Sunday, January 8, 2023

Next Election vs. Future Generations - Weekly Blog # 766

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Next Election vs. Future Generations

 

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

 

  

  

Time Horizons

Behavioral, political, and investment strategies should be selected based on a measurement period, acceptance of errors, and compound returns. While rarely identified, these three factors often control the success of a chosen strategy.

 

Many people are currently very short term oriented, distinct from the expressed time frame driving the Founding Fathers of the US expressed in the Declaration of Independence and Constitution.

 

Four examples of this shortened time focus are:

1.  Selection of Leaders in political, military, health, and corporate sectors. We unfortunately pick leaders with political skills rather than courage to lead in a different direction, with the focus is on the next election or selection. Both Henry Kissinger and Jaime Dimon have written about the lack of foresight in the world’s political and business leadership. (I would slightly disagree. Autocratic leaders seem to be playing chess rather than checkers, which is what our elected or selected leaders are doing.)

 

2.  As revealed in the recent “Varsity Blues” scandal, where some rich parents made illegal payments to get their children into well-known Universities. Their apparent motives were intended to ensure their young got admitted to these schools for bragging rights, while others utilized “legacy rights” at their own alma mater to achieve the same result. (That one’s children do not possess the appropriate credentials to be accepted into these designated schools should have been addressed years ago.)

 

3.  Almost all investment performance data in the press focuses on annual or shorter time periods. This often mirrors the investment focus of many in selecting a fund or manager. (While I can’t predict winners in future markets, I am aware that the poorest performing advisors can occasionally produce the best results in  future periods by recapturing some of the prior lost performance.)

 

4.  On Friday the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) gained some 700 points. Supposedly this was because of the questionable Department of Labor establishment survey which showed a higher number of workers than expected. (There was almost no coverage showing that only 6 out of 10 employable workers were on the job. For many years, countries with 7 out of 10 workers employed were considered the better locations for investing.)

 

Contrarian Views

The history of market prices around the world suggests that the biggest gains come from a radical change of opinion on the future performance of various securities.

 

After 15 years of the US stock market being home to many of the big winners, there is some sentiment that more global oriented companies will be winners.

 

Markets don’t have to follow nice, neat calendar periods. In the US, stock prices generally rose in October and November then declined a bit in December. It is quite possible that November represented the end of the recovery period that started in June. Suggesting Friday’s gain won’t be sustained for the month.

 

Only 10 out of 104 mutual fund equity-oriented sector averages rose in December. Utilizing securities data on a national basis, only China, Hong Kong, Japan, and Thailand gained over 1% (listed in performance order).

 

Winning the Long Game

One of the long-term reasons mutual fund investing performs better than many managed accounts with individual securities is that the fund industry developed an easy process of reinvesting distributions of income and capital gains. A number of large companies had similar reinvestment procedures in the past, although they were dropped due to lack of interest.

 

One of the lessons learned from the thrift industry is that through the magic of compounding a series of small contributions can produce meaningful returns over 12 to 30 years, particularly in a market of generally rising prices where fund holders stay in the product.   


It is often the small and simple things that lead to investment success: having patience, a long-term time horizon, taking as much emotion as possible out of the investment process, not following the herd and looking for opportunities elsewhere. While these items are simple attitudes, they are often difficult to implement in practice. Investing is an artform; therefore, one should allow for mistakes without deviating from good strategies.

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Bear Market, Recessions, Reinvestment - Weekly Blog # 765

 

Mike Lipper's Blog: Week in Conflict Leads to Buy List - Weekly blog # 764

 

Mike Lipper's Blog: What does your 4.0 Profile Tell You? - Weekly Blog # 763

 

 

 

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Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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