THE ILLUSION OF STRENGTH
This morning a portfolio
manager friend of mine sent me an interesting note discussing the current
mental attitude of professional investors:
"[There is] the resigned capitulation to the trend, going fully
invested in order to survive, with low-risk paying nothing and 'low risk' being
almost certain doom. Perhaps the most tangible example of principal-agent
dynamics I have seen during my 30-plus years in this business."
This attitude is not new, and something that has been
entrenched in extended bull markets throughout history. The current bull move
has lasted so long, despite weak macro fundamentals, geopolitical risks and
sluggish economics, that no one can see its potential end. As my friend
stated:
"We're like observers on 24
June 1812 watching Napoleon's Grand Army march off to Russia, with victory
certain."
The chart below
reiterates a point I made last week:
"There is an interesting
phenomenon occurring in the financial markets that absolutely, positively, will
not last indefinitely – the 'Giant Shrinking Correction.' The chart
below shows the S&P 500 (weekly closing data) since the beginning of 2009,
with all relevant corrections identified in terms of percentage. See chart in http://streettalklive.com/images/1dailyxchange/2014/SP500-CorrectionSizes-081414.PNG
There are two
important points to note. First, each correction since the end of QE2 has been
increasingly smaller. This is very much in line with a prediction made in November, 2013 by John
Hussman when he stated:
“A discussion of bubble risk
would be incomplete without defining the term itself. From an economist’s point
of view, a bubble is defined in terms of differential equations and a violation
of ‘transversality.’ In simpler language, a bubble is a speculative advance
where prices rise on the expectation of future advances and become largely
detached from properly discounted fundamentals. A bubble reflects a widening
gap between the increasingly extrapolative expectations of market participants
and the prospective returns that can be estimated through present-value
relationships linking prices and likely cash flows.
As economist Didier Sornette
observed in Why Markets Crash, numerous bubbles in securities and
other asset markets can be shown to follow a ‘log periodic’ pattern where the
general advance becomes increasingly steep, while corrections become both
increasingly frequent and gradually shallower. I’ve described this dynamic in
terms of investor behavior that reflects increasingly immediate
impulses to buy the dip.” See graph http://streettalklive.com/images/1dailyxchange/2014/Hussman-LogSP500-wmc131125-081414.png
Secondly,
I have noted in the chart above (red vertical dashed line) the onset of the
most recent QE program. As noted, corrections since December of 2012 have never
taken the markets back to extremely oversold levels as had occurred previously.
With the Federal Reserve now reducing monetary interventions, it is likely that
volatility will increase, and corrections will once again become deeper.
The
issue, as discussed by Hussman, is the current 'risk on' environment will most
assuredly swing to 'risk off.' It is at this point that most investors are
paralyzed into inaction as the realization of what was said 'could not happen,
does."
"On August 20th, Brussels was occupied. Squadrons of
Uhlans moving with lances at the ready appeared suddenly in the streets. They
were but the heralds of a grim parade, almost unbelievable in power and
grandeur, that followed. It began at one o'clock with column after column of
gray-green infantry, shaved and brushed with freshly shined boots and bayonets
glinting in the sun and their ranks closed to eliminate the gaps left by the
missing. The cavalry appeared in the same gray-green with black and white
pennants fluttering from their lances like horsemen riding out of the Middle
Ages. The phalanx of their innumerable hoofs clattering in close order seemed
capable of trampling to death anything in their path. Heavy guns of the artillery
thundered over the cobblestones. Drums pounded. Hoarse voices in chorus roared
the victory song, 'Heil dir im Siegeskranz,' to the tune of 'God Save the
King.'
On and on, more and more, brigade after brigade, they came.
Silent crowds watching the parade were stupefied by its immensity, its
endlessness, its splendid perfection. The
exhibition of equipment designed to awe the onlookers accomplished its
object...The parade kept to one side of the boulevards so that staff
officers in motorcars and messengers on bicycles could dash up and down the
line of march."
The current
occupation of the markets is both "unbelievable in power and
grandeur." There is
simply no denying the current bull market trend as "silent crowds
remain stupefied by its immensity, its endlessness and its splendid
perfection."
The thought for the day is simply this:
"Like the many proud soldiers that occupied Brussels then, two or
three years from now, how many investors will be
alive to 'tell the tale' of the occupation of the bull market today?"
It is within "resigned complacency" that
the risks to portfolios are easily dismissed with the conviction of strength
and control. Yet, it is also within this illusion that the greatest defeats in
history have been delivered.
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