Sunday, June 15, 2025

We may think we manage time, but time manages us - Weekly Blog # 893

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

We may think we manage time,

but time manages us

 

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

 

 

 

Recognition

When asked for investment advice the most appropriate response is, what is the expected pay-off time? That should be followed by what critical actions are expected during the “work-out” period? The answers to these questions will show both the humility and arrogance of the expectation of success.

 

The plain truth is, we collectively don’t know what the future will bring. The future course of events will be dictated by natural elements, what others do to us, and what we do to ourselves. (Today being Fathers’ Day, it is wise to include the impact of the entire heritage of our thinking and be thankful for it.)

 

The best way I have found to come up with usable answers is to rely on what I’ve learned at the racetrack, which is to assign odds to various logical outcomes. The purpose of the exercise is not the numbers, but a way to rank the various opportunities, remembering that I can be wrong.

 

The real benefit of the exercise is when I am proved wrong. What order of possibilities would have been better? This may include the theoretical Charley Munger and Warren Buffett box, labeled too hard to predict. (The other two boxes were yes and no.)

 

Applying the Approach

Starting with a deep depression, the most extreme example being the falling stock prices between 1929 and 1942. During those years there were periods of rallies and declines, but the extremes were not broken. Prior to that period there was extreme growth of corporate and farm debt. There was an increase in the belief that central governments could materially alter the course of the general economy. Also, during that period an activist political force tried to change the laws and regulations beyond their authority.

 

I have frequently reminded subscribers of the quote that history does not repeat itself but often rhymes. Using the methodology of assigning odds to a potential depression, I suggest there is at least a 40% chance current conditions are predictive of an oncoming depression.

 

Other Problems

  • The World Bank has cut its prediction of global growth from 2.8% to 1.4%.
  • Moody’s has warned that selling private asset funds to retail clients introduces new risks to private asset managers, including “reputation loss, heightened regulatory scrutiny and higher costs.”
  • Robert Gates, former Director of the CIA, Secretary of State, and a former independent Director of Fidelity Funds, wrote “The US can rise to the Chinese challenge” and needs to.
  • At least 170 large public companies expect to announce job cuts in June. These companies announcing job cuts do not include private companies, which employ much of the US work force.

 

While I perceive a more than average number of problems related to investing in US equities over the next few years, I remain bullish about investing in US equities. Our geographic position, the dollar size of our commercial and financial markets, and our eventual ability to surmount our problems, all support continued stock investments in the US for long-term retirement investment accounts.

 

What do you think?

 

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Selective Readings of Data - Weekly Blog # 892

Mike Lipper's Blog: No One Knows: Searching for Clues - Weekly Blog # 891

Mike Lipper's Blog: “Straws in the Wind”: Predictions? - Weekly Blog # 890



 

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A. Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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