Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning
Musings
“Are
We There Yet”
Editors: Frank Harrison
1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018 –
Immature
Impatience
One
experience learned from driving children on what seems to be a long trip is the
repeated question of “are we there yet?”. What should be learned from this
experience is the impatience of youth and their sense of elapsed time.
One
way to look at the experience is in terms of the elapsed time as a percent of
one’s life. For a four-year old, a single day awake is one out of 1460 days,
whereas for a ninety-year-old it is one out of 32,850 days. Investors have been
experiencing fluctuating prices for reasons we have attempted to explain for at
least for 3,650,000 days, or since the world first began investing.
Attempts
are made to explain a day’s price action tied to an established number or set
of conditions after-the-fact. Hoping to quiet the chattering classes of young
and old alike. The plain truth is that we don’t have a complete or even sound
explanation with any certainty. Never-the-less, as self- appointed experts we attempt
to quiet the chattering crowds.
Maybe
We Have Seen the Low of 2022
In
the artform of market analysis we require a low be declared post its occurrence,
whenever another price decline comes close to the first and does not fall much
differently than the declared low. On Friday we may have seen this phenomenon.
(Percent above the prior lows - Dow Jones Industrial Average +1.91%, S&P
500 +1.51%, NASDAQ +0.71%, or close enough.)
Based
on prior experience, evidence of a year’s low price would be identified by an oversold
condition caused by an unusual period of net selling, which we have probably
had. Additionally, the so-called VIX fear index has only risen to 30, not to the
extreme level of 40.
As
usual there are some contrary conditions. The most important of which is
whether the declared low is for a relatively small cyclical price decline, or
at worst a very mild economic recession.
Looking for a low to herald a structural correction, or worse case a period of stagflation. We have not yet seen any steps to address severe imbalances within the society. Nor have we seen a new leadership mentality from government, corporate/non-profit, or political segments which are desperately needed for a structural recession or a period of stagflation.
One
major concern is the magnitude of recent price rises being less than prior
expansions on a percentage basis. Due to societal and technological changes
have we entered a period of somewhat limited, but significant multi-year gains.
Recent Thoughts which Could be Important
- Absence of multi-year profit projections
- Will the return to physical on-site visits produce better insights?
- A view of “Sell Hubris and buy humiliation”
- Tesla’s market cap equals the sum of the European banking sector
- The US strategic Oil Reserve is back to 1981 levels
- The liquidity collapse in the UK has led to a possible 100 bps rise for US and other markets
- Recognition that socialization of large bailouts is too expensive
- Bonds not yet attractive on a capital basis
- China’s growth is pivotal to global growth
- Life insurance income statements benefit from rising interest rates
- Top 5 holdings in index sectors that worked: communications 71.2%, consumer discretionary 64.6%, energy 63.5%, infotech 58.6%, consumer staples 55.0%. Thus just 25 out of 500 names hold 35.46% of the assets, disproportionately driving so-called diversified performance. While they have added to recent performance, will they always?
Question of the Week:
What
odds do you place on a new market phase?
Did
you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/10/begin-to-dollar-cost-average-equity.html
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/09/if-not-bottom-then-what-weekly-blog-752.html
https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/09/planning-for-rising-stock-prices-weekly.html
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A. Michael Lipper, CFA
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