounting Practices (GAAP). Today, earnings report releases emphasize “adjusted earnings, adjusted operating margins, adjusted profit margins and even adjusted revenues”. The SEC has mandated that these reports must also show the results according to GAAP, but they don’t  highlight the fact that almost every year AICPA makes changes to GAAP. Corporate data complements government produced data as critical inputs to thinking on the economy according to Jim O’Neill, the former Goldman Sachs partner and global economist who coined the “BRICS” term for the rapidly developing emerging markets countries. He writes, “Though economics aspires to the rigor of the natural sciences, at the end of the day it is still a social science.” Thus, the specific numbers produced by economists are kidding us with their precision, particularly when they are expressed with decimals.

An Improved Fan Dance
If the base data is questionable, its use as the foundation for future prediction is extremely questionable. Consequently, The Bank of England and some of the US regional Federal Reserve Banks are showing charts using the most current or corrected datapoints, then adding a fan like wedge showing the range of future predictions.  My natural skepticism questions if the wedge is too narrow. I can accept that a narrow fan probably includes most of the probabilities utilizing a single up and down standard deviation. However, as an investor I like most others feel much worse after a decline than a pre-tax gain. I would much prefer a wider wedge that includes the reasonable possibility of two or three standard deviations. (I believe that both long-shots win and racing accidents happen on occasion, depriving the best horse from winning.)

Jason Zweig on the Wrong Long-Term
The second important item in this week’s press is a column by my friend Jason Zweig. He cautions against investing in companies that are building for the long-term, properly concerned that the focus on long-term investing can lead to the mistaken allocation of resources. Tech companies spend substantial capital on new facilities and equipment for future markets that might not evolve. Think of the engineering and construction geniuses responsible for the construction of the Egyptian Pyramids. The pyramids were monuments to the rulers while living, as well as in their after-life. I am much more interested in the long-term development and acquisition of talent, including the building of multiple generations of leadership at all significant levels. 

Investing for the Long-Term
I have devoted most of my investments to the long-term and where appropriate for my clients I have done the same. While this on average generally means a low turnover of securities and funds, it is not a lock-step process of holding regardless of current input. It requires careful examination of current information versus long term perspectives, both of the specific investment and its place in the portfolio, as well as any changes in the needs of the beneficiaries. I accept the cyclicality of both the markets and my ability to correctly analyze the inputs. I often expect to be premature and less often to be wrong. My long-term attitudes are derived from the study of some of the best investors as far back as I have information. In general, these attitudes have been good for my accounts and family over time.

Mid-Term Platform or Lid?
Each week I look at the investment performance of mutual funds around the world as a good representation of the results of managed money. This week I paid attention to the average returns of US Diversified Equity funds for the five years ended this week. The period included the final years of the past administration and the first couple years of the present one. The importance of politics is questionable. The twenty-investment averages for the five years generated an annualized compound growth rate of +5.69%. This included some extremes on the upside: large-cap growth funds +12.13%, S&P 500 index funds +10.72% and multi-cap growth funds +10.16%. On the down side there were dedicated short bias funds -19.35% and alternative equity market neutral funds -0.74%. These results suggest that large-cap tech companies produced a disproportionate portion of the gain and that being out of equities was a loser. 

Five years is a little longer than the average US stock market cycle and roughly equates to the presidential cycle. Being a contrarian I would not expect the two extremes to repeat over the next five years. The extreme contrarian would examine the funds that produced negative results feeling they could be the leaders at some point. In that vein I would be scanning for any indication that things are changing for the better for commodities funds, particularly those involved with different aspects of energy and agriculture. I don’t currently see a catalyst, but I can afford to be late as I suspect that most of the selling in these sectors is over.

Short-Term = Confusion
As is often the case the future direction from current conditions is not clear to me. Banks do not appear to need deposits to make loans as the interest rate offered on average is 0.59%, down from 0.61% the week before and its recent cycle high of 0.63%. Lack of new loan demand is not encouraging. The latest survey sample of the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII), a very volatile measure, shows the three alternative predictions for the next six months are all between 31% and 36.5 %. On a more positive note, the roster of price moves in the Weekend WSJ showed 64 out of 72 being positive. Of the 25 best performing funds for the week, 14 were growth funds and 3 were health-oriented funds.

The one certainty after a period of level market performance is that there will be a breakout on the upside or a breakdown, possibly both, based on  higher volume and enthusiasm.

Another Favored Myth Destroyed
For many years during a US recession Americans talked about moving to Australia with their US acquired skills. Very few did, but it was in the back of their minds as an economic escape. In the nuclear age several Americans thought that the safest place to live with their families was the South Island of New Zealand. The tragic events of this week have shown that there is no practical place to escape. We are going to be forced to deal with present and future problems where we are. The destruction of myths often leads to the recognition of the benefits of where we are and focuses our attention on making our lives and investments better.          



  
Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/03/the-top-before-big-top-weekly-blog-567.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/03/2-speed-vs-2-directions-old-better-than.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/02/lessons-from-warren-buffett-and-italian.html



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A. Michael Lipper, CFA

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Sunday, September 30, 2018

Longer to Rise, Faster to Fall - Weekly Blog # 544


Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

Longer to Rise, Faster to Fall

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


One of the most critical tasks for good analysts is to anticipate both the near and far term futures. We know that we will be wrong some of the time in terms of direction and frequently and will be in error on the numbers themselves. We take comfort that our fellow prognosticators, the weather people, are still employed. Both of us tend to have better records than either economists or politicians. The reason for the better record is not that we are brighter, but that we are constantly looking for surprises that could cause trend reversals. The others are much more comfortable in extrapolating the present into the future.

Each day and each week I look for potential surprise elements that I occasionally share with you. To put some perspective into my observations I place my views in different time slots, which may be useful to our subscribers even if you haven’t adopted our sub-portfolios of different time spans.

Most of the US market indices are near their historic previous high points but appear to be laboring in an effort to go higher. My friend, Byron Wien, said that the “market could move somewhat higher, but that a major surge is unlikely”. Byron was not in the US Marines with me training in the undulating hills. My experience is that it takes a long time to get up a steep hill, but the fall on the other side happens quickly. This matches our historic market experience and reinforces my belief of identifying different time spans for different tactics. The rest of this blog contains inputs that I received this latest week, broken down into times when they appear to be most important.


Need for Operational Cash or Short-Term Considerations 

The picture is mixed as shown below:
  • September slow-down in sales orders
  • Jump in wholesale inventories (could be tariff or price increase related)
  • Generally rising stock markets in US, China, and Japan
  • Closing daily stock price gaps for DJIA and S&P 500 
  • Center parties losing some power in Germany, France, and Italy
  • US restaurant shortage of experienced staff
  •  Of the larger investment objective averages, the following beat the S&P 500 index funds for 2018 year to date: Small-Cap Growth, Health/Biotech, Large-Cap Growth, Science & Technology, Mid-Cap Growth, and a number other popular fund objectives. Leader-ship is broader than just the FAANG stocks.
  • Only three types of fixed income funds gained over 1% on a total return basis year to date: Loan Participation, High Yield, and Ultra Short Funds. As with most other fixed income funds, net asset values were flat or down, leaving only their dividends on the positive side.
  • In the past week, five of the six best performing indices were commodity related indices. The two best currencies were viewed as commodity currencies. 
  • There was a significant slow-down in net sales for the world’s open-end funds between the first and second quarter. According to a compilation done by the Investment Company Institute, the $584 billion net sales in the first quarter was down to $194 billion in the second quarter. This was materially less than the $609 billion in the second quarter of 2017. Even so, the fund industry is a powerful force in the investment markets, with global total assets of $53 trillion.    

Until the End of the Next Recession and Market Decline:
  • Byron sees the next recession after the 2020 presidential election, but the stock market may anticipate earlier.
  • Jeremy Siegel, Wharton Professor and Consultant to Wisdom Tree (*), believes “stocks are overvalued and bonds are enormously   overvalued on a long-term basis.”
  • Studying mutual funds since the 1960s and knowing their history before then, it is very rare to find a professional investor that es-capes a major decline and then is successful in re-entering the stock market at a propitious time. Cash makes us too comfortable.  

Legacy Investing: Stay in the game
  • John Authers, one of the most read columnists in the Financial Times, has written a column on what he has learned from investing his fund journalism prize in 1992 and the good record it produced. He invested in a mutual fund which had a good investment record, which he continues to hold. The points he has learned are: 
    • There is not a great deal of difference in performance over the long-term between an actively managed middle of the road fund and an index fund, if it existed at that time.
    • He and most investors have a home country bias.
    • One should expect portfolio managers to change and for there to be changes within the management company itself.
  • Jason Zweig, another old friend, recounted in the weekend edition of The Wall Street Journal that there are periods when various markets outside of the US perform better than the domestic market. He believes that the trend of US investors investing in funds invested outside of the US will be rewarded. As pointed out by a manager at T. Rowe Price (*), foreign markets from a US prospective have less tech growth stocks and thus their markets are selling at a lower valuation.
  • I have made the point to an investment group that I participate in, that currently a good way to hedge US holdings is to invest long-term into China, either directly or from my standpoint thru mutual funds.

My Conclusions:

Investing is like predicting the weather. It’s almost impossible to predict the levels of the market, particularly with shifting levels of sentiment and liquidity. Getting the trends right is often the best one should hope for.

As most artist’s don’t exactly know which of their works will achieve lasting acclaim, we should recognize that it is at best an art form or an intelligent gamble when properly managed.

Investing with different approaches for different time spans allows one to have more tools than a single portfolio with a single strategy.

At the moment I believe we are climbing a wall of increasing worries. It’s like climbing a series of difficult hills, always aware that most declines are marked by surprises which lead to a quick fall.


Question: how do you see the long-term outlook?


(*) A long position is held either in a private financial services fund or a personal account of mine and do not represent a recommendation

 
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A. Michael Lipper, CFA
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Sunday, November 19, 2017

Be Thankful for Risk - Weekly Blog # 498



Introduction

In the northern Hemisphere, this is the season of festivals to celebrate the gathering of a good harvest. In the US, we recognize this tradition as Thanksgiving. World Stock Markets have been quite kind to investors so far this year as seen through the eyes of mutual fund holders using category averages and highlighting some exceptional performance:

US Diversified Equity Funds
+14.34 %
Sector Funds.                           
+9.76 %
World Equity Funds                 
+16.73 %
Mixed Assets Funds.               
+11.25 %
Domestic Long Term Debt         
+3.51 %
World Equity Funds                    
+7.65 %
LeaderGlobal: Science&Tech
+46.84 %
LeaderPacific: Ex Japan
+38.22 %

Source: Lipper Inc., a Thomson Reuters Company.


If the calendar year ended last Thursday night these results would be above average on a historical basis but shows that investing in Asia and in global science & technology issues has produced extraordinary results.

Performance Always Comes With Risks

Investment history is a tale of gains and loses with hopefully some lessons that can be used in the current time frame. This last week we had an example of very long-term rewards from investing in the auction of Leonardo da Vinci’s painting of Salvator Mundi for $450 million. In the Wall Street Journal, our friend and columnist, Jason Zweig made a good attempt to quantify the painting’s return, from presumably its first sale to this week. By his calculations after an attempt to adjust for inflation using gold as a very rough measure, the annual return since the sixteenth century was an outstanding 1.35%. But even this, by today’s standard low return, was better than cash, gold, and bonds, but not stocks. Another author has calculated the gain after inflation in the equivalent of the S&P500 since 1871 to be 6.9%.

There are two important lessons from this data: 

  • First, accepting risk can produce better returns than perceived safer investments. 

  • The second that the $450 million price compared to an auction house estimate of $100 million did not appropriately consider that this may be one of only 20 finished works by  the talented artist. Scarcity has a value

This is one of the reasons we favor individual stock selection over sector bets. This has implications for our fund selection process of favoring funds with less than 100 positions and even a few under twenty positions over broad index funds or passive sector funds. To us differences do  matter.

Recently we have been reviewing reports on the 13F filings of a number of well-known investment managers. In an over generalization most seem not to have owned a lot of winners in the third quarter, but continue to own and enjoy good results from positions bought years ago. +

+Email me at Mikelipper@gmail.com  for more info on our Timespan L Portfolios®

Whether we like it or not we are all risk takers anytime we get out of bed or cross a street, let alone make a long-term investment decision. In an over-simplified model any portfolio’s strategy can be summed up as capital preservation or capital appreciation or for most, a ratio of the two. In the above model of comparative returns to the value of Salvator Mundi’s portrait, it is important to note the better performance of the painting over cash, gold, and bonds. To me there is a quotient of risk in all three of the under-performers that has been viewed as “safe.” For example, cash is not protected against inflation, particularly the virulent type that has been seen periodically through history. In addition while most of the time the costs of holding cash on account is small, and with minor custodian risks, both have been known to create anxiety for cash owners. Perhaps the biggest risk in holding cash is a dramatic change in the needed use of the cash to meet needs. If these are true for cash, similar risks may be present in other “safe assets.”

At this time holding US Treasuries could be more risky than generally perceived - based on two bits of news not generally appreciated. The first is analysis by Merrill Lynch echoed by others, that Treasuries are the most crowded trade in the market. This suggests that there is a supply/demand imbalance with some of the participants not exercising price discipline which may explain why the yields on US treasuries are higher than agencies UK, German, and Japanese issues of similar maturity and perceived quality.

The second and perhaps related bit of news is an article headlined from the Financial Times which said “US Treasury dealers accused of collusion.” There are similar, other cases pending. The results of these cases one way or an another could cause disruption to not only the market for US Treasuries, but also to many markets that use treasury prices as benchmarks in setting the prices for other instruments and markets.

Accepting Intelligent Risks Can have Its Rewards

Obviously not every single risk works out for long-term investors, but many do.  The key, particularly for our longer term investment accounts is in careful selection of mutual funds. Two of the matrices that we study are prices and related valuations plus the underlying selectivity as evidenced in the portfolios of mutual funds. Currently we appear to be in a two-tier market with a couple handful of good performers becoming price performance leaders. This not true for a second tier.

One study points out unlike in 2000 the fifty largest companies in the S&P500 were selling at 31 times earnings. Today the fifty largest is selling at 17.9% which is generally in line with historic records. One explanation for the high valuations of some stocks is the Charlie Munger belief adopted by Warren Buffet that it is better to “buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.” This philosophy depends on the ability to find wonderful companies at fair prices. In my mind, this is dependent on sound and smart investment analysis. A good investment analysis course could be taught exclusively on the wins and losses in Berkshire Hathaway’s* history. Recently they have been reducing a large position in IBM which perhaps has not yet developed into a wonderful company and have been buying Apple*, still evolving as a wonderful company. While Berkshire is a very long-term investor in a number of securities, it is price sensitive, currently sitting on $110 Billion in cash and $180 Billion in investments.
*Held either personally or in the private financial services fund I manage.

Conclusion

Accepting the risks of disappointing results from time to time does not diminish the odds in favor of long-term gains. One needs to balance the goals of capital preservation and capital appreciation. The ratio should
probably shift inverse to near-term market performance.

Question of the Week:

If you were forced in terms of your own account how would you divide your portfolio into only two buckets between capital preservation and capital appreciation and is the mix different in your professionally managed accounts?