Watch Out for the Four - Weekly Blog # 938
Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Watch Out for the Four
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Preface
As subscribers have been told, I am shifting my focus to
investing for long-term gains, hopefully for multiple generations. This is the
time to begin searching for future winners, although it’s not the time to begin
serious buying. If you are like me, at times it can be difficult to only follow
an investment intellectually. I need to own a small amount so that I go through
all the relevant info while awaiting the time to begin a meaningful buy
program.
Timing May Not Begin Until:
The beginning of the buy program will not start until people
and the data change. In terms of people, there are four structural leaders.
These are the men who wish to change the future and are governing to do that.
They lead and largely dictate activities in the US, China, Russia, and North
Korea. Only the last one, North Korea, is preparing to eventually pass the
torch of control to a very young daughter. In each case the eventual leader
will be different than the present leader and will have to exert power to stay
in place. Any of these replacements could have input into future global
investments. Because of the similar ages of the first three, investors will be
faced with cross currents that will make choosing investment policy difficult.
Before these leadership transitions occur, the global
economy is likely to change multiple times. I expect we will be dealing with
the terrible “4s”* at least some of the time. The data series likely to experience
major swings are inflation, currencies, and taxes, among others. Changes to these
data series may not be dictated from on high, but in the marketplace. Additionally,
secular changes in demographics and technology will have an impact on how
people act and feel.
*Terrible 4s are 4% for inflation, unemployment, and dollar decline,
leading to an S&P 500 price that starts with a “4”. A high 4 signals a recession
and a low 4 a depression.
What Can We Do Now?
First, we can pay attention to what people are doing, not
saying. Actions speak louder than words. While the media is full of pundits
talking about market indices at new highs, 58% of the stocks on the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) fell in the latest week. Perhaps more meaningful, 56% of the
stocks fell on the NASDAQ. A survey of investment advisers and their clients
found advisers twice as bullish as their customers.
Second, be aware of financial and economic history. We know
that historic patterns don’t exactly repeat, but directionally they are pretty
accurate. Economic cycles are based in part on the level of debt being created
throughout the system. (Government deficits need to be considered as well as
business debt, personal debt, and accidental debt.)
When debt repayment becomes too burdensome it won’t be
promptly repaid and will cause purchasing power to drop and fixed income/equity
markets to decline. Depending on the severity of the decline it will be called
a recession or a depression. The frequency of recessions is normally five to
ten years, suggesting one is due. A depression is much more serious and
infrequent, usually every fifty to one hundred years. Depressions are often caused
by mismanagement of an economy in a recession. We have not had a depression for
ninety years and some believe the last one brought on WWII. The key for us is knowing
that these occurrences are possible and being aware and ready to change
behavior.
While Waiting
The present should be devoted to looking for stocks to buy
for the next expansion. A study of the past suggests the leaders of the next
cycle will be quite different than the present. Bearing in mind that many children
born today will need retirement money 100 years from now, the odds of most
large companies surviving is not good.
There are lots of ways to choose stocks to research. None of
them are perfect and they will change over time, so investors should always be
learning what will cause change. From time to time, I’ll pick one approach to
explore briefly, so keep tuned to find an approach that helps you.
Acquisitions
No solution is perfect, and conditions change unpredictably.
It is normal to change our choices after looking at the cards we are given. The
easiest approach is to add a new holding and temporarily retire a present holding.
Additionally, no one plays the investment game without making periodic
acquisitions. Unfortunately, many investors fail to discard some part of what is
not working. This habit of adding without discarding leads to an
ever-increasing number of acquisitions, which in most cases leads to average
and eventually below average results.
I have never seen an acquirer who couldn’t benefit from
getting more talent, often with different characteristics than their existing talent.
I have often found it better to buy a company for management and tax purposes, even
if it’s for a single individual. It has worked for me, even when it was a bad
choice. It is easier for me to make a bad choice than to fire an individual or
a small group who I like as people, but not as workers and co-venturers. I am
comfortable with the way Apple often buys tiny companies, compared to others who
acquire much larger companies with all sorts of personnel problems.
I was speaking with the manager of a small unit in a very
large company who wanted the unit to grow by hiring more people doing the same
thing his present employees do. That may be efficient in terms of output, but it
just adds to existing problems. I would not view this situation as growth but view
it as adding new machines. If on the other hand the new people brought new
talents, they could serve a different group of clients who had different needs,
which is real growth.
There are some companies who try to grow by buying distant
operations, adding resources outside their prime geographical area. I do not
view this as growth of talent either, but as getting more copies of existing
machines. They would be adding to present capacity but not getting new talents
that could open new markets. For me they are not growth engines but merely
machine acquirers, which will not be valuable talents as the business changes. Investors
can see which type of stock I would acquire, even at somewhat of a premium
price.
Question: What do you think about my approach?
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Mike
Lipper's Blog: Investors’ Interlude - Weekly Blog # 937
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Not Yet Ready for a long-term Solution - Weekly Blog # 936
Mike
Lipper's Blog: We Have a Management Problem - Weekly Blog # 935
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Investors’ Interlude - Weekly Blog # 937
Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Investors’ Interlude
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Take Some Gains Before Taxes Do
The common denominator for most big investment gains are
changes. Usually changes in investor perceptions and economic structural
changes. The Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500) and NASDAQ Composite are
at record highs, due largely to enthusiasm for announcements related to the suspension
of fighting in the Middle East. (This is not true for the Dow Jones Industrial
Average (DJIA) and the average stock.
Unfortunately, since WWII the US has had a history of winning wars but losing
the peace.)
We do not know the total cost of the war and other spending,
including election-oriented payments. I suspect the President’s desire for a
lower valued dollar will be achieved. There is also a strong push from urban
legislators for “fair taxes”, also known as “tax the rich”. Thus, I believe capital
gains rates and estate tax rates will rise.
Due to these expected changes long-term investors should
review their portfolios to see how much of their wealth should be realized
before their estates are taxed. If this generates significant amounts of cash,
I suggest maintaining the cash or short-term treasury holdings for
reinvestment.
I believe there will be positive changes in the foreseeable
future. These changes may be driven by technology, demographics, immigration,
and global factors. These changes are likely to be net larger than politically
motivated changes and you want to be in position to take advantage of them.
Investment Impacts of Past Changes
The Founding Fathers were afraid of the powers of
government, so they placed our Capitol in the humid swamp of Washington DC, thinking
our legislators would desert the “swamp” during the humid months. That worked
reasonably well until the development of air conditioning. The end of the
government’s year is now September 30th, after the summer political conventions,
which reduces the time for debating many of the critical issues of the day. DC
is now a year-round city for government workers and legislators. Many work or
live in large buildings constructed and possibly owned by real estate families
who are probably wealthier than the US Senate members. Thus, the advent of air conditioning
changed how our government works.
Another unexpected change was the railroad growth of the
late nineteenth century. The highly regulated railroads only made profits on freight
travel and lost so much money on human passengers that the federal government
became the principal owner of passenger travel. The freight lines are governed
by both the Department of the Interior and Anti-Trust laws. This has led to other
countries having better and cheaper train service than we do, paid for by charges
on the goods we consume. It is interesting to note that the Dow Jones Transportation
Index, which covers the rails, was the best performing market index this past
week. The rails are still important.
Future Changes
We live in an environment of an increasing rate of change. I
leave to others to identify the changes which most investors would not be
surprised by.
Geographic Changes
- Western Hemisphere countries have become more partners than
adversaries in terms of trade, health practice, external and internal defense,
probably led by Canada.
- Russia, after Putin, will experience major political and
economic changes.
- Asian countries that border both Russia and China will come
into their own in terms of trade and be more open to development.
- African countries will welcome joint development from
Western countries.
- Indonesia and India will become less autocratic, with foreign
companies able to generate substantial sales and earnings.
- Each country will make their own rules.
Retirement Issues
- Over time, US Social Security will be allowed to exclude US
government paper and possibly approach being a foreign wealth fund.
- It is reasonable to expect that those born recently will
live to at least one hundred, so we will need to provide for longer periods of
investment and spending.
- For the same reason, private retirement vehicles will need to
change.
Market Regulation
- Using the last trade may no longer be appropriate if it is
too small and unrepresentative of the size of the seller.
- As more stocks and possibly bonds trade in size in
after-hours, having a closing price on the exchange market may be unrealistic.
- From a technology perspective, there should be a body that
can approve of their use for retirement accounts.
- Should issuers of a certain size be required to have assets
or insurance on the life of the CEO that can be used in retirement accounts.
As usual, I would love our subscribers to share their views
with me.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Not Yet Ready for a long-term Solution - Weekly Blog # 936
Mike
Lipper's Blog: We Have a Management Problem - Weekly Blog # 935
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Is History Rhyming Again? - Weekly Blog # 934
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Not Yet Ready for a long-term Solution - Weekly Blog # 936
Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Not Yet Ready for a long-term Solution
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Preface
I was hoping to start a series of blogs on the selection of smart
securities investment strategies for multi-generational ownership.
Unfortunately, the current data does not lead to a positive view. The breakdown
of the twenty-hour cease fire negotiation with the Iranians confirms that this was
a week of data confusion. The historical odds were against progress in the
search for political and economic solutions.
Our Side
The investment mode for the week is captured by the changes
in the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) sample survey of the
next six month’s market outlook. The bullish outlook improved slightly to 35.7%
from 33.6% the prior week, a gain of 2.1% in a not highly disciplined survey.
What is perhaps a little more insightful is a drop in the bearish measure to
43.0% from 51.4%, a decline of 8.4 %. During the survey week, many pundits were
enthused about the forthcoming ceasefire meeting. (I expect Sunday morning’s
announcement of a failure to get an agreement will materially impact this
coming week’s results.)
The two largest stock market exchanges reflected different
views, with only 31% of NYSE stocks falling vs 53% of NASDAQ stocks declining.
(The NASDAQ market has younger, more speculative companies, with a larger
number of companies reporting losses, including some private debt funds.)
Consumer sentiment was reported to be lowest in 70 years.
Moody’s (*) raised the chance of a recession in the next 12 months to 48.6%.
One of their executives is quoted as saying “we could already be in a
recession”. (*) Owned in managed accounts.
Iranians’ View
The first thing to remember is that Iran is the modern name
for Persia, which was the dominant political/military power in the Middle East
for hundreds of years. Persia was briefly lost to Alexander the Great and later
to the Ottomans but was never effectively occupied by foreign forces.
The current view of the Iranians is that Trump is losing this war. He is driven to achieve a quick victory to guarantee a positive mid-term
election this year, at least in the House. The Iranians are believers in the
German strategist Carl von Clausewitz’s statement that “war is an instrument of
policy by other means”. Our President went to a military high school, but I
believe he at best learned infantry tactics, not strategy. He did not
participate in the ROTC at University of Pennsylvania. The current Secretary of
War did not have any professional exposure at West Point or VMI and thus was
not schooled in strategy. One of Clausewitz’s beliefs was getting the other
side to give up the will to fight. Unfortunately, since WWII the US has won
wars but lost the peace in getting their opponent to give up the willingness to
fight. The last time we achieved it was through the Marshal Plan, named after
General George Marshal a graduate of VMI who rebuilt the industrial strength of
Germany.
While the potential for nuclear warfare was a concern, the
far greater risk to the US, Britain, Europe, Mid East, Africa, Latin America,
and Asia were already active sleeper cells. At this point we have not yet organized
an effective counterforce.
It is no wonder the weekend discussions did not produce
positive results. Consequently, it may be too early to invest new long-term
money.
These are controversial views. Please exchange your
thoughts. I am always a student and need to learn.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: We Have a Management Problem - Weekly Blog # 935
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Is History Rhyming Again? - Weekly Blog # 934
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Bifocal Analysis: Short & Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 933
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We Have a Management Problem - Weekly Blog # 935
Mike
Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
We Have a Management Problem
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
The Founding Fathers Saw it
When unsuccessful in getting George Washington to accept the
title of King they decided to name him President, a person who presides over others
that are powerful. Notice, they did not choose Executive or Manager.
Interesting.
Today, the elected leader of the country comes from the
commercial world and governs as a Chief Executive. Interesting. The difference between the two labels is that the presiding
officer needs to work with other elected officers and not command his or her
views become absolute commands.
Different Styles = Different Results
The largest owner/leader of a private family company has
only the marketplace or regulator that prevents almost complete dictatorial
power. This is reinforced by having family members in the named positions. It
is worth noting, rarely if ever is one of the senior family members hired away
to run a separate public company. Interesting.
One of the realities of managing a successful company is
that senior people are often hired away to run competitive companies. GE, JP
Morgan Chase*, and Apple* are good examples.
* Indicates shares owned in personal and managed accounts.
Interesting
The Selling Problem
Emotionally, selling is much more difficult than buying.
Afterall, buying is an act of new faith in both a stock and the individual
making the decision. At the time of purchase the stock position is the single
best bet the investor can make.
Selling sometimes involves disappointment in the stock or can
be the need for account liquidity. It is like the pain of selling one’s
children or losing a personal extremity, but at the time of sale it is the
least loved stock in the portfolio. Emotionally it is relatively easy to set up
a buying program that purchases a position over time, such as buying a certain
number of shares each month for the next year as one gains conviction. However,
selling is an entirely different mindset as it is painful to lose a limb or a
child, the quicker the better. That may be why more shares have been sold at
declining prices on down days for the last six months. Since selling is more
emotional it probably makes tactical sense to sell over time. Interesting
Reasons to Consider Selling Programs
- The US has the highest inflation rate of all the advanced
economies.
- Iran has a functioning economy, despite the bombing.
- There are only 3 mutual fund sector averages that beat the +13.66%
10-year compound average of S&P 500 index funds; Science & Tech
+17.82%, Precious Metals Equity +16.77%, and Large-Cap Growth +14.61%. My guess
is that it is unlikely these three sectors will outperform the average US
diversified fund’s return of +11.16%, nor will they produce double digit gains
in the next 10 years.
- The “Hyperscalers” are commodity players that depend on the long-term
prices of fuels for their plants.
- The Walmart (stock) Recession Signal +10.89% vs the S&P
Luxury Price Average -14.8%.
- Fixed Income strategies in the future won’t follow
historical patterns.
- The President has borrowed the most money and runs the
government with biggest deficit. They are urging retail investors to buy debt
securities.
- Ray Dalio believes in the histories of recessions,
concluding we are currently in stage five on the way to six.
- Fitch has noted that the default rate on private debt has
risen.
- The ECRI industrial price index has risen to 135.06, which
is a +14.21% increase in the last 12 months.
- Note: The job gains for March included jobs for healthcare,
which require larger amounts of social assistance and produce less GDP per
person.
- Homer Jenkins Jr. noted in the WSJ that “Trump is a lame
duck with low appeal and a surplus of voter distrust.”
- We won’t have peace in the middle east until Iran’s
sponsorship of death and destruction in the US, UK, Europe, Mideast, Africa,
and Asia ends.
Interesting. Be Careful
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Is History Rhyming Again? - Weekly Blog # 934
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Bifocal Analysis: Short & Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 933
Mike
Lipper's Blog: This week’s Dichotomy/Bifocals Needed - Weekly Blog # 932
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Is History Rhyming Again? - Weekly Blog # 934
Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Is History Rhyming Again?
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Preface
Before the New Jersey Symphony’s inspirational playing of
Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony there was a brief concert by the New Jersey
Symphony Youth Orchestra’s Academy Orchestra, who are gifted and wonderful. However,
what was more wonderful was thinking that these talented young people not only
learned their musical skills very well but also learned a bit of the history
and discipline of classical music. Hopefully, it will give them the skills to
manage the messed-up world we are passing on to them.
I couldn’t help my own burdened brain sitting there Friday
night after what may have been the most important stock market week in some
time. The Standard & Poor’s 500 pierced the low set in September. Classically
trained market analysts will likely suggest how difficult it will be for this
most important of all indicators to quickly recover the 10% loss from its high
point. Pundits will likely blame the current military and diplomatic failures
to end the war.
Those in leadership positions are not paying attention to
ancient history. Iran is the modern name of what was called Persia for
centuries. The rulers of Persia controlled much of what passed through the
“silk road”, which not only passed new foods to the western world but also
mathematics, science, paper money, and gun powder. Persia had a large and
powerful army that kept would be conquerors away, although it was not
particularly successful at adding to its piece of the Asian land mass.
I believe the main threat to the US and other countries is
not their incipient nuclear warfare, but their successful sponsorship of proxies
who damage other established governments and societies through the destruction of
people and property. Recently, the US experienced a couple of wanton killings carried
out by US citizens who received local training and support. We have seen the
Iranians do this not only here, but in the UK, Europe, Middle East, and Africa.
Because their sleeper cells easily entered the US through an open border, we
don’t exactly know the size and capability of the problem.
The US has a history of winning wars and losing the peace
because we are not very good as occupiers. Also, it is worth pointing out that
Iran has never successfully been occupied by foreigners. In my opinion, the
dream of a fully formed new government structure for the country appears naïve.
In exposing the problems which led to the market drop, we
need to address an approximately 100-year period of excessive debt creation and
the confusion between a top-down education and a bottom-up learning process.
This Week & Beyond
We got one violent rally this past week and could get one or
more this coming week because a gap opened between the S&P 500 and NASDAQ on
Friday. The gap must normally be filled before a sustained move can occur. Friday
can perhaps be summed up in three numbers:
- S&P 500 -1.67%
- Price of oil +7.07%
- ECRI industrial prices rallied again to the 130 level, putting
the year-over-year gain at +9.25%
In the first three days of the week there was a positive
tone to US stock prices, but they were swamped with declines in the last two
days, putting the SWX down for five straight weeks and on Friday it fell below
its September returns.
The declines appeared to be coming from retail-oriented
accounts, many of which were housed at large retail brokerage firms years ago. Coincidentally,
both the number of listed stocks and the number of primary retail brokerage
firms significantly declined during this period. They were replaced by larger
more diversified firms whose brokers switched from commissions to fees, making them
look more like “wealth managers”. However, many of them are still short-term
oriented and prefer stock exchange listed securities for their accounts. Most
of these new recruits to the business have not experienced a full economic
recession and very few investors or investment committee members have any
direct experience with depressions.
The latter point, in my opinion, is causing great risk to
the market, not that I can estimate the starting date of a new depression. However,
as someone who has studied old races and other ancient track conditions, I am
conscious that bad things do happen. Thus, I feel a need when examining
investment possibilities to include an alternative negative future in reviewing
future strategies. There are not many investors or advisers who do.
Most down markets, but not all, are caused by a forced
repayment of debt at an inappropriate time, like in William Shakespeare’s “The
Merchant of Venice”, or in margin calls. We may be due for such a period!!
Coming out of the expansion of most global economies after WWI in the nineteen
twenties, there was a ballooning of debt creation. Borrowing against securities
became popular with retail investors in the US and other countries, particularly
by those of the farm community in the US. By the late 1920s, many US farmers,
merchants, suppliers, and local small banks were heavily in debt, with their
crops and land used as collateral. When the price for domestic crops was impacted
by lower-priced foreign competition, it led to dire conditions. They appealed
to their congressmen for help in putting tariffs on incoming food items and they
convinced a reluctant President to enact The Smoot-Hawley tariffs, causing foreign
governments to respond in kind. This led to the disruption of global trade,
which was one of the initial causes of the recession. The recession was turned
into a depression by a new government which needed a ten-year long depression
and a new World War to pull us out of this self-administered trouble. I AM NOT
PREDICTING THIS, BUT I AM SAYING WE SHOULD CONSIDER IT A REAL POSSIBILITY.
Caution: As these worries are disturbing, they should not be
discarded, even though none of us wish they come to be. However, prudence
requires that they should be examined regularly to see ensure their chance of
occurring stays small and doesn’t creep up to a higher probability. The odds still
favor expansion.
Please share your views which can help us.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Bifocal Analysis: Short & Long-Term - Weekly Blog # 933
Mike
Lipper's Blog: This week’s Dichotomy/Bifocals Needed - Weekly Blog # 932
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Premature: Buying Program to Begin Soon? - Weekly Blog # 931
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