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Posted

Packer - I agree with you.  Do you believe the official inflation statistics?

 

I really do not like the idea of substitution.  Yes I get that personally I substitute chicken for beef when one gets too expensive but I think it screws with the metrics.  Just like how we have changed which unemployment rate U2 or U-3 or what used to be in now u-6.

 

I think we as a society understimate the real inflation # and it has lead to a distrust and disillusionment with gov't.

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Posted

Packer - I agree with you.  Do you believe the official inflation statistics?

 

I really do not like the idea of substitution.  Yes I get that personally I substitute chicken for beef when one gets too expensive but I think it screws with the metrics.  Just like how we have changed which unemployment rate U2 or U-3 or what used to be in now u-6.

 

I think we as a society understimate the real inflation # and it has lead to a distrust and disillusionment with gov't.

 

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/inflation-charts

 

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/unemployment-charts

Posted

The issue about the fake gov't numbers has been debunked many times. It's actually not possible for gov't to mess with the numbers. Economists and people would figure out that pretty quick. Shadowstats is a nutjob organization. if you want a secondary measure for inflation I would recommend MIT's Billion Price Project.

 

Generally I would say that I agree with Packer that you won't see meaningfully higher rates soon. Our views probably differ on why. But my view is that most of Aggregate Demand is quite constrained while at the same time you have a lot of excess savings in another segment. If you raise rates too much you'll bonk AD. As for the excess savings those provide a lot of credit supply. If the tax cut package goes through it won't help with either (probably make it worse) so not much change. Now for the caveats:

 

Caveat 1. There is a bias towards tight monetary policy in the US, especially in the conservative circles - from where the new fed chair comes from. In that case we may end up with overly tight policy. So elevated rates, below target inflation, and a bad business environment. This would be the nightmare scenario for equities. However the Fed is a bit like the Borg. it definitely tightened up the doves. Maybe it will loosen up the hawks. We will see.

 

Caveat 2. Historically rates have been all over the place. In 1971 with fed funds @4% nobody would have guessed that 10 years later fed funds would be at 19. In 1981 with fed funds at 19 nobody would have guessed that fed funds would be at 3 in 1992. In 2000 with fed funds at 6.6 definitely nobody would have guessed that fed funds would be zero in 2010.

Posted

I would not take any kind of consensus on this topic.  Just like many other things in life you need to do your own research, thinking and analysis and come to you best conclusion and go with it.    Especially on this topic though because if the mass majority anywhere are in agreement it is probably better to take the contrary bet.

 

I wanted to press you on this since you started this topic...

 

First of all, this is a fact (not a consensus!): Indexing will generate market-average returns.

 

Given this fact and that overall market valuation is high (which implies that the expected market-average returns would be low), what should an investor do?

 

I see two conclusions:

1) Since the overall market valuation is high, you should pick stocks that are undervalued instead of indexing.

2) Since the overall market valuation is high and because stock picking is hard, you should invest in other assets (or just sit on cash).

 

Are you advocating any of these two, or something else?

 

I would personally prefer cash to the market at this price.  Safer and you have the option of buying some really cheap, safe companies at some point.  Human memories are such that the fear and super cheap prices have become a fading memory.  People can get scared very quickly. 

 

It is not an easy choice at this point.  But why should passive investing be easy.

 

PS

I think Berkshire will outperform the S&P 500 by a nice margin in the next 7 yrs or so.

 

Posted

Earlier in this thread there were questions about trends and correlations:

http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.ca/2017/11/are-turkeys-calling-market-top.html#.WhQcDbpFzuh

 

Turkeys have gotten bigger, haven't they? This has a spurious look but, if the correlation holds, maybe turkeys will keep on getting bigger. Have always enjoyed physics but perhaps what they need to fly is simply to get bigger.

 

On a more serious (?relevant) note about the price, yield and "expectations":

http://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/veolia-successfully-issues-a-3-year-bond-with-a-negative-yield-1008324867

 

Veolia is a French-based transnational utility which is BBB rated. The 3-year bond's yield is -0,026% and the issue was massively over-subscribed. With certain assumptions going forward, as there may be more room for the credit spread, the quality of the investor base expects a profit.

 

Today, I will get myself a new financial calculator. (and a turkey)

 

 

Posted

Did not plan to come back here but re-visited an article written by Mr. Benjamin Graham who "could not understand how securities were valued in the later 1950s".

 

https://www8.gsb.columbia.edu/sites/valueinvesting/files/files/DOC003.pdf

 

For some reason this article came across my desk at the same time as an issue leading me to President Eisenhower's Farewell Address to the Nation (1961).

 

Excerpts:

 

"But each proposal must be weighed in light of a broader consideration; the need to maintain balance in and among national programs – balance between the private and the public economy, balance between the cost and hoped for advantages – balance between the clearly necessary and the comfortably desirable; balance between our essential requirements as a nation and the duties imposed by the nation upon the individual; balance between the actions of the moment and the national welfare of the future. Good judgment seeks balance and progress; lack of it eventually finds imbalance and frustration."

...

 

"Another factor in maintaining balance involves the element of time. As we peer into society's future, we – you and I, and our government – must avoid the impulse to live only for today, plundering for, for our own ease and convenience, the precious resources of tomorrow. We cannot mortgage the material assets of our grandchildren without asking the loss also of their political and spiritual heritage. We want democracy to survive for all generations to come, not to become the insolvent phantom of tomorrow."

 

 

An hypothesis is that the comments from the past simply come from another epoch and only have historical value.

Another hypothesis is that Mr. Graham's 1974-5 comments may have an unusual degree of relevance in our time.

Haunted by the absolute/relative valuation conundrum.

The problem is that one of the options is moronic.

 

Posted

Once in a while, anyone should look to see if their theories have any value. Hussman has been wrong for so long, I wonder why anyone listens to him. Even if what he predicts does end up happening someday, someone would be richer by not having listened to him at all than by having listened to him. Opportunity costs are real.

 

The problem with perma bears in a world where stock markets are up way more than they are down on average over the long-term is that it leads to something like this:

 

"This is a fake market, a house of card, it'll crash any day now, look at these charts and metrics, better stay cash and/or short"

 

*market doubles or triples over many years*

 

"Any day now the big one will come!"

 

*Market falls 20%*

 

"This is the big one! The 50%+ drop, great depression, here we come! I'll just wait a bit more before deploying capital..."

 

*Market bounces back*

 

"This is a dead cat bounce, it'll start falling again any day now"

 

*Market keeps growing for a few more years before another 10% correction*

 

"The big one is coming any day now! We're still too high on the CAPE, look at the gold ratio, these debt levels... Someday I'll get to invest that cash at great depression levels!"

 

*years pass*

 

Meanwhile, someone who started with the same capital and just rode it all out in great companies generating good returns is probably 10x richer than the permabear.

 

 

Hussman has a strong belief that valuations matter. Similar to Graham’s nonsense that in the long run the market is a weighing machine.  This underlying faith in investors someday suddenly coming to some sort of quantitative value based assessment of the market they invest in, is constantly being brought up by value investors.  I think Jeremy Grantham correctly surmised that the weighing machine proposition is just a belief in regression to the mean.

 

 

Here again (see below) I’d say this common view is wrong, and is basically nonsense. The idea that valuations will only appear in the long run, that a look at the long run somehow a series of presents will change into a useful measure of value to influence investors to  act accordingly is nonsense.this somehow out of an analysis of a series of prices which will average volatility right up to the last or most current point in the analysis . If capital flows always drive valuation in the short term, they therefore drive valuations in the long term. There is no long run weighing machine. Simply put, we can only live in the present and we can never escape the present to live in the mystical long run where suddenly valuations become apparent.

 

The Danger on Which Gurus Agree

 

“Bill Ackman ...wrote in his early 2016 letter :

 

We believe that it is axiomatic that, while capital flows will drive market values in the short term, valuations will drive market values over the long term. ...”

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/danger-gurus-agree-180442861.html

 

 

Posted

Once in a while, anyone should look to see if their theories have any value. Hussman has been wrong for so long, I wonder why anyone listens to him. Even if what he predicts does end up happening someday, someone would be richer by not having listened to him at all than by having listened to him. Opportunity costs are real.

 

The problem with perma bears in a world where stock markets are up way more than they are down on average over the long-term is that it leads to something like this:

 

"This is a fake market, a house of card, it'll crash any day now, look at these charts and metrics, better stay cash and/or short"

 

*market doubles or triples over many years*

 

"Any day now the big one will come!"

 

*Market falls 20%*

 

"This is the big one! The 50%+ drop, great depression, here we come! I'll just wait a bit more before deploying capital..."

 

*Market bounces back*

 

"This is a dead cat bounce, it'll start falling again any day now"

 

*Market keeps growing for a few more years before another 10% correction*

 

"The big one is coming any day now! We're still too high on the CAPE, look at the gold ratio, these debt levels... Someday I'll get to invest that cash at great depression levels!"

 

*years pass*

 

Meanwhile, someone who started with the same capital and just rode it all out in great companies generating good returns is probably 10x richer than the permabear.

 

 

Hussman has a strong belief that valuations matter. Similar to Graham’s nonsense that in the long run the market is a weighing machine.  This underlying faith in investors someday suddenly coming to some sort of quantitative value based assessment of the market they invest in, is constantly being brought up by value investors.  I think Jeremy Grantham correctly surmised that the weighing machine proposition is just a belief in regression to the mean.

 

 

Here again (see below) I’d say this common view is wrong, and is basically nonsense. The idea that valuations will only appear in the long run, that a look at the long run somehow a series of presents will change into a useful measure of value to influence investors to  act accordingly is nonsense.this somehow out of an analysis of a series of prices which will average volatility right up to the last or most current point in the analysis . If capital flows always drive valuation in the short term, they therefore drive valuations in the long term. There is no long run weighing machine. Simply put, we can only live in the present and we can never escape the present to live in the mystical long run where suddenly valuations become apparent.

 

The Danger on Which Gurus Agree

 

“Bill Ackman ...wrote in his early 2016 letter :

 

We believe that it is axiomatic that, while capital flows will drive market values in the short term, valuations will drive market values over the long term. ...”

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/danger-gurus-agree-180442861.html

 

 

 

I think I understand what you're saying in a philosophical sense; insofar as the "long term" cannot be anything other than a series of "short terms."

 

In Ackman's defense though, he may be trying to imply that capital flows can reverse relatively quickly, and that elevated valuations create or at least positively correlate with the conditions that can cause inflows into the capital markets to turn into outflows.

 

I am personally somewhat bearish on the US stock market, but I look for individual securities (businesses) to purchase and try not to get overly concerned about the overall market's valuation. Right now I think it's tough to find bargains.

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