Showing posts with label stocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stocks. Show all posts

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Reading the Future from History - Weekly Blog # 863

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Reading the Future from History

 

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

 

 

 

History May Suggest:

  1. The American People Won the Election
  2. The Recession has started

 

The Declaration of Independence was signed on August 2nd, 1776, the US Constitution was passed in 1787, and the last state (Rhode Island) ratified it in 1790. Today, Rhode Island still remains the smallest state in the Union. Thus, since the beginning of our nation the rights of our smallest state have been critical to our progress. One of the many things making the US different than other republics is The Founding Fathers fear of the tyranny of the larger states on the smaller states. Consequently, our Electoral College favors state representation over population. In the 2024 election, even though President Trump polled more votes than Vice President Harris, the House is almost evenly split, but he won 36 states and lost only 14, mostly on the coasts or major rivers.

 

This split is one reason I suggested President Trump will likely have difficulty getting much legislation easily passed through both houses, where he only has a majority of about five votes. Of the 14 major issues, only two can be accomplished through just executive orders.

 

Actually, many if not most Americans are pleased with the results of the election. An incompetent government was dismissed before it became even more intrusive and has been replaced by a new administration with untried ideas. New legislation will be delayed by a disruptive Congress and a slow-walking Deep State. Many Americans would like it if the air conditioners in D.C. did not work, fulfilling Hamilton and Madison desire that government work be part-time.

 

Recession Coming?

As someone rowing in a boat with the wind picking up and clouds darkening, you become relatively certain it will soon rain. The question is, will you get to dry land before getting really wet?

 

Evidence of an economic storm on the horizon can be summed up as follows:

  1. Stock analysts have been instructed for generations that high quality bonds are more sensitive to economic changes than stocks, at least initially. Currently, yields have been going up (prices down). However, mid-quality bond prices have barely moved at all, something overseas fixed income investors are very sensitive to.
  2. Most US stock prices declined this week, with just 37.7% of the stocks on the NYSE rising and only 27.6% rising on the NASDAQ. NASDAQ stocks have performed better than those on the “Big Board” for some time and are cheaper on a market to book value basis. This suggests the NASDAQ investor is a more professional investor.
  3. The American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) weekly sample survey of investors indicates the bullish or bearishness sentiment of their investors for the next six months. In the last three weeks, the bullish reading has risen to 49.8% from 39.5%, while the bearish reading only went down to 28.3% from 30.9%. Market analysts believe the “public” is often wrong at turning points. With that in mind, it is interesting that the bulls gained 10.3% while the bears dropped only 2.2%.
  4. The weekend WSJ tracks some 72 prices of stock indices, commodities, ETFs, and currencies. This week only 12.5% were up, with Natural Gas up a leading 5.77%. The remaining gainers all rose by less than 2%. This likely indicates sophisticated investors are nervous about what lies ahead.

 

 

Thoughts?

 

 

 

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

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Both Elections & Investments Seldom What They Seem - Weekly Blog # 860



 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2024

A. Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, April 16, 2023

Pre, Premature Wish - Weekly Blog # 780

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Pre, Premature Wish


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

 

 

 

Motivation

After stripping away all the worries, details, and paperwork, the critical mission for analysts and portfolio managers is optimizing the capital of our clients, including their families. Despite our perceived brilliance, it is much easier to accomplish this mission during a “bull market” rather than a “bear market”. The biggest mistake and most difficult to recover from is missing the beginnings of a significant bull market, which is very easy to do.

 

Most of the time markets travel through various transitional phases:

  • Early recognition by a few far sighted, but often difficult people.
  • Growing acceptance.
  • Almost universal acceptance, except for the worrywarts.
  • Finally, the proclamation of a permanent condition. 

As the inevitable bear market becomes visible the process is reversed.

As it is difficult and dangerous to jump aboard an accelerating train, I prefer to board when it is marshaled in the yard. The difficulty of getting aboard requires an amount of brains, courage, and luck. That is precisely what I am attempting to do by focusing on conditions before travel begins.

 

Pre-travel Conditions

First, study past bull market journeys. Some start, but relatively few amount too much. Why? It may be that the damage done by the prior bear market was insufficient to get the necessary support. Additionally, the market may lack reasonably competent management capable of selecting the right track and able to keep the momentum moving in the right direction at increasing speed. Enough momentum to break the friction caused by others, including one’s own partners.

To start a bull-market you must first have been sufficient pain from the preceding bear market, with the ability to initially fund dominance over key doubters.

Today, there do not appear to be sufficient losses needed to be made up. However, for most of this calendar year there have been more shares sold at lower prices than bought at higher prices, both on the “big board and the NASDAQ. Most trading weeks there are more shares sold at lower prices than at rising prices, by a ratio of 4 to one. Buyers are labeled as accumulators and sellers as distributors by market analysts. Contributing to distributions are some investors moving out of dollar-based securities. The US dollar is in its fourth decline in fifty years. With the proceeds from their sales many investors are buying bonds, either for the first time or in quantities way beyond their habit. Others are investing in European and Asian stocks.

Currently, the risk of losing a little in bonds and stocks is probably close to being equal.  As new fixed income buyers venture into higher risk paper, the potential exits for higher risk paper to generate greater loses in fixed income than for stocks.

The total global economy is slowing. Not only in sales, but also in profits as margins narrow due to government policies restricting profits. There is a tendency to lower perceived risks.

After an investor loses more than expected, there is often an emotional need to quickly recover those losses. This is the second wave of money that will be sucked into buying stocks in a new bull market, and so the cycle begins again.

As much as I want to participate in a new bull market, it is apparently premature. Consequently, we must husband our resources and work to find relative islands of improving profitability.    

 

Thoughts?

 

 

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

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

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Equity Markets Speak Differently - Weekly Blog # 777

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Sunday, March 5, 2023

Data Performance/Easy.Interpretation/Not - Weekly Blog # 774

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Data Performance/Easy.Interpretation/Not


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

 



Simple Numbers Not Useful Answers

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index with dividends has annualized compounded performance reported to be 10.81% since its theoretical inception in1871. The index’s performance since 1965, the period for which Berkshire Hathaway has a public record is 9.9%.  The Buffett/Munger record for this period is 19.8%, or twice the index. I find the three-year record of Berkshire Hathaway compared to the S&P 500 and NASDAQ of greater interest. Berkshire’s compound growth rate was +11.34%, the S&P 500‘s +7.66%, and the NASDAQ +7.80%.  

 

The overall superior Berkshire result produces more comfort to me and clients than just the raw performance numbers. Remember, Berkshire’s combined results include their operating assets and expenses. I do not normally use three-year performance comparisons, as they frequently do not include one or more down years. The S&P 500 had three periods of two consecutive down years in the 58 years, vs. Berkshire which had only one such period. Over the entire 58 years the index fell in 13 calendar years, vs.11 years for Berkshire. (Psychiatrists tell us we feel twice as much pain from a loss vs. a similar gain, which makes sense arithmetically.)

 

Since we manage money for ourselves and others, investment performance is only part of the gain. Our reward is having the proceeds used productively by our beneficiaries or ourselves. If we or others squander the proceeds through bad choices its human impact is the penalty we should calculate in assessing success or failure.

 

Perspective on the last Three Years

On a purely mathematical basis, performance for the last three years suggests we have entered a different period than before. For the five years ended this past December, the S&P 500 index rose by an annualized 9.43 %, which is not a great deal different than its annualized 10.81% return since 1871. However, what is different is the S&P 500 Index growing only 7.66% annualized over the last three calendar years. (Berkshire, because it didn’t have the down year and had its operating side perform better than the security side, produced a compound annual return of 11.34%.)

 

While our accounts benefitted from Berkshire’s performance, the accounts will track a bit more closely to the index. I don’t know how much longer this particular phase will last, we have quite possibly entered a stagflation period. The president and past president have been spenders, comfortable with debts rising faster than the ability to repay it.  

 

If we define a period of stagflation from purely an investment perspective, we had six multi-year periods where the index did not produce a single year rising 20% or more, (1968-1974, 1974-1981, 1986-1989, 1992-1994, 1999-2002, 2004-2008, 2010-2012, 2014-2016).

 

A number of CEOs are changing. In many cases the new ones have strength in operations rather than skills climbing the political ladder.

 

We are also seeing changes at the supermarket. In one of the normally high-priced markets they are no longer carrying the highest price merchandise, e.g. lobster bisque. The weekly list of prices for stocks, bonds, commodities and indices are fluctuating wildly. Less than 10% of prices on the WSJ weekend list rose the week before last. This week 88% rose. To add to the confusion in the securities marketplace, the NYSE saw prices decline for four of the last five trading days, vs. three out of five for the more trading-oriented NASDAQ. For the week, 62% of prices dropped on the NASDAQ vs. only 54% on the NYSE.

 

American investors and their institutions have been selling US stocks but buying both European and Asian stocks. Those buying in the US have favored small-capitalization stocks, including those having more physical assets.

 

Low transaction volume in US stocks is being offset by investors favoring perceived to be less risky investments.

 

We may well be in a phase like the period between the Archduke being assassinated and the formal beginnings of World War I, which was obviously going to happen.

   

Question: What are you looking at to signify a new market phase?

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: “This was the Worst Week of the Year” - Weekly Blog # 773

 

Mike Lipper's Blog: A Terrible Week - Weekly Blog # 772

 

Mike Lipper's Blog: Primer on Starts of Cyclical & Stagflation - Weekly Blog # 771

 

 

 

Did someone forward you this blog?

To receive Mike Lipper’s Blog each Monday morning, please subscribe by emailing me directly at AML@Lipperadvising.com

 

Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

 

Sunday, January 30, 2022

“Things are Seldom What They Seem” - Weekly Blog # 718

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


“Things are Seldom What They Seem”


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




This is the title of a song by WS Gilbert of Gilbert & Sullivan in the operetta H.M.S. Pinafore. The title seems appropriate to thinking about investing today. In gathering research to reach my conclusion, I excluded positives that led to a bullish conclusion, but not because it’s unlikely. To the contrary, most investors tend to be optimistic, their views are documented by investment and political pundits. Consequently, another similar voice is hardly additive. Seeing potential negatives is not a popular exercise, although it’s useful in bringing balance to one’s views. To be perfectly clear, the vast bulk of my investments are invested in stocks and equity funds for the long-term, even beyond my life. I hope the majority will pay off in total return, comprised of price appreciation and growing dividends. The biggest problem today is that very few investments generate income sufficient to meet reasonable future expenses after inflation and taxes. The inability to meet current and future expenses from dividend and interest payments is a sign of a highly priced market.


Critical International Competition

Our geopolitical discussions are often based on Ukraine or China, with these conflicts placing the Western world at a disadvantage, regardless of our greater wealth. The current administration is playing checkers, where one needs to get up close to the opponent to eliminate one of the opponent’s pieces. The Russian leader appears to be an excellent chess player. The goal in chess is to capture the opposing king, using players that have different capabilities and proximity. Our Chinese competitor believes time is on their side and is building a greater level of self-sufficiency. Both appear to be capable executors of tactics and strategies based on a lifetime of work and success. By comparison, many members of our cabinet and senior staff were chosen based on their identity and political views.

Earlier this week at an investment committee meeting I mentioned that Russia had already accomplished its real mission, sponsoring disunity among European NATO members. Both German and to a lesser extent Italian business leaders wanted to maintain close relations with Russia and China. While I still believe this is the way they play global chess, there is a contrary action on the horizon. One of the main political parties in Sweden, concerned about the fluidity of Russian troop movements, wants to join NATO. With Sweden’s technological strength and good military, it could more than make up for the potential loss of Ukraine. Whether this happens or not, the mere fact that it could, is an example of “things are seldom what they seem”.


Guessing the Future is Difficult

As securities analysts, we used to say the one saving grace of weather forecasters is that they made us look good by comparison. (In terms of weather, I should point out, the less than optimum choice of the date for the Allied landings in France was a correct judgement by Ike, which differed from the German Army’s conclusion.)

Each year, the accuracy of the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) budget revenue projections is compared to its past record. In fiscal year 2021 the projection was too low by 15%, three times the normal error rate of 5%. Outlays were too high by 4%, twice their normal miss rate. These projections were calculated after some midcourse corrections in March. The purpose of showing these misses is another example of skilled statisticians falling to Mr. Gilbert’s song title. 

I don’t have similar numbers for analyst misses in terms of sales and earnings for the same period. My guess is the private sector error rate was equal or more than the CBO’s. My concern, particularly for high P/E stocks with double digit earnings multiples, is that errors can start “to be real numbers” This may be particularly true if one wants to invest for periods of ten years or more.


Two Different Voices

This is the season where politicians and corporate managements tell us how good things are and will be with their fourth quarter and annual earnings announcements. Actions by consumers and investors are saying something different, with consumer spending in December slightly below November. It is possible consumers shifted to earlier holiday buying due to fear of shortages, although a recent walk through The Mall at Short Hills, a ritzy shopping center, did not reveal ebullient shoppers. This suggests very little business capital was used to expand capacity vs filling out the supply chain, although there was probably some inventory building on the industrial side. 

In terms of net buying of mutual and ETF fund shares, it was dominated by the buying international funds and the redemption of domestic equity funds.


Views on a Recession

Merrill Lynch market analysts believe the quickest way to a recession is a Wall Street Crash. Jeremy Grantham, a manager that has been early but correct, put out a very dire point of view in a piece titled “LET THE WILD RUMPUS BEGIN”. He portrayed a bursting of the US Extravaganza, taking stocks, bonds, commodities, and housing down to at least their base price levels. Barron’s headlined an article “The Countdown to The Next Recession Already Has Begun”. This article pointed to rising fed rates bringing on a recession in 2024.


We May Not Be Hedged Against What We Thought 

Suppose we have a $1,000,000 portfolio invested 90% in stocks and 10% in long bonds. If any of the thoughts expressed above materialize and stocks and bonds both drop at least 10%, you now have $900,000 portfolio. While you continue to be hedged against a relative decline of one of two asset classes, you are not hedged against the loss of $100,000. If you look at the purchasing power of your money, both inflation and foreign exchange could reduce the purchasing power of your investments.


Working Conclusion

Be prepared for a difficult market that will reset values, possibly for a few years. At the same time, maintain long-term positions for future generations. They will need it, because it is possible the world will restructure in an unfavorable way, but at least they will have a start.    

  



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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/01/two-critical-questions-weekly-blog-717.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/01/current-causes-of-concern-weekly-blog.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/01/deeper-thoughts-weekly-blog-715.html




Did someone forward you this blog? 

To receive Mike Lipper’s Blog each Monday morning, please subscribe by emailing me directly at AML@Lipperadvising.com


Copyright © 2008 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, September 13, 2020

WHO YOU SELL TO DETERMINES WHAT YOU BUY AND WHEN? - Weekly Blog # 646

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


WHO YOU SELL TO DETERMINES WHAT YOU BUY AND WHEN?


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




This week showed the value of reverse thinking. Most investors choose what to purchase based on the perceived characteristics of the investment. They choose when to make the purchase based primarily on their own needs or possibly a headline event. This thinking has not produced profits over the latest two weeks.


Who to Sell to?

Basic securities analysis textbooks assume that investors sell to investors that think like them, which is long-term, although the eventual buyer may be another company in a merger or acquisition. One of the nice things about life and markets is that each year brings new people wanting to invest. Each generation produces young people wishing to get rich quickly, who believe that making smart decisions and acting very quickly pulls off that trick. (Wouldn’t we all like to find Eldorado, the mythical gold mine.) 


While sheltering in place the youth discovered their brokerage firms allow them to trade on margin (borrowed money). Stocks and bonds cost too much money and move too slowly, so they quickly discovered put and call options. Options normally expire worthless or are sold, but they can require delivery or acceptance of the underlying shares. To protect the sellers of these options they buy or short the underlying shares. During the last two weeks the market has become aware that in aggregate these options plus some owned by a large Asian fund group is huge. This is one of the explanations of the two-tier market we have been experiencing. 


The first tier is about ten stocks including a couple of Asian companies. Through the end of August these stocks gained much more than +20%. The remaining stocks, the second tier, is still down a few percentage points year-to-date. Our intrepid youth has concentrated their attention on these tech leaders in the first tier. Options are written for various time periods, from a day to multiple years. Most institutions using options typically hold them for one or two months, but these youth are often in and out within two days. A complicating issue is the belief that the equity underlying these trades, on both the buy and sell side, could be as low as 7%. This in and of itself is causing rapid trading on the other side of these transactions. Short-term traders expect the other side of their trades to be similarly motivated by short-term views. During the last two weeks this has been the added increment to the market, adding to both volume and probably much more to volatility.


The Time Hurdles

Politics

As I’ve suggested in prior blogs, we have entered an emotional trading period which can last until mid-November. By the end we will have the initial results of the election. For forward-thinking investors who know history, the impact of the Presidential election will prove to be less important than who will be the chair and probable ranking member of various Congressional committees and possibly sub-committees. It will be this small group that puts words to the President’s wishes. Based on history, campaign slogans will either be totally disregarded or so modified that the results will be very different than what voters perceived on election day. 


By January, I believe both political parties will be splintered into different groups on many basic issues. Committee chairs will not automatically be able to send their wishes to the “floor” of their house without some support from the ranking (senior) opposition member of the committee. While all members always think of their next election, the defeated party will be focused on how to reverse the past election and how to improve their own chances for the next election. The ranking member has less ammunition than the chair, as they aren’t able to appoint sub-committee chairs. Additionally, members from the minority party will undoubtedly be split as to the reason for their side’s loss in the last election and will blame some of the remaining party members. Thus, they will not be easily led. Their immediate concern will be the 2022 mid-term and regaining the majority in 2024, where the two Presidential candidates will likely be new to those roles. 


COVID-19

We are likely to get frequent reports on the progress of vaccine trials and therapeutics, which are not as much in the news but possibly more important in terms of the number of people treated. Personally, I am very concerned with the execution of production and distribution of these lifesaving or at least life altering medicines. These are very large tasks that frequently run into problems. 


Other News Elements Before 2021

  • BREXIT + UK Economic Recovery Faster than Continent
  • Some rising commodity prices affecting some consumer prices


Market Indicators

  • Very few fund investment categories rose this week - precious metals, agricultural commodities, Japanese and European equities
  • NASDAQ fell -11% from its all-time high
  • Dow Theory has a buy signal (often late, but sometimes early)
  • AAII survey sample increasingly bearish
  • Used car prices rising


What Should Investors Do?

Traders should trade, but remember, they want to finish with cash in the end. Investors should sit through this emotional trading period unless the market moves 20% either way. If a specific issue has some unexpected news causing reinterpretation of the situation, perhaps some change might be warranted. In general, sound investors with good portfolios and not too much cash should use a 20% market gain to add to reserves. Investors should use a 20% market drop to look for new bargains, which will benefit quickly if the market adapts to new strategies. (One might consider long-term producers or transporters of natural gas, or companies whose revenues are tied to market prices.) 

  

 

     

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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/09/turning-point-or-bump-weekly-blog-645.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/08/caution-ahead-emotional-turns-likely.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/08/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings_23.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, December 1, 2019

CONVENTIONAL WISDOM/CONTRARIAN OPTIONS - Weekly Blog # 605



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

CONVENTIONAL WISDOM/CONTRARIAN OPTIONS

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



At all times investors have strategic choices, they can choose to ride current momentum trends or opt for one or more counter/contrarian trends. Unless investors are extremely disciplined, most portfolios reflect a combination of both extremes. Nevertheless, when investors consider the likely track of their choices, it is a good time to consider the proportion of their financial responsibilities allocated to the momentum or contrarian extreme. I find it useful to go through this thought pattern periodically, either at recognized peaks/troughs or some calendar driven date. Due to the US market officially trading only three and a half days this week, it gave me time to ponder the future.

We appear to be within a current momentum trend of rising stock prices, which has historically produced relatively small future gains. Consequently, there is added interest in examining contrarian options. Contrarian alternative investment performance will likely bifurcate, with some producing outsized gains as they become eventual momentum vehicles. Their returns will likely be much larger than the mid-level opportunities facing conventional wisdom now. On the other hand, some contrarian options will fail and decline, or more likely produce rather flat or underperforming returns.

The following divides the evidence that favors momentum or leans toward my natural search for contrarian points of view:

Conventional Wisdom:
  1. “The trend is your friend” is an old saying which celebrates the power of momentum, which lasts until it doesn’t. The terminal phase of a trend can either slowly peter out or come to an abrupt stop. Sometimes a new trend immediately supersedes a tiring one or is replaced by a trendless market. Some date the beginning of the current trend to 2009, while others date it to December 2018. Regardless, the information technology driven market trend continues to lead indices higher.
  2. Tied to the first point, the level of reigning pundit conviction is the fuel driving the engine and that is prolonging the trend. There are no publicly anointed “bears”.
  3. In aggregate, because long-term oriented equity mutual funds have liquid assets that approximate their current level of monthly net redemptions, there is reduced potential for a redemption-led sudden market decline.
  4. As of the end of this week there are five equity investment objectives that have generated average year-to-date gains of over 30%.
Contrarian Points:
  1. In the US and in most countries, the amount of money invested in bonds dwarfs the amount in stocks. If bonds are purchased at the offering and held to maturity there is very little opportunity for price appreciation. Bond investors therefore tend to be more cautious than stock investors, who believe in the chance of earning more than their purchase cost. The two markets are interlocked in that economies and companies typically need fixed income investments to provide the financial leverage necessary for equity owners to earn overall economic returns above those of their companies. Bond owners prefer little to no risk, whereas stock owners are willing to accept risk if it is appropriately priced. Due to this dichotomy, the spread between stock and bond returns is viewed as an important measure of market value. The 5-year average return gap, +6.07% for equity funds vs. +2.75% for domestic bond funds, is too wide. For the current year the gap is even wider, +21.05% for stock funds vs. +7.81% for domestic taxable bond funds. A related concern is the drying up liquidity reserves for global central banks at the US Federal Reserve. Historically, a contraction of liquidity reserves has often led to dramatic disruptions in the fixed income markets. If the cost and availability of leverage goes up suddenly, it could hurt stock markets.
  2. US stock market indices appears to be confused. The price chart for the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 Index are forming a topping pattern. However, this past week there were 56  new lows on the New York Stock Exchange vs. 136 on the NASDAQ. (The two markets have roughly the same number of traded issues.) What makes this a bit confusing is the NASDAQ market has risen more than the NYSE and its chart pattern is not yet in a topping formation. Many market professionals believe you need high transaction volume to confirm any important move. We are not seeing that now, either in the number of shares traded or in price volatility. In terms of the latter, the VIX volatility indicator is currently running at 12.55 vs. 18.07 a year ago in the sagging fourth quarter. Bottom line, while there are some bearish signals, we need to see some form of confirmation before we hoist the “bear” flag.
  3. One of the lessons I learned from a very successful mutual fund executive, now no longer with us, is that markets move on the weight of money. What this means is that a small fund of $1 million performing spectacularly well  is much less important than a fund management company of $50 billion increasing by $5 billion due to performance or net sales. Thus, I am more influenced by the $20 trillion in taxable long-term mutual funds than market indices. My old firm prepares the performance of the 25 largest long-term mutual funds for The Wall Street Journal weekend edition. Only three have gains of over 25% vs. the 25.68% year-to date gain for the US Diversified Equity funds average. Six income-oriented funds produced returns of under 10%. Despite what many regulators, media, and financial educators believe, this shows that owners of mutual funds may be attracted to performance, among other values. Most of all, they value the comfort and trust in their own and their advisers’ decisions. Communication skills are important to breed the confidence that their investments will be taken care of during periodic market declines. That they will have the funds available when there is the need for orderly redemptions. This applies to both stock and income-oriented funds. The six income-oriented funds that produced mid-single digit returns all generated performance that fell below the average of seven different fixed-income fund objectives. Obviously the owners of these funds, like many of their equity fund compatriots, are not primarily interested in relative performance.
  4. The Wall Street Journal had an article titled “Stocks Projected to Slow”, stated by some portfolio managers and others looking at 2020 performance. In the article, some expected earnings gains of 3%, while others expected the economy to grow at roughly the same amount, with profit-margins maintained. Considering valuations, measured by reported earnings and price/earnings ratios, next year doesn’t look to be a great performance year. 
If you share these views I suggest potential returns are not adequate to cover the chance of negative surprises, particularly at the operating earnings level. If Charlie Munger and Warren Buffet can show patience to invest their $128 billion of Berkshire Hathaway’s (*) available cash at their age, maybe you can too.

(* Owned in a managed private financial services fund and personal accounts.)

Question of the week: 
Do you spend all your investment time selecting individual investments or do allocate some time to evaluate the structure of your portfolios and risks?


Did you miss my past few blogs? Click one of the links below to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/11/contrarian-stock-and-bond-fund-choices.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/11/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings-all.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/11/where-are-we-and-so-weekly-blog-602.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, March 3, 2019

2 Speed vs. 2 Directions: Old Better Than New - Weekly Blog # 566



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

2 Speed vs. 2 Directions: Old Better Than New

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


                     
                     
Investment survival and successful investing are often in conflict. This  age-old quandary is facing us now. We instinctively know that losing money does not promote successful investing. This thinking is captured in the first two great rules of investing: Don’t lose money and Don’t forget the first rule. Unfortunately, the modern solution to this puzzle, Alternative Strategies, doesn’t work most of the time.

According to the latest data from Refinitiv (owner of Lipper data), there are 1507 mutual funds investing in 8 different types of alternative strategies, with assets of $239 billion. Similar strategies are followed by numerous hedge funds. The Investment Company Institute (ICI), the mutual fund trade association, has 5 categories of alternatives. Within the ICI roster of alternative categories, the range of liquid assets is between 42% and 14%. The asset composition of alternatives includes liquid assets (cash or short-term debt) and two or more active groups of risk and debt related investments. The managers of these funds use liquid assets to cushion the periodic volatility of their more active investments, with the cushion theoretically improving the alternative portfolio’s relative ranking vs. active investment funds. While this will produce a slower speed of decline, it is rare that these strategies produce better rates of return over time. Even though cash was the only major asset class to generate a gain in 2018, it is extremely rare for the same long-shot horse to win two races in a row as a long-shot. (One of my lessons from racetrack handicapping)

Starting at least in the 19th century trustees of wealth used a balanced approach, often owning both stocks and bonds. Many early US mutual funds were balanced funds. They followed what appeared to be a sound strategy, as stocks and bonds moved in the opposite direction (two-way street) most of the time. The reason for this divergence is that bonds generally increase in value when stocks appear to be risky. This yin-yang relationship is less true today, as the movement of interest rates is driving both equities and debt.

The 757 balanced funds with assets of $485 billion gained +7.31% on average in 2019, better than the averages for all alternative asset categories. This was also true for the 5-years through this past Thursday, where balanced funds averaged a return of +5.08%. Only one of the alternative categories slightly beat balanced funds for the past 52 weeks, +3.05% vs. +2.51%. I suspect the reason for the balanced funds superior performance was that on average they only have 6.07% invested in liquid assets, compared with the 42%-14% mentioned above.

Short and Long-Term Observations
Short-term
The American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) weekly sample survey of its members are now reporting that 42% are bullish compared to 20% being bearish. This is a very volatile time series and often a negative indicator.

Long-term
 Since 1926 the annualized total reinvested return for the S&P 500 has been +10.1% and the Russell 2000 +11.9%. These factoids deserve a couple of ancillary observations. For a long period of time the equal weighted S&P 500 performed better than the more popular market weighted version, suggesting there may be more relative market risk in the popular FAANG shares. The better performance of the Russell 2000 suggests that the acquisition of its  companies has overcome the drag of its component companies with  losses. The shrinkage of the number of attractive small companies has led to managers like T. Rowe Price and Longleaf closing their small company funds. This could have the impact of raising the prices of some small-caps due to a perceived shortage.

Question of the Week:
What level of decline do you think you can tolerate without making material changes?


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

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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/02/could-biggest-risk-be-confirmation-bias.html

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2019/02/some-retire-while-others-sense.html



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Copyright © 2008 - 2018
A. Michael Lipper, CFA

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Sunday, April 29, 2018

Correlations, Diversification, and Value - Weekly Blog # 521



Introduction

The words correlation, diversification and value are often used to describe purported solutions to avoid losing money. Yet rarely are these tools or concepts in and of themselves fully understood. Currently, many investors with substantial amounts of their investment portfolio invested in stocks and fixed income securities appear to be more worried than usual. This week’s blog post will examine some of my thoughts on these three words. I will be happy to discuss them with you to apply to your own specific portfolio needs.

Correlations

Correlation and its opposite, dispersion, are terms that come from the scientific realm that describe how members of a collection relate to one another. In concept, if there is a group of individual people or securities, they must have some common characteristics. Our psychological need for reaffirmation tends to view correlation as supporting us in our decisions.

In the last week ending Thursday night, the net asset values or prices of mutual funds fell. Eighty nine out of ninety six equity type mutual fund investment objective categories declined. Twenty five out of twenty seven taxable fixed income fund investment objectives also fell, according to my old firm Lipper Analytical Services, now a part of Thomson Reuters. (Money market funds and tax-exempt funds were excluded.)

On the surface it appears that geo-political and interest rate concerns caused the small number of transactors to slightly sell more than they bought.  I suggest that a greater motivation was that after a prolonged period of unrealized gains in their stock and bond portfolios they were worrying about committing the biggest sin of investing - roundtripping.

My racetrack betting experience saw it differently. I saw investor confusion as to the smart bet. At the track this usually leads to many horses with relatively low payoffs if they happen to win. Thus, to me current prices/and price momentum are not particularly useful tools in making investment decisions. I will rely on my continuing analysis as to the long-term imbalance between buyers and sellers and other fundamental investment principles.

Diversification

In discussing investments with a highly respected analyst of fifty plus years of experience, he suggested that in his portfolio it was important to build it in such a way as to be able to sleep well. As I have given up sleeping well years ago in favor of occasional short naps, I didn’t know how to do what he wanted. I countered that sleeping well should not be confused with being asleep for long periods of no intellectual involvement. The sleeper is frozen into position until they wake up. As a US Marine I avoid being frozen into place.

My investment policy rests on the thesis that not only do I not have the skill to predict the future with complete accuracy, but the future will be made up of periods of rotating leadership. I execute this strategy for my accounts and personally through the extensive use of mutual funds. I look to the individual funds’ managements to make smart, occasionally successful tactical moves within their sets of capabilities and mandates. I reserve to myself and my associates the proper mix to meet specific needs and the timing of changes.

Changes should be based on specifics within a fund, such as to tactics and policies, including key personnel, but not performance. Performance is the consequence of prior changes, explicit or implicit. As all human activity tends to be cyclical, periods of poor performance are likely to be followed by good performance.

The key to this portfolio strategy is diversification. I get nervous when all of my investments are doing well at the same time. Thus I am afraid of too much correlation as I won’t have some investments going up, or at worst going down slowly, when others are falling. For the last several years low and declining interest rates have reduced the temporal value of cash or near cash.  The search for yield has reduced the level of cash in many formerly sound portfolios.

We should collectively consider rebuilding our cash commitment as ballast to our investment voyage. As a practical matter, unless cash is above 25% of a portfolio it won’t likely keep the market value of a portfolio positive; what a smaller amount of cash will do is two-fold. First it will allow for the payment of current needs without having to liquidate good investments in a declining market, as would be provided by the Operational sub-portfolio in a Lipper TIMESPAN Portfolio®.  But probably more important than taking care of current needs is a focus on buying bargains. The great fortunes are made by buying bargains near a bottom. As a practical matter better risk diversification can be achieved in less crowded markets, which often means investing in smaller caps and smaller countries.

Value

Investors should not want to buy fairly valued securities. While not completely accurate, Benjamin Graham is viewed as the father of value investing, with Warren Buffett as his leading disciple. As a proud winner of The Benjamin Graham Award for Service to the New York Society of Securities Analysts, which Graham helped found, I am conscious that his fame rests on his writing of the seminal book for analysts labeled Securities Analysis with Professor David Dodd.

When I took his course, Professor Dodd instructed us to recast published financial statements to determine the real value of the company, which was its liquidating value or as some call it “net-net” value. Graham and Dodd published their initial work in the real depression of the 1930s. They were primarily focused on defaulted bonds, which were many. They viewed them as future equities. Their approach, as implemented in their leveraged closed-end fund, was to use a substantial discount from the net-net value as their entry point into the reconstruction of the defaulted entity’s new equity, with the old equity either completely or largely written off. There were a handful of others playing this game, but Graham & Dodd were the only ones writing about this approach.

What brought this to mind was the Barron’s cover story this week, entitled “Are Value Stocks about to Grow Again?” The article focuses on book value compared to current price as the measure of value, and mentions Ben Graham and Warren Buffett.  The concept may be right but the tool can be very misleading. What most of the time drives up the price of so-called value stocks is an above market bid.

In general there are two types of acquirers, financial and strategic buyers. I have been involved with both. The financial buyer is essentially a liquidator, the faster the better. Often the financial buyer is using borrowed money to execute the raid, so they do not have time to get maximum value out of real estate or unfinished inventory. The quicker they can shed people the better. The strategic buyer sees a bigger value in the acquisition than the present management is producing. The acquirer values the customers, the intellectual property, and often the people.

Since most companies are not about to be acquired, they sell at a discount to their acquisition value. Roughly speaking, I start with a belief that many stocks are selling at a 25% discount to a potential acquisition price, which won’t be realized in the foreseeable future because a financial buyer’s net-net calculation is close to an extended book value calculation. Strategic buyers don’t see what they can do quickly with the targeted acquisition to make the return on the new investment.

Liz Ann Sonders from Charles Schwab suggests that value stocks will rise. I agree selectively. A number of companies are capacity limited, with long lead times to bring on new capacity. As customers for their products and services find bottlenecks causing delays, corporations may either buy new capacity by buying a company or will tolerate higher prices. These are capacity plays not book value plays.

A New Constraint

The Department of Labor is questioning the value of recognizing the “ESG” attraction in selecting securities for employee 401(k) plans. A number of foundations and endowments are devoting a portion of their investment pools for similar purposes. They may be challenged by the DoL’s view as to the investment merit of ESG, no matter how laudatory the objectives. It would be difficult to include ESG elements in the calculation of value for many investors. 

__________
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Copyright © 2008 - 2018

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

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?