Showing posts with label Dow Theory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dow Theory. Show all posts

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Retro, Forward, & Cycles - Weekly Blog # 792

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Retro, Forward, & Cycles

 

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

  

 

 

Managing Money Motivations

There are two very different parties in a professionally managed investment account. The first is the owner of the capital who is primarily interested in investment performance, usually using current performance as representative of future performance.

 

The second participant is the manager of the account who wishes to maintain the relationship for a long time. The fully loaded cost of acquiring the account is usually not earned back immediately. Thus, the first rule for the manager is not losing the account. This is somewhat different than the motivation of the owner of the account.

  

Best Defense is to Keep the Account

Managers assemble a number of different securities into a portfolio so that not all of them decline by the same amount in most down periods, hopefully some will rise. One of the standard ways of accomplishing this task is diversifying the investment characteristics of the securities. The most important characteristic of a security is deemed to be its risk of declining.

 

The money management profession in many cases believes stocks and bonds have separate levels of risk of decline. The way this is expressed and managed is through a ratio of stocks and bonds, for example 60/40. This means 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds. The investment media has declared the 60/40 strategy dead following approximately 40 gainful years for bonds and 3 years of decline. The average performance of 107 mutual fund sectors over the last three years through Thursday, 41% have lost ground. All but one of the declining sectors were fixed-income oriented.  The one exception was Chinese Regional funds. (This confirms my view that we have been in a period of stagflation for some. We will be dealing with Chinese oriented funds in a subsequent blog.)

 

Understanding the Use of Numbers

The purpose of the ratios was to manage risk. Today there are many stocks that are less risky than some bonds or other credit instruments. A better name for this diversification function would be low risk, or high quality/high risk, or low quality. One should recognize that like almost everything else in life, risks move in cycles. Some Scottish Trusts started life owning only British gilts, and over time introduced stocks. Today, some of these trusts are almost exclusively invested in stocks, while maintaining their historic names. 

 

In the US, trust accounts have gone from 100% bonds to a 50/50 split. Trusts then moved to 60/40, with some advocating for 70/30 and even 80/20. What brings this concept of cycles to mind is in 1957, or there about, discussion I had with the venerable Professor David Dodd, who was teaching Securities Analysis at Columbia. He emphasized the use of balance sheet related data in securities selection. With the arrogance of a student, I suggested growth had become more important since the Depression, when he and Ben Graham wrote their seminal textbook on Securities Analysis.

 

He closed the discussion by explaining that the fund he was involved with had made lots of money buying discounted value securities. However, ten years later growth stocks led the market. Perhaps the good professor was right for professionals. Many growth stocks fell, including from the ’73 peak, whereas his value stocks held up much better. This experience convinced me that the appropriate diversification schedule is a cyclical pattern.

 

Are We Near a Change in Valuations?

There is some evidence that it is possible, if not likely, we are near a change in valuation. Fixed income yields have been inverted without a marked recession for over a year. Last week the US Treasury yield-spread between the two-year (4.93%) and thirty year (4.03%) was a remarkably narrow 0.9%. This suggests the long-term future is not as attractive as the current period, with potential recessions in the next thirty years.

 

This appears to be at variance with current estimates for S&P 500 stocks. Net income changes in the second and third quarter of 2023 are expected to be -8.6% and +1.7%, respectively. (These are net income changes, EPS estimates are expected to be -6.4% and +1.7%, respectively. This shows the benefit of firms buying back their common stock. Buy backs potentially help managements with their stock options, but possibly not in the long-term improvement of the value of the company.)

 

The “bulls” in the market are possibly relying on one of the oldest market forecasting devices, The Dow Theory, which requires both the DJIA and the Transportation Index to move in the same direction. In the latest week only two of the 30 DJIA stocks rose, with thirteen of the 20 transportation stocks rising. At this time of year seasonal inventory is moving toward the stores, but many stores are closing or hiring inexperienced staff.

 

With services and non-durables growing while durables are not, there is a long-term structural problem for the economy.

 

Conclusion:

Changes are coming and we need to manage them, or they will manage us.

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Gravitational Waves & Investing - Weekly Blog # 791

Mike Lipper's Blog: Manageable Risk - Weekly Blog # 790

Mike Lipper's Blog: Predictions Suffered Last Week - Weekly Blog # 789

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

 

 

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Fire Drill - Weekly Blog # 782

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Fire Drill:

On board ships and in schools, why not in investing?

 

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

 

 

 

Any Smoke?

Implications: US stock index returns are almost normal for the full year if we use the year-to-date performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average +7.16% and the S&P 500 +8.14%. Even the NASDAQ +18.64% is representative of a good speculative year, perhaps benefitting from short covering. The VIX indicator is almost asleep at 15.76, compared to 30 in past mildly troubling times.

 

There are some whiffs of smoke in the air, including a continuing 2 to 10-year yield inversion spread of 4.08% - 3.45%. Updating one of the oldest technical indicators with a more modern twist. In the latest week the 30-stock DJIA had 20 stocks rising to 10 declining, but the 20 transports split 6/14. (In the original Dow Theory, it was only the rails in the index. Today the number of rails has dropped, and a number of airlines, trucks, and other transportation securities have been added.) This could be significant if the normal buyers of rails, which are freight driven, are looking for future declines. 


Another group that appears to be worried are the CEOs of traditional financial services companies. The latest to announce a 10% layoff from both their investment banking and investment management functions was Lazard. (Mid-market M&A industry revenues hit a 9-year low in the first quarter.)

 

Publishers Note

The popular distinction between a recession and a depression is your neighbor losing his job in a recession and you losing yours in a depression. It can be helpful to explore the possible roads to a depression by focusing on the needs of securities analysts regarding layoffs. In focusing on the way companies handle layoffs, they should first be aware of the lost art of making money from bankruptcies. All too often layoffs are the first act of self-inflicted worsening conditions. Since they don’t teach about surviving bankruptcies today, they are unequipped to adequately analyze layoffs. (I admit the thought came to me in a recent meeting with the Dean of an upcoming Business School, where there are no classes on bankruptcies.) 


While a Columbia College undergraduate I was privileged to take Securities Analysis from Professor David Dodd, who was both an academic and investment partner with Benjamin Graham. David Dodd collaborated in producing the seminal work on Securities Analysis based on their experiences in the 1920s and 30s. It occurred to me that the whole basis for the course was the knowledge necessary for those who’d lived through the depression. This knowledge could be important in the coming era, and I will consequently devote the rest of this blog to the types of things one should look for prior to and during such a period.

 

The Fixed Income World is Different

There are two critical differences between fixed income and equity.

  1. The first is the legal relationship. Fixed income is a contractual relationship with an initial investment, periodic payments, maturity, and rank in the order of payments in a bankruptcy.
  2. Owners of fixed income securities are expected to be paid a pre-determined amount of interest and pre-payments of principal, as well as a final payment.


If payments are not delivered as promised, the default process is governed by the issuing documents. Things change dramatically when a bankruptcy begins. All debts immediately come due, sourced from the potential sale of all assets. Debts are paid in priority order, as specified in the issuing documents.

 

However, compromises are often made to get agreement from the holders of different classes of claims. This helps expedite payments rather than having to endure long, expensive court hearings. The size of the payments is a function of the price paid for the assets, less the costs of the sale. The cost of the sale includes the cost of highly specialized attorneys, accountants, and other experts.

 

Fixed income securities rights and privileges are senior to common stock rights. Owners of common stock will probably be wiped out, as there is generally no additional money to pay out after the senior debt holders have been paid. However, to avoid long and expensive court battles by equity owners, they will often be awarded a small amount of a subsequent new equity class.

 

What is a Bankruptcy Worth

Up to this time the focus has been on the current appraised value, usually in a quick liquidation. To the extent there is a belief that a “going concern” will survive bankruptcy, a different kind of analysis is needed based on the current use of the assets and their user in the future.

 

Growing up in Manhattan there were neighborhood cigar stores on many commercial street corners. They were good business in the late 1920s and became less good as time went on. By the early 1940s those businesses had effectively died. A chain of these went bankrupt, but their stock went up in price!!! The reason for this was that these stores were on busy corners and had long-term leases. A classic case of being worth more dead than alive.

 

There were a couple of cases of railroads who lost lots of money throughout the depression and went bankrupt. However, a couple of sharp investors saw a similar situation, as the railroads had considerable land along their right-of-way. In the WWII expansion of plants and military camps, these lands and their proximity to the rails became very valuable.

 

The unfortunate attitude of too many of today’s analysts and portfolio managers is that “value” is found on the published financial statements. To them, stock selling at a discount to book value is a bargain. In truth, book value is a collection of unamortized assets not written off. Because of changes in the market for a company’s products, the use of their facilities is less than their original purpose. For example, strip shopping malls in poor locations today.

 

What is not reflected in the financial reports are the developed new products, self-generated patents, a good sales force, key employees, etc. These are the types of assets we look for as investments.

 

The items mentioned in the last paragraph are critical in evaluating various layoffs. To the extent the layoff managers husband these types of assets I am not concerned, but if they are shedding valuable assets I am.

 

 

How Do You Evaluate Layoffs of Owned Stocks?

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Early Stages of a New Grand Cycle? - Weekly Blog # 781

Mike Lipper's Blog: Pre, Premature Wish - Weekly Blog # 780

Mike Lipper's Blog: 3 PROBLEM TOPICS: Current Market, Portfolios, and Ukraine- Weekly Blog # 779

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Sunday, May 22, 2022

Falling Confidence Beats Numbers but be Careful With 2nd Quarter GDP - Weekly Blog # 734

                                    


Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

Falling Confidence Beats Numbers, 

but be Careful With 2nd Quarter GDP

———————

Is a Structural Recession Coming?


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



Managing the News

The classical definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative GDP. The first report for the first quarter indicated a decline of 1.4%. This was the headline, although the remaining bulls focused on subsequent reports adjusting first quarter results to a positive number that never made it into the conciseness of the market. Perhaps the message the market has taken is that this Administration is tone deaf. The White House had an afternoon and an evening to manage the news through its obedient media but failed to bolster confidence in the Obama team’s overall competence. It will be interesting to see how the second quarter GDP is handled after the July 4th holiday. If like the first quarter it is a negative, which looks more likely than not, the definition of two consecutive negative quarters representing a recession, may be viewed by some as fulfilled. If not, we may have to wait for an October surprise.


Current Pictures

Racetrack handicappers hope to find “smart money” to give them an edge. Two suggestions - Transportation and Speculators vs. Investor timing.

Transportation: One of the earliest stock market signals led to the Dow Theory, which states that a trend is likely to continue if the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is confirmed by the trend of the Dow Jones Transportation Average (Rails) and visa-versa. The theory was based on industrial shares being more future oriented and rails representing freight that was actually sold. Applying this thought to the week’s performance. After 8 weeks of the DJIA declining, it was up 3 out of 5 days. However, the Dow Transportation Average was down 3 days this week.  This makes sense to me considering US rail traffic was down 5.4% this week. Of the 10 classes of freight, 7 were down and only 3 were up.

Market performance depends on which forces are dominant. Generally, there are more long-term investors owning shares traded on the NYSE than the more speculative holders that invest in the NASDAQ listed stocks. Larger passive index funds are more significant owners of “Big Board” shares. In terms of share volume for the week, only 47% of the NYSE shares rose vs 40% on the NASDAQ. In terms of transaction volume, the NYSE had 45% rising vs 42% for the NASDAQ. Clearly, participants in the market are not enthused with the current direction.

Since recorded time, civilizations have had economic cycles. While some were blamed on weather or plagues, most of the time the main cause was a prior foolish expansion that could no longer be supported. When this is recognized, it usually requires major structural changes to make progress. Is the forthcoming recession an advance signal of a structural depression? Quite possibly!!


A Problem Needs to be Addressed

The identification of the problem to be addressed is generally too simplistic. Global supply chain disruptions have almost universally been blamed on insufficient physical capacity. While temporary capacity limitations cannot be denied, the focus as usual is misplaced. There is a real shortage of qualified workers and most importantly of first line supervisors. In the US, we already know the ratio of publicly available job opportunities to registered unemployed has almost doubled. This is not purely a US phenomenon, as this week we were alerted to the UK’s ratio of opportunities/unemployed. There are now more opportunities than unemployed, probably creating a pattern I experienced in the late 1980s when we couldn’t hire sufficient qualified computer programmers in the US. We sought help from substantial software development shops in India. We were delighted when our designated vendor showed us the credentials of those assigned to produce the required software on a tight schedule. When it didn’t happen as planned, it became clear the good programmers we were introduced to were no longer there. They had left that employer for another, for perhaps an additional $5/week.

Today we are experiencing a decline in the quality and timeliness of deliveries at supermarkets, department stores, law firms, accounting shops, and hardware/software manufactures, etc. In almost all cases these organizations are desperate to find qualified workers, despite the high wages being offered. They have applicants, but they often don’t have the required work skills. The problem most often is that applicants don’t have the right attitudes toward work.

I suggest this is a generational problem, if not longer. The combination of stressed homes and a unionized bureaucratic school system is not producing disciplined students who value intellectual honesty, nor are they capable of budgeting their own time. To me this is distressing as a fiduciary and a consumer, but it doesn’t have to be that way. I am biased in favor of military training, sports teams, and religious organizations. In the US Marine Corps, officers quickly learn that the wonderful history of The Corps is due in part to non-commissioned officers, starting with Napoleon’s early rank of corporal. (Unfortunately, when cost- accountants run companies, they eliminate levels of supervision. They view it as overhead and don’t recognize that first line supervisors are the main cultural builders of a company.)

I hope we never again have a war that requires us to re-introduce conscription (draft). I say this for lots of reasons, including my grandchildren, great grandchildren, nieces, and nephews. However, as an analyst I am worried that at least half if not many more could not qualify to serve their country, due to their physical condition and mental discipline.

The likely business solution to those unemployed by choice is to encourage more automation. Much of the work done by low level workers has already been automated. Business and non-profits have already figured out that the cost of automation can be amortized over a few years, and so doing they eliminate a substantial number of problems in the workforce. Total compensation paid to lower-level employees vs. the cost of the facilities needed to support them does not offer sufficient pay-back.

This shrinkage of low-level jobs may lead to a permanent group of unemployed, at least in terms of the public record. While developed countries are moving down the replacement trend, it will take far too long to eliminate the unemployed problem. These concerns may be the underlying reason we cannot exclude the possibility of a structural depression.


Investment Conclusion

Be careful and invest wisely for the various likely futures and keep us informed as to what you are doing. We all need help.



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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/05/inconclusive-but-trending-lower-weekly.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/05/three-worries-april-near-term-slowdown.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/04/short-long-term-thoughts-weekly-blog-729.html



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Copyright © 2008 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, February 20, 2022

We are Progressing - Weekly Blog # 721

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


We are Progressing


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



                  

This is a blog on investing and is not intended to express any political views. Every single action we take, including taking no action, is an action. Every single action we take has less of a future impact for those we care for emotionally or legally, be they the next moment, day, week, month, year, or the rest of our lives. With that thought in mind, my focus is on the indefinite time periods for those we hold ourselves responsible.

This blog is focused on an investment period measured in years, comprising multiple market cycles. In sharing my thoughts, I am very conscious that humility is the only guarantee in investing. There will be periods of elation and depression as we travel through the various phases of market cycles.


Point of Departure

I believe markets move within their own cycles. I find it useful to measure from peak to trough for the styles of investing which identify most of what we do. In the absence of detailed knowledge concerning the structure of an investment account, I use three major stock indices for the US equity market. The NASDAQ Composite Index, which topped out last November, contains future oriented securities valued for their growth potential. The S&P 500 Index, which peaked on the 4th of January, is meant to contain the 500 largest and most liquid US stocks traded in the US. The S&P 500 Index is representative of the bulk of long-term US stock investments and is often used by institutions to represent “the market’. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), which topped out on the first day of 2022, is a selection of the 30 most representative stocks.


Where Are We?

As a working assumption I believe most US equities have topped out for this phase. What phase we have entered is the question investors are asking. The choices are:

  • A minor fall to a support level like the Dow Jones Transportation Index, a key component of the oldest market timing model, the Dow Theory. 
  • The NASDAQ Composite Index, which fell beyond the 10% correction level used by the press.
  • The S&P 500 Index, which is close to entering a correction phase, to be followed by the DJIA.

As we manage long-term money, which has long-term payout needs measured in lifetimes, I believe we have entered a downward slope with periodic upward trading opportunities. (57% of NYSE stocks and 61% of NASDAQ stocks fell last week.) Hardest hit were growth funds, with the T. Rowe Price Growth Fund falling -4.38%, the worst of the 25 largest growth funds. 


Focus

Instead of focusing on trading opportunities, I am focused on the likely investment opportunities in the subsequent rise in the market after the valley. To get to the happy hunting ground we will have to deal with expected problems. In time order: Ukraine, inflation, and Long COVID.


Ukraine

As is usually the case, the media and politicians are focused on the wrong things. First, the Russian Army has a significant number of conscripts due to return to civilian life who are not battle trained. They would suffer significant casualties, which would not go down well within Russia. If the Russians invade, they are likely to suffer casualties caused by a well-armed and trained army and volunteers. They have a lot to fight for, as shown below:

  • The Largest proven recoverable Uranium resources in Europe
  • 2nd largest explored Manganese ore reserves in the world
  • 3rd largest exporter of iron ore
  • 4th largest array of natural gas pipelines
  • 8th largest number of installed nuclear plants

To an important degree, Putin has already accomplished his goal of weakening NATO by showing the unwillingness of Germany to take up arms, followed by Italy and a weak US response. So far, the only negative from Putin’s point of view is the push by Sweden’s second largest political party to join NATO.


Inflation

From the White House’s viewpoint, it is pleased the market is doing the job that the Fed was meant to do. The markets most sensitive to short-term inflation are the commodities markets, which are pricing commodities higher in the near-term than the longer-term. Members of Congress are preventing the White House from adding to the problem, by resisting an increase in money supply growth. 

A study of 19 recorded pandemics over 700 years shows real interest rates falling in all cases. However, a complete solution to the supply chain issues has several hurdles to overcome and is unlikely to be solved before the next Presidential election. These include: 

  • A shrinking number of petroleum refineries, from 301 in 1982 to 124 today.
  • The absence of new mineral production and severely restricted new mine and pipeline volumes.
  • Fewer skilled workers and supervisors returning to the workplace due to Long-COVID. 


Long COVID

Long COVID is the inability of some workers to return to the workforce due to PASC symptoms, which stands for Post-Acute Sequalae of SARS COVID. (Cumberland Advisory has a good blog on their panel discussion on the subject.) One study predicts between 10 and 20% of those who get COVID will get the Long version. One must expect other pandemics in the future, and we have not yet come to an understanding the best way to reduce their damage.


Investment Shopping List

While it may be a long-time before a terminal bottom is hit, and more importantly recognized, one should start building a shopping list. There are two categories that appear to be worth examining: common denominators and the not yet dead that are still working.


Common Denominators

At times it is difficult to pick a potential winner out of a crowded sector. I have followed two approaches on this issue. 

  1. The first is to find a sound sector manager or fund to make individual choices. The problem is that manager’s need to diversify, resulting in too many choices. The second is to find one or two stocks that capture most of the future expected benefits. Two common denominator stocks in the financial services industry are Moody’s and S&P Global (already owned). Internal developments and acquisitions should capture additional business. These are to be put on the hunting list and should not be bought today, they are already more than adequately priced.
  2. The second approach is to look at the non-winners in the current market to see if the sick/dying corpses have elements that will blossom in a new market. I use the multiple of current price to sales as a primary initial filter. Four large companies that could have something to value, in order of their price/sales ratios, are: 

Corning (2.55x)

Intel (2.49x)

IBM (2.15x)

HP Enterprise (0.78x)

HP Inc (0.64x)

I am sure that there are others, and they should be researched.


Subscribers: Please share your thoughts and suggestions. We unfortunately will have some time before we select new holdings   to new heights. However, it takes a lot of time to get to know new names and get comfortable with them, after what may be an unhappy period. 

  



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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/02/building-long-term-investment.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/02/changing-focus-in-changing-world-weekly.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/01/things-are-seldom-what-they-seem-weekly.html




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Copyright © 2008 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, January 16, 2022

Current Causes of Concern - Weekly blog # 716

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Current Causes of Concern

(I would like to be wrong)


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



In our first blog of 2022 I suggested this might be a troublesome year. While most predictors tend to forecast their wishes, it says more about them than being useful. The most useful predictions are perhaps expressed in a fanfold display, with at least three lines originating from the current origin to a future date. The graph offers at least three possible paths forward: high, medium, and low. My faulty crystal ball is not up to that model. My current outlook is negative. Perhaps it is my military training, when I assume a position of responsibility and search for all possible attack routes. Following this process, there are immediate causes for concern for our investment portfolios. (As already noted, I hope I am wrong.)

The causes for concern come from my weekly review of both data and news reports. You can interpret any or all these factors negatively or positively or view them as unimportant. I leave it up to our subscribers to make their own judgement and hopefully share their views. The concerns are listed in the order I came across them, not in order of importance. In parenthesis and in italics after each item are my worries.

  1. Most commentators are focused on the expected moves by the Federal Reserve Board regarding interest rates and the disposition of their large portfolio of debt instruments. (I expect the Fed to continue its traditional role of being late in changing direction, confirming trends already in motion rather than signaling a change in direction. This view originates from the reality that the President nominates the Fed Governors, which in turn are confirmed by the Senate. This week, three people with no apparent experience of working in a bank, a commercial profitable enterprise, or managing money as a fiduciary, were nominated. Despite the Fed being an independent agency, it is very unlikely it would take a point of view opposing the President. Many investors believe rapidly rising interest rates are largely due to the accommodative policies of the Fed under the current and prior President. Inflation results from many other imbalances in the domestic and global economy. Under the current circumstances I am concerned.)
  2. In the latest week through Thursday, 11 of the 25 top performing mutual funds were precious metals funds, with 7 of the 10 worst being growth-oriented funds. (The stocks in these portfolios are moving in the direction suggested by a high inflation and short-term focused stock market.)
  3. One of the oldest predictive approaches to the equity market is the Dow Theory. For continuation of the current trend, it requires the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Average to be going in the same direction, with each index confirming the high of the other. The Transportation index has been declining since November, while the Industrial average has gone on to make a new high. (If the professional buyers of transports believed the ordered clearing of seaports would solve rising inflation, the index would be rising.)
  4. The old Journal Commerce Index of Industrial Prices continues to rise, gaining 2.7% this week. (Inflation is broader than consumer prices, transportation costs, and excess money supply growth.)
  5. The Barron’s Confidence Index is predicting bond prices performing better than stock prices over the next six months. (This rarely happens and is a sign of an equity bear market)
  6. Robert Lovelace, a senior official and portfolio manager of the highly respected Capital Group, pointed out that we are in the 11th year of an equity market expansion. A significant contributor to its rise being the increase in price/earnings ratios. (Earnings of companies typically change more slowly than valuations. Consequently, we can have a down market with flat to rising earnings when valuations decline.)
  7. The largest contributor to global trade growth is China. Compared to the US, China is a controlled economy. Even with all its controls, results are slipping. (Without China’s need to import high quality goods, services, and energy, the exports of developed countries will decline. This is important for the US, Germany, Italy, Canada, and Australia, among others which supply imports into China.)
  8. Bond owners suffered volatility risks greater than 5 years interest payments in January. (If the bond market is at risk, it is also dangerous for global stock markets. Most equities are leveraged by the amount of fixed income borrowed. There are many highly leveraged positions in high-quality bonds.)
  9. Ukraine‘s unequal position versus Russia’s 100,000 troops on the border is dependent on international cooperation for a resolution. (Is Putin betting on the probability the US and others will not commit troops? The belief that curtailing Russia’s use of the SWIFT currency transfer system will be an effective deterrent, does not comprehend the historic practice of enemies at war. Enemies regularly trade with each other through third countries, as happened during WWII. The way we exited Afghanistan and left many promised entry into the US behind questions the strength of the US word.)
  10. Growth in the use of Private Equity by public pension funds and wealth managers for individuals broadens the potential risk to investors, who don’t have sufficient knowledge of these investments and what can go wrong. (It is just another example of performance chasing rather than anticipation.)
  11. Barron’s wrote positively of 105 stocks gaining 5.1% on average in 2021, vs the relevant averages which gained 8.4%. They were more successful with four bearish recommendations. The choices of the “experts” who participated in their annual round table also underperformed the market. (Picking investments is a difficult task. It is easier to pick winners and limit losers by choosing portfolios, but they will often fail to beat individually selected stocks that are big winners.)
  12. The J.P. Morgan Chase earnings call celebrated the published numbers, while discussing each of their main activities properly outlined current problems. While it is arguably the best large bank in the world, they have possibly reached a cyclical high in many activities, which won’t return until there is some real continuing growth in many economies. The 6% drop in JPM’s price on Friday appears to be appropriate. (Perhaps JPM is topping out, like the US is doing under Putin’s judgment. Xi may share this view, considering his plans to deploy four aircraft carriers vs only one for the US in the waters near Taiwan over time.) 

None of these concerns need be permanent, but investors likely face some troubling times ahead. The possibility of multiple negative events unfolding simultaneously is a big concern. We have a toxic mix of increasing inflation, high valuations, extremely low interest rates, a slowing global economy, and a dangerous geopolitical environment. Having people appointed for purely political reasons is always a concern, but especially at a time like this when perspective and skill are required. 

Inflation will only be beaten by taking the necessary corrective measure to raise interest rates and slow the spending. There will be political pressure to do otherwise. Taking the corrective measures necessary will likely be painful and politically damaging, a reason it will not likely be done to the extent necessary.

Valuations will likely return to normal faster than most expect, although that’s cold comfort for most investors. A generation of investors knows only rising markets and that has led to complacency. 




What do you think?

  



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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/01/deeper-thoughts-weekly-blog-715.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2022/01/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/12/are-investors-taking-too-much.html




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A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


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Sunday, September 13, 2020

WHO YOU SELL TO DETERMINES WHAT YOU BUY AND WHEN? - Weekly Blog # 646

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


WHO YOU SELL TO DETERMINES WHAT YOU BUY AND WHEN?


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




This week showed the value of reverse thinking. Most investors choose what to purchase based on the perceived characteristics of the investment. They choose when to make the purchase based primarily on their own needs or possibly a headline event. This thinking has not produced profits over the latest two weeks.


Who to Sell to?

Basic securities analysis textbooks assume that investors sell to investors that think like them, which is long-term, although the eventual buyer may be another company in a merger or acquisition. One of the nice things about life and markets is that each year brings new people wanting to invest. Each generation produces young people wishing to get rich quickly, who believe that making smart decisions and acting very quickly pulls off that trick. (Wouldn’t we all like to find Eldorado, the mythical gold mine.) 


While sheltering in place the youth discovered their brokerage firms allow them to trade on margin (borrowed money). Stocks and bonds cost too much money and move too slowly, so they quickly discovered put and call options. Options normally expire worthless or are sold, but they can require delivery or acceptance of the underlying shares. To protect the sellers of these options they buy or short the underlying shares. During the last two weeks the market has become aware that in aggregate these options plus some owned by a large Asian fund group is huge. This is one of the explanations of the two-tier market we have been experiencing. 


The first tier is about ten stocks including a couple of Asian companies. Through the end of August these stocks gained much more than +20%. The remaining stocks, the second tier, is still down a few percentage points year-to-date. Our intrepid youth has concentrated their attention on these tech leaders in the first tier. Options are written for various time periods, from a day to multiple years. Most institutions using options typically hold them for one or two months, but these youth are often in and out within two days. A complicating issue is the belief that the equity underlying these trades, on both the buy and sell side, could be as low as 7%. This in and of itself is causing rapid trading on the other side of these transactions. Short-term traders expect the other side of their trades to be similarly motivated by short-term views. During the last two weeks this has been the added increment to the market, adding to both volume and probably much more to volatility.


The Time Hurdles

Politics

As I’ve suggested in prior blogs, we have entered an emotional trading period which can last until mid-November. By the end we will have the initial results of the election. For forward-thinking investors who know history, the impact of the Presidential election will prove to be less important than who will be the chair and probable ranking member of various Congressional committees and possibly sub-committees. It will be this small group that puts words to the President’s wishes. Based on history, campaign slogans will either be totally disregarded or so modified that the results will be very different than what voters perceived on election day. 


By January, I believe both political parties will be splintered into different groups on many basic issues. Committee chairs will not automatically be able to send their wishes to the “floor” of their house without some support from the ranking (senior) opposition member of the committee. While all members always think of their next election, the defeated party will be focused on how to reverse the past election and how to improve their own chances for the next election. The ranking member has less ammunition than the chair, as they aren’t able to appoint sub-committee chairs. Additionally, members from the minority party will undoubtedly be split as to the reason for their side’s loss in the last election and will blame some of the remaining party members. Thus, they will not be easily led. Their immediate concern will be the 2022 mid-term and regaining the majority in 2024, where the two Presidential candidates will likely be new to those roles. 


COVID-19

We are likely to get frequent reports on the progress of vaccine trials and therapeutics, which are not as much in the news but possibly more important in terms of the number of people treated. Personally, I am very concerned with the execution of production and distribution of these lifesaving or at least life altering medicines. These are very large tasks that frequently run into problems. 


Other News Elements Before 2021

  • BREXIT + UK Economic Recovery Faster than Continent
  • Some rising commodity prices affecting some consumer prices


Market Indicators

  • Very few fund investment categories rose this week - precious metals, agricultural commodities, Japanese and European equities
  • NASDAQ fell -11% from its all-time high
  • Dow Theory has a buy signal (often late, but sometimes early)
  • AAII survey sample increasingly bearish
  • Used car prices rising


What Should Investors Do?

Traders should trade, but remember, they want to finish with cash in the end. Investors should sit through this emotional trading period unless the market moves 20% either way. If a specific issue has some unexpected news causing reinterpretation of the situation, perhaps some change might be warranted. In general, sound investors with good portfolios and not too much cash should use a 20% market gain to add to reserves. Investors should use a 20% market drop to look for new bargains, which will benefit quickly if the market adapts to new strategies. (One might consider long-term producers or transporters of natural gas, or companies whose revenues are tied to market prices.) 

  

 

     

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

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/09/turning-point-or-bump-weekly-blog-645.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/08/caution-ahead-emotional-turns-likely.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2020/08/mike-lippers-monday-morning-musings_23.html




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A. Michael Lipper, CFA

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