RuleNumberOne Posted June 23, 2019 Author Share Posted June 23, 2019 True. Nobody wants to hear about inflation. With a 4x increase in government debt since 1999, record corporate debt, fiscal deficits during record-low unemployment, the last thing anybody wants to hear is inflation. Inflation is the one thing that can blow this sky-high. Here is how it works. Suppose California's inflation is 8%, Alabama and Mississippi are at 1% inflation. National inflation = ( California inflation + Alabama inflation + Mississippi inflation ) / 3 = 3.3% Though computers and cellphones cost as much as ever, Internet and wireless bills as high as ever, there has been improvement in speeds. Therefore, we have actually had deflation! Say these categories are deflating at 20% per annum and take up 10% of spending. Final inflation = 3.3% - 2% hedonic adjustment = 1.3% What a great human achievement! 1% inflation year after year, decade after decade! The eighth wonder of the world! Now let us move over to Europe. You say Italy and Greece have too much debt? Lets tweak the inflation methodology a bit here and there, now Italy can borrow at 2% and Greece at 3%. Nobody can complain about the ECB bazooka when inflation is at 0%! "Whatever it takes!" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liberty Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 Actually increased volatile and sideways movements re often signs of a very late stage bull market. I've heard "insert what is happening recently" is a sign of "late innings/crash soon/recession/new normal with no growth/etc" since about 2011. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. Someday it'll be right (broken clock and everything), but I think people are extremely bad at predicting that stuff -- not just bad, but much worse than they think they are, and it's this miscalibration that makes it dangerous. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spekulatius Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 Actually, increasing government debt is not a problem when negative interest rates persist. I believe the QE in the next downturn will include unprecedented purchases of corporate debt and probably equity purchases as well. It’s the only thing left to do when the risk free interest rate approaches zero. That’s already the case in Japan where their treasury buys selected equites like Reits. In a way, is a smart thing to do, when the cost of capital approaches zero or becomes negative. Strange new world. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WayWardCloud Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 That or helicopter money / universal income if the next president is one of the further left people running. I like the idea better actually. If the government really HAS to print money and throw it around, then it might as well be bottom up rather than hoping for it to somehow trickle down. I think it's superior because that way the money is mostly being reinvested in the "real" economy immediately rather than hoarded at the top. Give $1000 to working class people they'll go to the store and buy stuff. Give $1000 to upper class people they'll add it to their stash of financial assets and real estate. Rich dad, poor dad, all that. But good luck to whoever tries to implement those policies in the US ;D Oh, and I agree that a government borrowing at super low cost to invest in anything that can easily return more than the cost of debt, such as real estate, makes sense on paper. Austerity politics make no sense in our extremely low rate environment (I'm looking at you, Angela). That said I really don't want my government to be ubiquitous owning real estate, shares of companies and whatnot. It's too much power under the same hands and it's just asking for conflicts of interest and corruption. Just look at China. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castanza Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 That or helicopter money / universal income if the next president is one of the further left people running. I like the idea better actually. If the government really HAS to print money and throw it around, then it might as well be bottom up rather than hoping for it to somehow trickle down. I think it's superior because that way the money is mostly being reinvested in the "real" economy immediately rather than hoarded at the top. Give $1000 to working class people they'll go to the store and buy stuff. Give $1000 to upper class people they'll add it to their stash of financial assets and real estate. Rich dad, poor dad, all that. But good luck to whoever tries to implement those policies in the US ;D Oh, and I agree that a government borrowing at super low cost to invest in anything that can easily return more than the cost of debt, such as real estate, makes sense on paper. Austerity politics make no sense in our extremely low rate environment (I'm looking at you, Angela). That said I really don't want my government to be ubiquitous owning real estate, shares of companies and whatnot. It's too much power under the same hands and it's just asking for conflicts of interest and corruption. Just look at China. You can't artificially create demand by printing money and giving it to poor people. Policy built on hopeful premises is dangerous. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jurgis Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 But it's perfectly fine to print money and give it to rich people. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castanza Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 But it's perfectly fine to print money and give it to rich people. Never said it was....simply pointing out a fact. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SHDL Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 You can't artificially create demand by printing money and giving it to poor people. Not to derail the thread, but I actually think you can. For instance I have like $200 sitting in my file cabinet, it’s been there for years, and it likely will be there forever. If the government takes that away and hands it out to 10 alcoholics on the street I’m reasonably sure most of them will spend it on their liquor of choice within a day or two. I guess we can reasonably call that “demand creation.” Now if the government finances the handout by printing money instead, things become a bit more complicated but more or less the same thing should happen in the end. The only difference is that my cash holdings gets diluted by the money printing instead of going down in nominal terms by government confiscation. Now whether that’s good government policy is another matter … which I guess we can all have fun talking about in the Politics section. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest cherzeca Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 thread turning into 1984 rather than 1999 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
UK Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 https://www.brookings.edu/blog/ben-bernanke/2016/04/11/what-tools-does-the-fed-have-left-part-3-helicopter-money/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RuleNumberOne Posted June 24, 2019 Author Share Posted June 24, 2019 Helicopter money will not generate inflation in Alabama, it would just be a one-time event. Meanwhile even fast food workers in Silicon Valley have seen their wages more than double over the last 9 years. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-06-12/top-u-s-inflation-hot-spots-clustered-on-west-coast Seeking Alpha article today says the peak valuation for Siebel in 2000 was 27x sales. 60x sales is very normal today. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4271574-upon-time-tech Even a year ago, an IPO was unthinkable for some of the companies going public now. At least in 2000, Greenspan set the Fed rate at 6% to break the bubble. Kashkari and Bullard want to cut right away to 2%. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TwoCitiesCapital Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 thread turning into 1984 rather than 1999 Lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castanza Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 You can't artificially create demand by printing money and giving it to poor people. I’m reasonably sure most of them will spend it on their liquor of choice within a day or two. But you can't be sure. And that's such a specific example lol. Anyways. I agree with Stahleyp in terms of euphoria. granted I wasn't an investor during the 1999 bubble. But I have done quite a bit of reading on it. Same with the 1983 video game bubble. To me it looks more like we might have localized bubbles within specific markets (think tech subscription services and SaaS, auto industry). I do think a lot of the hype simply is being expresses with "the changing of the guard" so to speak. What I mean by that is the rapid influx of millennials and other young investors entering the market. This demographic communicates much differently and it very much driven and motivated by trends and fads. I think it's easy for this generation to latch onto IPO's etc. and then blast it all over social media and other outlets. I think a bubble does exist, but I don't see it at 1999 levels where everyone was throwing every last penny at basically every company that launched. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SHDL Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 Yes, never be so sure about humans, especially those who are drunk all the time. ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 If we are at 1999 levels, we should be experiencing a 70% drop in the Nasdaq and around 43% drop in the S&P 500 over the next 34 months or so. Who wants to bet on that? ;) I'm using the last days values for 1999 and bottom in 2002. The drop was a bit more if you go to the highs in 2000. I'll also say that, contrary to seemingly popular belief, euphoria does not have to occur before market crashes. The stock market was not euphoric in 2007 (though I suppose you could say that housing market was). There was a fair amount of concern that oil prices might cause a recession (peak oil, $4+ gas). In fact, the government was concerned so it had the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008...that was passed in Feb of 2008. The market was off not even 12% from its all time high and stimulus comes in! I was concerned about the market then but did not foresee how bad it would get. I was expecting a lighter recession so was fully invested. I though "well, to have those 50% drops we need a lot of euphoria like 1999". Wrong, wrong, wrong. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scorpioncapital Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 So maybe euphoria in any market can lead to crashes in another. Mortage bubble of 2008 had alot of leverage and money tied up indirectly to banks , which were publicly trsded and some even failed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TwoCitiesCapital Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 I dunno - I witnessed a ton of euphoria on the FANG stocks two years ago. Same with NYC real estate Same with Tesla. Same with Bitcoin. One could argue that there's euphoria in the bond market if you believe that we aren't in a period of secular stagnation. Even if you do, there's a pretty decent argument to be made that there's euphoria in corporate credit. I agree euphoria doesn't appear to be widespread - but it's been there in very specific, very large, and very visible risk assets even if it hasn't been in the S&P as a whole. With the exception of bonds, each of these euphoric instances has also dramatically disappointed investors over the past 12-18 months which does tend to portend broader weakness. And while S&P 500 might not be euphoric, it's definitely priced for perfection. Just my two cents Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mcliu Posted June 24, 2019 Share Posted June 24, 2019 What about euphoria in sneakers and streetwear? People are trading these like stocks.. https://stockx.com/ You can literally build a portfolio of shoes and track the prices.. :o Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest ajc Posted June 25, 2019 Share Posted June 25, 2019 Something I didn't include in my recent tweetstorms about a possible tech IPO bubble and growth stock overvaluation, was a graphic on first day rises of 30% or more (see image below). Keep in mind, that data was from 2 months ago, and it's only become worse since. Instead of being on track for 20-something companies, we may be on track for 30 or more this year. Essentially, the only time we've had this many $1b+ IPOs rise 30% or more on their first day of trading was in very late 1999 and throughout the year 2000. There might not be a euphoric mood in the air, but the numbers are on par with the Dotcom era. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest cherzeca Posted June 25, 2019 Share Posted June 25, 2019 I think comparisons to 1999 are way off base simply because back then (and I was investing back then unlike some on this thread) there was substantial uncertainty as to how the internet would affect business, and whether new tech companies would replace old incumbents. lots of talk about option value. turns out that pets.com did not replace the incumbent pets food industry because that industry could take advantage of the internet benefits to a far greater extent than any early pets food adopter of the internet. turns out that e-commerce is just commerce. now is this type of "option value/this time its different" thinking apparent now? yes in small segments such as blockchain. ostk will fizzle and v will do quite well with blockchain because there is nothing about blockchain that v cant do far better than what ostk can do with it. so ostk is a 1999 phantom. but it is a far cry to find isolated instances of ostk-like thinking to somehow equate today to 1999. as for corporate debt bubble, yes I think at today's rates an issuer would be crazy not to borrow. and some bondholders will suffer. no biggie for the overall market though Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest ajc Posted June 26, 2019 Share Posted June 26, 2019 I think comparisons to 1999 are way off base simply because back then (and I was investing back then unlike some on this thread) there was substantial uncertainty as to how the internet would affect business, and whether new tech companies would replace old incumbents. lots of talk about option value. turns out that pets.com did not replace the incumbent pets food industry because that industry could take advantage of the internet benefits to a far greater extent than any early pets food adopter of the internet. turns out that e-commerce is just commerce. now is this type of "option value/this time its different" thinking apparent now? yes in small segments such as blockchain. ostk will fizzle and v will do quite well with blockchain because there is nothing about blockchain that v cant do far better than what ostk can do with it. so ostk is a 1999 phantom. but it is a far cry to find isolated instances of ostk-like thinking to somehow equate today to 1999. as for corporate debt bubble, yes I think at today's rates an issuer would be crazy not to borrow. and some bondholders will suffer. no biggie for the overall market though I think the 1999 comparison here is more figurative, not literal. To my mind, the point shouldn't be to have an exact repeat but to take a probabilistic look at if it rhymes. Median P/S ratios for tech IPOs have only been higher in 1998 and 1999. The percentage of tech IPOs with negative earnings has only been higher in 1999 and 2000. Growth stocks have not been this overvalued versus value stocks since at least 1999. The only other time the market ever valued tech IPOs at P/S ratio's like what we're seeing today is when it was already in early 1999 (see image below). In 1998, Yahoo grew sales at 188%, eBay at 724%, and Amazon at 312%. For that kind of growth, IPOs of that vintage were getting P/S ratio's of around 8.8x at the open. Switch to 2019. The hot tech IPOs of this year, were Zoom with 118% sales growth, Slack with 76% growth, and Uber with 43%. It's not even close. What investors have gained in any increased certainty with this new breed of tech businesses, they have given up in growth. I did some back-of-the-envelope work a few weeks back (http://www.cornerofberkshireandfairfax.ca/forum/general-discussion/why-i-think-we-might-be-in-a-significant-tech-ipo-bubble/msg367923/#msg367923) and found the median P/S at the open so far in 2019 was only exceeded by the levels we saw in 1999 and 2000. People who aren't worried about the very bubbly nature of these tech IPO valuations are fooling themselves. Keep in mind too, the Dotcom crash was I believe the largest crash in a major US index since 1929. It was down 80% from peak to trough. Even from the late 1998 high, leaving out the last year completely, the Nasdaq still fell 60%. If people are expecting a bubble even bigger than 1999 so they can continue being fully invested in hot growth stocks, then they wouldn't know what margin of safety looked like if it stood right next to them. Anyone wanting more chart porn on the subject, is free to look here (https://twitter.com/tonyjclayton/status/1118205158721249280) and here (https://twitter.com/tonyjclayton/status/1142741798554624000). Whether or not someone senses a general tech euphoria or thinks a Nasdaq crash is coming tomorrow, isn't what matters. What matters is according to the data we're most likely in valuation territory reminiscent of the Dotcom era, and investors should currently be thinking far more about the downside than the upside. I could be wrong but I think that was the general idea the original poster was trying to get at, and my view is he/she isn't too far off. I guess as always with these things, we'll just have to wait and see how it all plays out. Time will tell whether Zoom at 59x sales, Slack at 39x sales, Crowdstrike at 48x sales, Beyond Meat at 78x sales, Shopify at 27x sales, and many other extreme multiple growth businesses ( ), were priced for absolute perfection at today's levels. I say this as a consumer tech investor myself by the way, so I've got no beef with the companies or sector. The valuations however, are in a very dangerous place historically-speaking. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RuleNumberOne Posted June 26, 2019 Author Share Posted June 26, 2019 I think more "tech" money will be lost in the next bear than in 1999. WeWork has a private valuation of $47 billion, which is 39 times the peak market cap of WebVan. There was outright fraud in 1999, but the market caps involved were a fraction of what we have today. What was the peak market cap of pets.com? People have become inured to the lack of earnings in cloud stocks. In lieu of a P/E, those stocks have traded on a P/S basis for the last several years. The P/S multiple keeps climbing year after year. Anything less than 20x is cheap, i mean P/S, not P/E. The "tech" is not ground-breaking either, it is just built on AWS. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spekulatius Posted June 26, 2019 Share Posted June 26, 2019 I think more "tech" money will be lost in the next bear than in 1999. WeWork has a private valuation of $47 billion, which is 39 times the peak market cap of WebVan. There was outright fraud in 1999, but the market caps involved were a fraction of what we have today. What was the peak market cap of pets.com? People have become inured to the lack of earnings in cloud stocks. In lieu of a P/E, those stocks have traded on a P/S basis for the last several years. The P/S multiple keeps climbing year after year. Anything less than 20x is cheap, i mean P/S, not P/E. The "tech" is not ground-breaking either, it is just built on AWS. I am not so sure. yahoo’s peak market cap exceeded $100B and it was later sold for just a few billion. JDSU’s peak market cap was $125B and it lost 99% of it. Cisco was $550B and it went to a bit more than $100B. Then there are endless companies who needed 10+ years to exceed their peak before like a couple of semi companies, Dell, Sun, Compaq and MSFT even etc. If you now adjust this for expected market r turns, or just inflation over almost 18 years, the value in today’s dollars will probably not exceeded in the next downturn, but who knows? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cigarbutt Posted June 26, 2019 Share Posted June 26, 2019 Let's call this the cocktail party sentiment index and admit the limited usefulness for choice and timing of individual stock pickings. In 1999, I created a malaise at a cocktail party when saying that I had just sold Nortel (low 40's before it tripled shortly thereafter), by far the largest capitalization in the Canadian market and darling among others in the tech group. In 2019, I just shut up and listen (except occasionally on incognito boards) and the same people tell me that WeWork is the way to go. Maybe this time is different. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ValueHippie Posted June 26, 2019 Share Posted June 26, 2019 I am doing some econometric research on bubbles in the SP500. The code is not yet finished and therefore the periods in 2007 and 2015 should not show up. By just analyzing the time series, it seems pretty clear that we are in a bubble right now. However, a minor correction as in December 2018 should suffice to bring my test statistic below the critical value. Edit: Check the attachment! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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