Sunday, December 3, 2023

3 Senior Lessons + Upsetting Parallel - Weekly Blog # 813

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

3 Senior Lessons + Upsetting Parallel

 

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




 3 Seniors Passed This Week

In age order Henry Kissinger, Charlie Munger, and Sandra Day O’Connor died this week. They were remarkable people who lived good lives, leaving numerous good lessons for life. In general, these lessons can be utilized in our quest for investment wisdom.

 

Henry Kissinger was not only a fountain of geo-political knowledge, he was also a skilled conflict negotiator. Almost every important investment contract could use his skills in finding areas of agreement and more clearly defining the goals of both parties. In many instances these agreements went beyond the headline numbers. This is the essence of a happy deal and trade.

 

Charlie Munger, who I have had the pleasure of knowing for over ten years, was a believer in staying within his circle of competence. However, he grew this circle when he could. He was intelligently patient if progress was occurring. He believed in the value of people over historic financial results, both as customers and workers. (This became important as the country transitioned to a service economy, even for the manufacturing companies. Tesla is much more service oriented than the Big 3, with their own wholly owned dealers doing some replacement work, but very little repairs)

 

Sandra Day O’Connor believed in updating decision alternatives in reaching conclusions. (One of the traditional investment problems is, what is cheap and what is expensive? For investors this requires viewing prices in terms of interest rates, the value of the dollar and other currencies, and evaluating capacity utilization, among other variables.)

 

Upsetting Parallel

Current experience is the critical investment difference between the enthusiasm of youth and inexperience. Young and inexperienced investors treat every event as something new, requiring a new way of dealing with it.  

 

More experienced investors recognize elements that are similar to past behavior patterns. This suggests that very little is totally new, most circumstances are somewhat similar to what occurred in past cycles. Kissinger, Munger, and O’Connor were young in the period leading to the “Depression”. Those of a similar age are dying out or no longer have views that seem relevant. We have not gone through a similar period since WWII, which in part was caused by the Depression.

 

Our educational institutions do not study this period and consequently most people know little about it. Unfortunately, political leaders of today also know little about it. The current occupant of the White House waxed poetic about the FDR period upon entering the Presidency, not recognizing that many of FDR’s ideas led to lengthening the Depression, and probably to WWII as well.

 

Cycles are never absolutely the same, but close enough to raise the possibility, if not the probability, of similar results reoccurring. I will attempt to identify some similar events reoccurring today.

 

Global Economic Growth Slowing Brings Autocrats to Power

World trade has slowed, and populations don’t like it. They look for someone to blame and politicians are only too eager to provide answers, gathering more power for themselves in the process. Prior growth has attracted more immigrants, initially welcomed as low-cost labor. However, their growth in numbers has now become a burden to the existing society.

 

Rising levels of crime will bring more policing power and stronger governments. We are seeing leadership in just about every continent move from the center to extremes on either the right or the left. Pay particular attention to Europe, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, Latin America, and some elements within the US and Canada.

 

China Changes and the World Feels it

The rate of China providing goods at low prices to meet demand in the US and Europe has slowed. The Chinese have cut back on imports, so China’s net contribution to world trade has declined. Wealthy Chinese had been previously exporting as much of their prodigious savings as possible. This has led to a change in the Chinese government’s attitude. They are now trying to attract foreign investment and are changing a number their rules.

 

The Chinese are simultaneously pouring resources into their defense sector. They have more ships than the US Navy and now have 3 aircraft carriers. They also appear to have state-of-the-art missiles and spacecraft. Like other countries with large standing militaries, they have little respect for current US government forces. However, like both Japan and Germany in the 1930s, they are very conscious of the potential power the US could deploy if it had time to do so.

 

Politicians Using Old Strategies in a Changing World

Good prices vs votes/contributions are the key battles. People want goods and services without regard to where and how prices are generated, as long as they appear reasonable relative to perceived competitors. Technology generally lowers prices through increased production and less human labor. Professional politicians want contributions from labor unions that have negotiated long and large contracts. The reduction in world trade will eventually make many nations poorer, including the US.

 

Target the Lawyers

Charlie Munger performed the switch from law to investment management brilliantly. Goldman Sachs also has a number of successful investment bankers and other executives who started with law firms before seeing green. In their defense, some lead M&A counsels at law firms earn close to investment banker packages, with their growing personal accounts residing at money management institutions.  

  

Warning: If some of the trends mentioned continue, the parallel with the Depression is more than likely.

 

What are you doing to prevent it?

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: A Cyclical World + Consistent Results - Weekly Blog # 812

Mike Lipper’s Blog: Recognizing a Professional: Ratings vs Ranking – Weekly Blog # 811

Mike Lipper’s Blog: How to Find the Answer – Weekly Blog # 810

 

 

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Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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