Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Melt-Up, Leaks, & Echoes of 1907
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
A sportscaster’s view of the US stock market is that many
prices are gradually rising in a “melt-up”. But the owners of the teams, when possible,
are curtailing spending. Some of the fans’ happy talk appears to be leaking
away, particularly as the return on the value of their assets decline. Those
who think only in terms of numbers, particularly streaks, should be worried.
For the first time in 40 years the Vanderbilt football team beat Alabama!!! (This
highlights the difference between a statistician and an analyst. A numbers
hound believes the past is always prolog to the future, whereas a good analyst
scans present conditions to determine the odds of a streak being disrupted. It
is never zero.) Because of evolutionary changes in laws and technology the past
should be viewed in terms of modern times. On the contrary, human behavior
rarely changes under similar conditions, although it may impact the odds.
Something About the Name of Morgan and Financial Crisis
After a long period of financial expansion and the creation
of new financial institutions, it was trust-companies, not banks that were in
danger of failing after experiencing difficulty collecting on their loans. (The
modern analogy could be private capital funds.) Trust-companies borrowed from
banks and were publicly traded, but by 1907 there were concerns that a number were
insolvent and would fail. JP Morgan, the man, was concerned and called a meeting
of leading bankers to meet him in his library, which he locked until the bankers
promised to contribute sufficient capital to rescue one large trust-company. By
so doing, he single-handedly stopped the “Money Panic” of 1907.
While politicians in Washington were grateful, they felt Morgan
had too much power. Consequently, a few years later they created the Federal
Reserve Bank, which had supervisory power over large banks. This was The Fed’s
initial mission and today it is really their first mission.
Jaime Dimon is the current CEO of JP Morgan Chase*, the
largest US bank in terms of assets. JP Morgan Chase is the unofficial leader of
the banking industry, so it goes without saying they see a parallel to the 1907
crisis. He is pleading for a modern solution that allows small banks to merge
without time-consuming government regulation. *We are a small owner of shares
in JP Morgan Chase and use the Private-Bank facilities.
Other Concerns
- Our European military allies in support of Ukraine and future wars are worried. There are concerns regarding the production of ammunition and other armaments, particularly during the present decline in our productivity. The rise of union workers will additionally shrink the corporate profits used to invest in research and expansion.
- The changing business structure of the investment market. There are concerns that stock exchanges around the world now earn a decreasing minority of their earnings from their initial business of trading and clearing securities. There are fewer brokerage firms, less daily liquidity, and more direct transactions.
- Brief news releases, repeated frequently, leads to a simplistic understanding of the economy, investments, and politics. For example, most news briefs focus mostly on movements in the New York Stock Exchange. However, there are numerous trading days where NYSE issues move in one direction and NASDAQ issues move in the other. The daily movement in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is much more volatile than the NASDAQ Composite. (Could it be that Washington has limited capacity to understand the difference between light-volume moves and high-volume moves?) On an average day the NASDAQ trades about five times the volume of the NYSE. (Part of this spread is the amount of trading between dealers to even-up their positions.) The Year over Year volume for the Big Board is down -11.26 %, whereas NASDAQ volume is up +26.27%. From an analysis vantage point, we see major differences between the two markets. On Friday, the percentage of new lows on the NYSE was 2.4% of issues traded vs 7.2% on the so-called junior exchange. (Is the NASDAQ showing it is closer to a peak after doing so much better for the year?)
Question: What are you concerned about?
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
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