Showing posts with label stock prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stock prices. Show all posts

Sunday, November 24, 2024

SPORTS FANS SELECT CABINET & OTHER PROBLEMS - Weekly Blog # 864

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

SPORTS FANS SELECT CABINET

&

OTHER PROBLEMS

 

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

 

 

 

Go to the Arenas

As we view many contests and competitions, it is clear to us the mistakes combatants are making. Apparently, the President elect is choosing his cabinet based on the following three characteristics:  

  • Personal loyalty to Trump.
  • Complaints about what the government does or does not do.
  • No experience in running a large federal organization.

 

I remember from my sports days, both in secondary school and university competitions, various screams were heard about the details of the front-line games or the details of a move setting up some subsequent play. All we knew was that most of the players were inexperienced in their announced positions. They may have been fortunate in that many relied on what they were taught in school in those days. For example, they could have taught us that stock prices could approximate the value of a stock, or a sound reaction to an event.

 

Today, 80% of the volume of the S&P 500 is passive and 10 stocks make up 39% of its market-cap. One stock is bigger than every other national stock exchange, except Japan.

 

Bonds Speak Differently

High grade US Treasuries bond yields have risen 124 basis points in a year, sending their prices down. However, the prices of medium-grade bonds have been flat over the same period. This does not speak to the quality of US Treasuries but instead reflects the demand for them. Time value (the bond’s maturity) used to be a critical element of the bond market. Today, only 31 basis points of yield separates the 2-year bond from the 30-year bond. (This may suggest that due to low yields, very few of the current owners of 30-year bonds are expected to own them for a long time.)

 

Caution: Keep Data and Date Tied

The Saturday weekly Wall Street Journal roster of stock indexes, currencies, commodities, and ETFs showed gains for 74% of them. The American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) showed an increase in bearish readings, reducing the spread between bulls and bears to 8%, from 21.5% the prior week. This is a dramatic change. It could reflect a shift in the sample survey makeup. Alternatively, because the AAII survey was taken early in the week it reflected the views of the prior week. Overall, this week’s data was positive every day, suggesting “Black Friday” sales enticed customers for at least two weeks. That is my preferred guess.

 

What do you think?    

 

Happy Thanksgiving, particularly those and their families serving far from home.

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Reading the Future from History - Weekly Blog # 863

Mike Lipper's Blog: Inflection Point: “Trump Trade” at Risk - Weekly Blog # 862

Mike Lipper's Blog: This Was the Week That Was, But Not What Was Expected - Weekly Blog # 861



 

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Sunday, June 10, 2018

When, Not If - Weekly Blog # 527

The Next Recession

Recently, two very senior operating officers of significant organizations asked for my outlook on the next recession. I am very sympathetic to their quest for guidance, as it will immediately impact their day to day decisions which are trending quite positive. Taking the advantage of being an interested observer without operating responsibilities, I replied with some certainty that a recession was on the way.

The real question was when, not if. To be honest, I don’t know. Predicting the timing of a recession with operating precision is similar to the task of identifying when a volcano on the Big Island in Hawaii will erupt, or when “The Big One” (massive earthquake) will hit. One of the techniques in the USMC is to identify the potential for trouble rather than exercise the arrogance of solely predicting.

Why am I confident that there will be a recession? Because throughout the history of humans there have been cycles of alternating relative calm and crises, with some of these being caused by changes in weather. In the world of markets and economies the main stimuli for cycles are human behavior. The causes usually start with the word “over”: Over-building, over-capacity, over-borrowing, over-hiring and other terms for over expansion, or if you will over-expansion.

In explaining the falling apple, Sir Isaac Newton identified the physical laws of gravity. He believed they and other physical phenomena were put in place by “The Watchmaker in the Sky,” or God.  Perhaps there is a similar force that periodically corrects for errors in human risk management behavior. Having established, at least for me, the certainty of periodic recessions, the more difficult task is predicting the timing. I must admit that I fall back to the lessons of both the race track and highly valued stock prices, plus the power of envy.

Most people individually are quite bright and make reasonable decisions. However, when we enter “the crowd” our innate insecurity draws us to popular views which become ours. These are then reinforced by something psychologists call “confirmation bias.” Substituting Newton’s watchmaker with an eternal “bookie,” the greater the power of the confirmation bias the greater the odds that it is wrong. Thus, as noted in last week’s blog, with the large, learned, financial institutions’ belief that the next recession is three to five years away, it is an intelligent bet to make against the crowd. (A much more difficult bet to make wisely is which side of the over/under challenge to accept. Right now the odds favor the next recession coming more quickly than in three to five years, but there have been very long streaks in history which could give the “over” bettors some comfort.)


Risks of Fraud and Mistakes

Thus far, I have just focused on the normal tug of war between greed and fear. There are two other indefinite variables. The first is the surfacing of a large fraud from a respected place. A careful study of humans reveals that at almost all times there is a level of fraud. Sometimes the fraud includes intellectual fraud along with criminal fraud. One of the characteristics of the period before a recession is the pace of activity accelerating and the public scramble for attaining wealth being top of mind. Thus, the time spent on careful underwriting risks is shortened and the envy for wealth is heightened.

The second variable is the frequency of mistakes. During these volatile periods small errors occur in transactions more frequently, caused by too little time and too little experience, by both buyers and sellers. This accelerated pace often leads to big mistakes by important people and major organizations. In the post-mortems after failures, the repeated question is often how these very bright, accomplished people could make these mistakes? The answer appears to be the rapidity of the times demanded it. 
 
Economic recessions and market cycles have been necessary to correct for human excesses. Thus, in the long-run they are cyclical in nature, but do not change secular trends.  Long-term portfolios should be diversified across both cyclical and secular patterns. A 50/50 balance between the two is a useful starting point in portfolio construction because it prevents over concentration on the intermediate and long-term investing.


Two Significant Pivots

1.  Tactical Pivot

This week’s fund performance displayed a significant change. Prior to last week there were a limited number of equity gainers concentrated around the production and use of cell phones. Globally, growth-focused funds were just about the only asset class to show gains. In the week ended June 7th there was a dramatic change. Value-oriented funds joined Growth funds in generating positive results year to date. Their gains in the week turned many of these funds to gainers for the year. The bigger turnarounds were experienced by Base Metal Commodity funds +4.85%, Basic Materials funds +3.41% and the already positive for the year Consumer Services funds +3.73%. One could interpret these results as an indication that a further cycle expansion became likelier last week.

2.  Strategic Pivot

For a considerable length of time mutual fund investors have been net buyers of non-domestic equity funds. This focus on non-domestic equity funds is clouded by the way the vast majority of international funds display their portfolios. Most funds rely on portfolio statements from their custodians. Where a corporation is legally domiciled is important to a custodian as a source of local law and taxation. This information is much less important to investors than where companies are making their sales and pre-tax operating profits. The mismatch is clearly seen when it appears that the majority of US foreign investment is in European entities. While this is legally true, it is not helpful as to where our foreign funds expect to make their money.

Most large companies are multinational in scope. This is particularly true of companies domiciled in the UK, Germany, Sweden, and the Netherlands. To the extent that these companies are showing growth it is coming largely from Asia. This makes sense on both demographic and savings trends. The leading middle class growing countries are China, India, and Indonesia. They have populations that are in the early stages of acquiring the goods and services that more developed countries produce, either at home or in their overseas facilities. This is the reason that we are investing for our clients in Asian-oriented funds for the long run.


Asian Play

This weekend we are seeing American political leadership following investors pivoting toward Asia, which is causing distress for many Europeans, even though they are also significant Asian investors. The Asian play is not geographically limited to the Asian continent. Latin America, Canada, Africa, and the Middle East are junior partners to the growing power bases in Asia.


Belmont Stakes Implications and Lessons

I look for useful implications from everything that happens as I’m always willing to learn, even if at times reluctantly. The running of the 150th Belmont Stakes, which was won by Justify with Gronkowski in second place, was just such a learning experience.

Implications

Did you notice the silks worn by the winning jockey or the crowded picture in the Winners Circle? The winning colors are those of one of the three syndicates that own Justify, the winner. They belong to the China Horse Club, a group of some 200 Chinese investors. I am guessing that an old friend and retired good investment manager was probably not surprised that this group was part of the winning combination. He recently pointed out that after a lifetime of collecting selective Chinese art, the prices for such pieces has skyrocketed as Chinese buyers attempt to repatriate their art by becoming the dominant buyers. I suspect we will see more Chinese money buying into racing and more importantly breeding opportunities to meet both nationalistic and long term investment needs. (One of the real power centers in Hong Kong is the Happy Valley Racetrack.)

The other two owners are equally interesting. WinStar Farms is another syndicate, whose leader has the corporate title of president, suggesting that it is being managed with more of a corporate philosophy than just the skills of a bunch of enthusiasts.

The third owner is perhaps the most interesting of all. It is the family office of the famous, or infamous depending on your political views, George Soros. Disregarding politics, the office’s investment approach is sound. It buys into some of the best thoroughbred breeding stock and regularly sells off many of the resultant yearlings, with advantageous tax benefits. Not surprisingly, the manager of this operation is the tax manager. This is one of the ways the wealthy, who want to remain rich, employ intelligent risk management techniques. In this case it sold off the racing earnings of Justify and retained the breeding rights. At this point the colt’s racing earnings, including the Belmont win, is $3.7 million. However, the ownership has sold off most of the breeding rights for $60 million.

The investment implication highlighted by Justify’s ownership structure is that the world is moving toward more professional management of assets and liabilities and away from pure family control.


The Betting Lesson

A reported 90,000 people were at the track on Saturday and many others bet largely through electronic means. As much as I scanned the entries, I could not find a substantial reason, other than racing luck, that Justify was not clearly the best horse in the race. However, my discipline would not let me make an odds-on bet where the amount won would be less than the amount wagered. (I do this in my investing portfolio when buying good long-term stocks.) The colt did win and paid off $3.60 for a $2.00 Win bet, or after returning the $2.00 bet realized a gain of $1.60. I am reasonably certain that this was not a good return for the risk of being wrong. If one considered the winning position for Justify and then selected the second best colt, one might have bet on Gronkowski for Place. In fact, he came in second from trailing behind until late in the race. One would have won $13.80 or a gain of $11.80 for a $2.00 bet, or over seven times more than the winner.

The critical investment lesson to learn: Picking winners is not as productive as balancing the risks and rewards of investing.
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Sunday, October 29, 2017

3 Potential Risks - Weekly Blog # 495



Introduction

Contrarians are useful even when they prove to be wrong. In forming an investment committee for a non-profit institution of professional investors, I felt it was incumbent on me to somewhat balance the committee, largely populated by generic optimistic money managers with at least one contrarian that was well skilled in finding good shorts. While it would have been inappropriate for this institution to sell short betting on falling prices, the answering of some bearish views were useful in appropriately constructing our long portfolio which did well. We were better prepared to be long-term investors on the long side for reviewing and appreciating contrarian views.

Current Thinking Process

Stock markets around the world are rising well ahead of current sales and earnings, even adjusted for modest growth projections. The buyers are enjoying what could be called a “melt up.” Economic sentiments are moving higher.

While I do not know how long these trends will last - be it a day or multiple years - I believe it is critical to consider the potential risks that are currently apparent to this long investor and manager.

First Risk: Simplistic Decisions

On October 26th The Wall Street Journal published a multi-page critique entitled “Morningstar Mirage” which purported to show that the firm’s various ratings were not helpful in making decisions as to what mutual funds to buy. The article decried the marketing power of Morningstar’s ratings, not recognizing that at least since the 1930s funds that performed well attracted the most sales if they were known. In the same light there was no real discussion of the questionable mathematical processes used to reach its conclusions.

The biggest risk to investors is not the Morningstar Mirage. The biggest risk is that the financial community believes that investors want simple answers to complex questions. Sales people who can get very limited time with both their prospects and their accounts are trained to use the KISS principle, (Keep It Simple Stupid)” in their communications. It has never been clear to me whether the communicator or the investor was stupid.


Often people spend more time at a sporting event or preparing a special meal then they do making investing decisions which can have significant impact on their lives and those of the beneficiaries. At the game each play, each course or each critical ingredient is thought about deeply. As the readers may be aware I learned the basis of securities analysis at the racetracks, spending hours on each race. I am told that one of the most successful racehorse owners in the last 30 years in the UK spends a great deal of time on the races and the breeding of her horses. We should do no less than Her Majesty.

When Hylton Phillips-Page, my VP of Fund Selection and I analyze a mutual fund we spend a long time getting to understand how the fund, its managers, and supporting organizations impact the past results. A much more difficult task is guessing how we think the past will not be simply extrapolated into the indefinite futures. The term futures is a recognition that there will be interruptions of past trends as conditions change.

The risk of simplistic decisions is much broader than choosing mutual funds.  Not only investment decisions, but all types of other decisions, including political, career, and other personal decisions are put at risk when given only cursory attention. The past is useful as to what happened and more importantly what didn’t.  Most studies of human decision-making involve a number of biological organs. The brain and our senses are very complex and they interact differently when conditions change, and they are always changing.

Second Risk: Credit Withdrawals

In each of the general write-ups of major stock market reversals almost all the attention is devoted to stock prices. In truth almost every major stock market decline was slightly preceded by the withdrawal of credit support. Since we are not out of October, we should first start with October 28, 1929, the biggest single day drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average up to that point. On that day, the index dropped 12%. Most recounts do not include the fact that the market had been dropping since August and a good bit of the buying was done with borrowed money called margin. The borrowed money came from the major banks who issued it to the brokers, who in turn offered it to their clients on the basis of their portfolios. The banks used call loans to the brokers using their clients’ collateral. As the market declined in the late summer and early fall of 1929, the value of the collateral fell, reducing the safety for the banks that were starting to call their loans. The brokers called their margin accounts to put up more collateral which most didn’t (or were not able to) and were rapidly sold out of their holdings. This is an example of a non-price sensitive insistent seller.

A similar thing happened in 1987 where in one day, October 19, 1987, the DJIA fell 22.6%. European stocks were down about 10%. Portfolio insurance used futures to hedge long institutional positions. Many of the futures contracts were margined against the long positions owned by financial institutions. In Chicago there was no requirement to be able to short on a price uptick as there was in New York. When New York opened there was a wall of sell orders.

A somewhat similar occurrence happened with the collapse of Lehman Brothers when the “repo market” to finance its fixed income inventory was closed to Lehman due to a different set of rules and expectations in London.

Trying to avoid a future similar event, the Dodd Frank Act focused on what banks and others owned, not the risk in their loans. I suspect that most of the inventory owned by the Authorized Participants, (the market-makers for Exchange Traded Funds and similar products) are highly margined. At some point the providers of these loans may get nervous as to their collateral cushion and may want instant repayment which could create a problem.

There may be similar potential problems in both the US Treasury and Foreign Exchange markets where high leverage is available.

Third Risk : Career Risk

If investors are guilty of simplistic investment decisions, professionals live in fear of being fired either by clients or employers, This is a particular risk if someone needs to publicly report performance or work for publicly traded companies. Thus, despite reasonable long-term results, near-term absolute and even more importantly - relative results - drive terminations. This is normally a mistake on the part of the terminator for two reasons. First, most of the time there is a partial or complete recovery. Second, and much more dangerous to the investor is the choice of the replacement, often a manager that has good long-term results which are appropriate for a decline, but poor results in expansions.

Bottom Line

Risk is always with us and it is the highest when least expected. Drive on two-way streets, they are safer.
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Copyright ©  2008 - 2017

A. Michael Lipper, CFA
All rights reserved
Contact author for limited redistribution permission.