Where Are US Stock Prices Going? - Weekly Blog # 911
Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Where Are US Stock Prices Going?
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Time to Achieve
The old rule for publishers regarding future projections is to
never state both a target number and a date certain. However, the result of
that warning is a relatively useless projection for planning current actions.
Unfortunately, I have views on both the target number and approximate timing, although
neither are precise nor tied together. In this blog I share my thoughts with
the hope that some are of value, and our trusted readers will share what they
think are reasonable answers.
As a racetrack trained analyst, I believe the odds favor the
US stock market reaching a multi-year peak in the foreseeable future. Consequently,
my grandchildren and great-grandchildren will likely see nominal gains in their
assets long-term. Careful readers will quickly surmise that I must have mixed
views regarding my children’s market wealth prospects. Their results will be
heavily influenced by their controlled spending and financial diligence, and
what they want to leave to their heirs.
Current Market Dilemma
Most of the time a single investment attitude drives market
prices. Today, there are two dominant thought patterns. The first is enthusiastic
buyers who largely believe the President is in the process of restructuring the
economy and therefore society. However, he is at a disadvantage of having only
loyalists support him. (Loyalists generally do not pursue details of potential execution
problems or even try to identify them to reduce political, functional, and
court issues.) They think things are going well.
The second group is reluctant to make decisive decisions in
the market. The $8 trillion in money market funds is one measure of their
non-acceptance of things going well. Cash or similar investments are both a repository
for normal operating reserves and future buying pools.
Incomplete Evidence
- Tariff impact: Consumers 55%, importers 22%, foreign
producers 18%, and 5% evaded. (I suspect until tariffs are removed consumers
will pay at least 90% of them, either in aggregate prices and/or in
quality/quantitative shrinkage.)
- While the media and uninformed public focus on the Dow Jones
Industrial Average (DJIA) and New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) volume and prices,
they are missing a critical change in stock market structure. The
year-over-year share volume has increased 40.88% for the NYSE and 80.55% for the
NASDAQ, effectively double. (To some degree the NASDAQ volume includes inter-dealer
trades to restore trading inventory positions.) Sometimes the two markets act
differently. For example, on Friday the NYSE volume of advancing prices rose,
as did total volume from Thursday. However, NASDAQ activity was the opposite, with
lower volume and more decliners than gainers. A larger measure of the market is
the Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500), which is very near an all-time
high.
- In the weekly survey sample of the American Association of
Individual Investors (AAII), the percentage of respondents predicting a bullish
market for the next six months dropped to 33.7%, while those predicting a
bearish market rose to 46.1%. Just three weeks ago the ratios were 42.9% vs
39.2% in favor of the bulls.
- The
current market and political situation resemble those of the late 1920s, which
led to both the recession and depression. Both started with an overall increase
in debt at the individual and business level. This was particularly true in the
politically sensitive farm community, which was suffering from a change in
foreign demand for its crops. (This time it’s a Chinese decline in demand for
soybeans.) Small and medium-sized banks were having loan payment problems,
which then led to imposing tariffs on foreign products and services. The
current Federal Reserve Board is very conscious of this history.
- Another parallel is certain foreign governments recognizing
the relative weakness of America and taking advantage of the situation by threatening
further actions. This week Ruth and I spent time with the leaders of the US
Marine Corps University who are preparing for a future different than the past.
Similar efforts occurred before WWI and WWII, suggesting investors should think
about structural changes to their investment policies.
Building a larger cash opportunity reserve may make sense.
What do you think?
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: A Good Time to Sell? - Weekly Blog # 910
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Risks: Recession/Cyclical, Depression/Structural - Weekly Blog #
909
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Tactical Headlines Show Strategic Clues - Weekly Blog # 908
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A Good Time to Sell? - Weekly Blog # 910
Mike
Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
A
Good Time to Sell?
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018,
Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Selling is More Important
When an investor, distinct from a trader, asks me if they should
sell some portion or all of their holdings, I first try to determine the
critical time period in judging the results of the action. If one is persuaded by
media voices the answer will usually be tomorrow or at the end of the calendar
year. For me, it is when the money is expected to be needed. For example, for
my newborn great grandchildren's retirement or the replacement of the new
university dorm, it could be a 100-years. Another matrix could be the future
low price point needed to protect future funding of a desired goal.
Regarding a future low price point, it is important to
recognize that prices move in cycles. The important cycles can be labeled as
seasonal, cyclical, secular, and structural. It is how I think of the latter
part of last week’s drop in prices, where what I follow fell -15% to gains of +7%. To conserve your time and the blog's space I will comment on
the year-to-date period for those impressed with media voices and include some
other screens as well.
The first thing that hit me was the largest average gain of +15.94%
in non-leveraged, diversified large growth mutual funds. These gains were driven
by the biggest positions in technology stocks. However, they missed out by
focusing on securities registered with the Securities Exchange Commission.
After many years of SEC registered stocks performing very well, there were some
foreign markets that generated much better performance multiples. The leading
countries were Ghana +130.25%, Cyprus +94.75%, Luxembourg +74.8%, Greece +71.45%,
Columbia +70.05%, Nigeria +65.1%, Korea +61.1%, South Africa +48.02%, China +32.85%
and Chile +31.02%. Weekly Barron's performance charts showing 14 European and 7
Asian countries had 7 Asian and 4 European indices gaining. (As an analyst that
has followed non-US stocks and invested in some, I believe this is a good time
to examine these opportunities.)
Most Analysts Focus on Rising Stocks
I glanced at those stock prices not doing so well. For example,
the Dow Jones Industrials (DJIA) and Dow Jones Transportation (DJTA) stocks fell
-2.739 and -4.88% respectively for the week. Perhaps more importantly, their year-to-date
performance results were +6.90% and -5.21% respectively. (This suggests the US
goods economy is not doing well. Tariffs could be a problem. Freight movement
is down for both the rail and truck business and may forecast Halloween and
Christmas sales being behind earlier expectations.)
Down Prices = Opportunities
Three industry sectors are showing small declines on a
year-to-date basis: Banks -4.26%, Insurance -1.64% and small companies -1.1%. Restrictions
on all companies are the same, but small companies may be impacted more due to
their staff size. To the extent the current administration reduces some of the
regulatory overhead, it cou1d restore a competitive advantage to smaller companies.
However, many restrictions on smaller financial and insurance companies appear
to make it easier for new entrants.
AI, An Unrecognized National Problem
Some are beginning to comment on the absence of large
profits from Artificial Intelligence companies due to lack of public discovery
of relevant financial disclosure, so I will not. At a recent meeting hosted by the
London Stock Exchange Group, one of their headline speakers noted that the
challenge for the AI industry was to produce "more with less". It is
well recognized that AI is taking over an unidentified number of job functions,
reducing the need for human labor. Great! Where are these laid off people going
to get jobs anywhere near similar wages? This could be a concern for future
Administrations.
The 4th Activist President
Just like Andrew Jackson and the two Roosevelts, President
Trump is trying to solve various national problems by changing how they are handled.
Some of these attempts will survive the Courts. What I am not seeing is how the
restructuring of the economy will work. Looking at the aftereffects of prior
activist Presidents, I suspect it will materially change the outlook for
investments, something people are not currently focusing on.
I would like to know if anyone has any thoughts on what restructuring will mean to their investment orientation.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Tactical Headlines Show Strategic Clues - Weekly Blog # 908
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Anticipation Pays; Deliveries May Not - Weekly Blog # 907
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Selected and Casual Road Notes - Weekly Blog # 906
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Risks: Recession/Cyclical, Depression/Structural - Weekly Blog # 909
Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Risks: Recession/Cyclical, Depression/Structural
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Fears
Recessions are a cyclical phenomenon, largely due to price
and debt imbalances. They occur regularly within a ten-to-twenty-year period. Subsequent
recoveries are usually as quick as recessions. Depressions are much rarer, leaving
societies changed and altering the distribution of wealth and power.
Based on elapsed time the world is due a recession, which
may have already started. Liz Ann Sonders of Charles Schwab points out that the
US Government tracks the profitability of both public and private companies. In
both the first and second quarters of 2025 earnings declined. She believes that
when data for the third quarter comes out it will be below trend. This may be
different than more publicly reported GDP results because the wholesale sector
is absorbing the bulk of the costs of the tariffs which foreign exporters don’t
pick up.
There are lots of private indicators of economic business
troubles. One that has been around a long time is the production of boxes,
which declined. A new one to me is the trading multiples on the sale of
trucking companies, which I have been told dropped in the first half of this
year. This is important because it not only indicates a decline in the demand
for goods, but it is a signal that they are having difficulty getting
experienced drivers. Many drivers are on expiring or expired visas, demonstrating
the impact of tightening regulations on many business activities.
Below the surface other concerns are becoming more visible.
One can’t avoid a discussion of what AI (Artificial Intelligence) will do for
global industry and consumption. While a lot of money and talent is being spent
under this rubric, there are still no identified profits or sales from its use.
In a recent study by MIT, they found a low return on AI’s use. From an overall
economic viewpoint, I have not seen a study showing if AI’s replacement of the work
of people benefits society.
With relatively small changes in price and debt levels there
will be a recovery from the recession. However, every couple of generations those
responsible for curing recessions believe the quickest solution is structural,
which society rejects over an extended period.
My Fear
We have all heard that history does not repeat, but rhymes.
My fear is that we are generally following a pattern like the 1920s and early
1930s, which led to the Great Depression. (You’ll recognize the term depression
more from the study of psychology than economics.)
The US has suffered numerous recessions, most of which were in
the one-two year range. For a recession to become a depression there needs a
force trying to fix how society and the economy work. Unfortunately, previous commanded
decisions didn’t work and prolonged the impact of the recession. Over our
history we have had four presidents who have tried to make meaningful changes
to our society/economy: Andrew Jackson, Teddy Rosevelt, FDR, and Trump. Through
executive orders and legislation these Presidents tried to change how people
lived and worked but ran into significant opposition from the courts and
elements of the business community. Because of the US’s market and military
power, we have an impact on what other nations do. They either resist or go
along with the strategy but will be impacted either way.
What should Investors do?
This advice is for long-term investors looking to make
returns for future generations. Traders who invest to make relatively fast
returns should follow the momentum of the markets, while investors should move
slowly with portions of their wealth and responsibilities.
Each will be subject to the cyclical behavior of the market,
world economy, and changes in needs. While a trader may guess correctly regarding
cyclical moves and early structural changes, an investor should wait for some
understanding of the major implications of the change and be willing to be
wrong before being right.
Whatever discussions occur today, they will likely be
different a year from now. Major differences will result from views on the 2028
election.
Odds
These are my analog thoughts that lack the precision of
digital work, but that is the way I feel very early on Sunday morning:
- The
odds of a recession before the next Presidential election appear to be 65%.
- In dealing with a recession, the odds of government converting
it into a depression is 50%, although it may take longer. Human nature almost
guarantees future recessions and depressions due to over expansion of debt and
other unsustainable commitments.
As usual, please let me know what you are thinking.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Tactical Headlines Show Strategic Clues - Weekly Blog # 908
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Anticipation Pays; Deliveries May Not - Weekly Blog # 907
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Selected and Casual Road Notes - Weekly Blog # 906
Did someone forward you this blog?
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Contact author for limited redistribution permission.
Tactical Headlines Show Strategic Clues - Weekly Blog # 908
Mike
Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Tactical
Headlines Show Strategic Clues
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018,
Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
The Art of Successful Investments
The primary reason prices move is a difference of opinion,
otherwise they would stay frozen at a given level. There are two causes for the
move, information changes and different investment timelines. Two approaches cause
changes – a shift in prices and a shift in thought process. Most daily price
changes are reactions to other price changes, which causes “outer directed” flows
in the trading market. The so-called “smart money” is buying. Less often,
prices move due to recognition that the future will be meaningfully different
than the present. Using military terms for these changes, we would refer to them
as tactical and strategic, or in psychological terms outer or inner directed.
As a practical matter, outer directed frequently changes direction as markets
ebb and flow. In effect, they are trading.
In contrast to trading, inner-directed investors move when
they perceive the future to be significantly different than the present, or
possibly the past. They are not primarily driven by prices, but by changes recognizing
a fundamental future change. I label this approach strategic investing.
Traders can make changes intraday or at other frequencies.
Their focus is the ratio of winning versus losing. They enjoy being with the
crowd.
Strategic investors on the other hand may have years or
decades between actions. A strategic investor is often lonely, in that few if
any see what he/she sees. The lack of a crowd, however, reduces the size of any
losses. Their loss is missing another opportunity.
The media and many pundits live on providing tactical
information for trading, paying relatively little attention to strategic
investments. The reaction to recent press commentary provides a strategic clue
of the wider significance shown in parenthesis:
“Amazon plans to shut fresh grocery chain in United Kingdom
after just four years” (Both Walmart and CVS have reached similar conclusions.
In the case of Walmart, fresh groceries appear to be a critical loss leader to
get customers for other products. CVS is trying to reconfigure their “drug
stores” to have a smaller front, concentrating on drug and clinical services. I
suspect there is an import pricing problem which will be addressed successfully
somehow.)
“BMO is considering selling six branches” and “Citigroup to
sell an interest in Banamex”. (Both Bank of Montreal and Citi recognize the old
model of local branches being the center of a local community’s financial
business. However, much of that exposure can be handled by phone or computer
services, or an increase by non-bank entities. Banks are laboring under various
restrictions where restraints are less likely to produce troublesome losses.)
“American biggest corporations keep talking about AI, but
struggle to explain the upside” (I have yet to see a published estimate of new
sales or profits generated. One clue to the problem is several AI providers taking
all three CFA exams, with the best machines scoring 79.1% correct answers.
Considering AI requires a previously printed available source, one wonders about
the machine’s ability to think creatively in answering a question. Maybe the
test creators were not as knowledgeable as they should have been. Furthermore,
I know many CFAs who I would not hire to manage money for me today.)
“Poland restores China overland trade route.” (The article
did not mention the rail link tying traffic from China through the mid-continent,
including the now independent former Russian states. These states include Kazakhstan
with possibly world’s largest deposit of Uranium and substantial amounts of
oil. The rail link was closed to put pressure on Russia. When reopened, rail
traffic can travel throughout central Europe and into Spain etc. We are in an
era of expanding rail service in every continent. The recently announced merger
of Norfolk & Western with Union Pacific creates the first transcontinental
freight line. (The question on many investors’ minds is why Burlington
Northern, owned by Berkshire Hathaway*, has not entered into merger negations
with C&S to create a parallel transcontinental line. My thought is there might
be potential difficulty with labor negations. On Burlington’s mile-long freight
trains there are only two employees, an engineer and a conductor. There have
been difficult contracts negotiations with the conductors. In addition, there
have been similar problems with Berkshire’s airplane pilots in their private
rental flight business. We were in London when their subway system went on strike
for 5 days. In addition, New Jersey Transit is facing a rail strike. In both cases
the employees received good wages for 38 hours or less of work.)
*Owned in managed and personal accounts.
Short-term Signals
- The University of Michigan consumer confidence sentiment
survey for August dropped to 55.1% vs 58.2% the month before.
- In the latest trading week, the number of declining stocks
was greater than the number rising.
Longer-term Worries
Readers will not be surprised to hear that I believe there
is a lot of wisdom harbored within the mutual fund industry. There is a group
of funds that were designed to accumulate money for retirement and to manage capital
to meet needs in retirement. These portfolios were typically comprised of stocks
and bonds. The stocks were meant to supply growth and the bonds some protection
against periodic declines. These funds are
labeled Mixed Asset Target, with a specific year indicating the probable retirement
year. Interestingly, something happened on the way to retirement. None of the
fund peer groups meant to meet retirement needs prior to 2050 produced average returns
above 14.25% year-to-date. This suggests
to me that we should consider a range of twenty-five to forty years for long-term
investments. This means we should hold investments for a long time and only
sell if conditions change and are unlikely to return.
International equities had 10 better peer groups, world
sector funds and regional funds had 6 each, sector equity, global equity, and
mixed assets had 5 peer groups each for a total of 37 peer funds groups out of
over 100 tracked. Turning to local stock indices, there were 67 countries
better than the US for the same period.
It may not be too late to add international exposure to your
holdings. This would exclude funds investing in US registered stocks, as you
would still be exposed to US dollar purchasing power risk.
As of Thursday’s close, there were 18 mutual fund peer
groups in the US Diversified Equity Funds Super group. The best performer on a
year-to-date basis was Equity Leveraged Funds +29.25%, with twice the gain of
the second-place leader Mid-Cap Growth Funds +14.25%. Since borrowed money
(margin) is not used by most mutual funds, I am excluding equity leverage funds
for the following analysis. Treating 14.25% as a good performer, I wanted to
see which super group categories were better.
Dollar Risk
One reason people feel poorer today than a year ago, even
though their stocks and homes are hopefully valued more than a year ago. You
must go to the shopping center to understand the real economics. Almost all clothes,
if their quality is maintained, sell at higher prices. Fancy cars, if they are
sold at your mall, will also be higher. When you go to the grocery store or
fresh food counter, meat and fish of the same quality are higher.
If you dig into the financial statements of many providers who
raise money from overseas, their costs have risen since a year ago.
You may feel poorer now, but you will feel worse in the
future. What caused this to happen? Who did this to you? Well, we all did it to
ourselves. We collectively wanted too much from our government. They met our
needs, but since we did not want to pay full price for what was provided, the
politicians of both parties borrowed in our name, creating ever larger deficits
financed with higher interest rates.
For the next ten years I expect to double the money I pay to
the government for income taxes, sales taxes, use charges, tariffs, and
probably transportation costs.
What are your thoughts?
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Anticipation Pays; Deliveries May Not - Weekly Blog # 907
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Selected and Casual Road Notes - Weekly Blog # 906
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Bad Comparisons Can Lead To Faulty Conclusions - Weekly Blog #
905
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Anticipation Pays; Deliveries May Not - Weekly Blog # 907
Mike
Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Anticipation
Pays; Deliveries May Not
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018,
Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Since last December the bulls have been calling for a drop
in the Fed interest rate. Some anticipated an interim pay-off near the close on
Thursday when the last print on the 10-year yield failed to maintain its
announcement high, fulfilling the dictum of selling on the news. The number of Friday’s
declines on both the NYSE and NASDAQ were above the number of rising prices.
With the much-expected rate cut I found it interesting that the
sample surveys of the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) were bearish
for the last three weeks. The six-month projections stayed in the 40% range for
all three weeks (42.4%, 49.5%, and 43.4% respectively). In the latest week,
which probably did not benefit from Thursday’s rate cut, the bullish estimate of
41.7% was slightly below the bearish call.
The explanation for the three main market indices rising to
record levels from their April lows this week was the familiar “FOMO”, fear of
missing out. I suspect traders sharing that impulse were largely housed in
retail-oriented wealth management arms of brokerage firms and non-trust
departments of banks.
The battle for investment survival is being waged by armies
marching under the “FOMO” banner, as well as others withholding their purchase
orders upon reading the economic data. There are two ammunition arsenals
safeguarding the non-buyers, the declining number of job-openings and the rise
of non-US traded equities benefiting from the fall of the US dollar. In April
there were 158,000 jobs added, which fell to 22,000 in August. Barron’s shows
the investment performance of 14 local markets in Europe and Asia each week. This
week Europe had 4 risers and Asia 8. Asian and Emerging Market funds were most prominent
among the better performing mutual funds this week.
On a longer-term basis there are a number of worries about
investing in US markets:
- The US market is becoming more speculative, with year-over-year NYSE share volume rising 16.24% and NASDAQ 68.97%.
- The current
administration appears to want to reduce the independence of the Federal
Reserve.
- The President and SEC are floating the idea of switching
from quarterly reporting to semiannual. Both ideas will make foreign-traded
issues more attractive than they are now.
- The drive to include non-publicly traded securities in retail
accounts, particularly retirement portfolios, is expected to increase the risk
of losses.
- The London edition of the Financial Times devoted a full
page to the headline “A new era of McCarthyism?”, showing a picture of
President Trump and the late Senator McCarthy. This reminds me of sibling
rivalry between an older brother and a successful younger brother. With a
number of listed London exchange stocks moving to the US there is risk to a
portion of the London market.
With the US stock market indices but not the average shares
at record levels and the economy open to question, please be careful.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Selected and Casual Road Notes - Weekly Blog # 906
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Bad Comparisons Can Lead To Faulty Conclusions - Weekly Blog #
905
Mike
Lipper's Blog: Appeals Court Rules (7vs4) Against Trump, but Life Goes On -
Weekly Blog # 904
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