Timing & trends

Bob Hoye: Investment Fads

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Investment Fads

We have been fascinated by the chart on the publically-traded shares of the Swiss National Bank. Yes, it is the central bank, it trades, it zooms and it is long the latest fad in investing. Fiduciary responsibility being a constriction has become a neglected concept.

Their reserves have been committed to equities and the chart records the euphoria of the day.

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As one would expect the biggest positions include the fad stocks of today.

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In the 1980s, we first wrote a piece on life insurance companies called Actuarially-Driven Investors. It reviews that investors with fiduciary responsibilities would get caught up in the financial fashions of the day. It was equities in the great bull markets that ended with the 1873 Bubble and the 1929 Bubble. At secular lows in interest rates the biggest weighting was in long-dated bonds.

The latest iteration of the review was amended to include the fad to buy commodities on the boom up to 2008.

That the Swiss National Bank, along with other central banks, is long equities is another example of an institution with fiduciary responsibilities getting caught up in yet another financial fad.

The European Central Bank belligerently bought ten-year bonds down to a negative interest rate.

It must be time for a change in investment fashions.

ACTUARIALLY-DRIVEN INVESTORS & FINANCIAL FADS

Summary: No matter how wild they get, financial markets don’t impose upon the calculation of mortality rates. Unfortunately, the ivory tower culture of actuarial work is vulnerable to the vast but recurring changes in fashions in stocks, bonds, real estate, and (shudder) now in commodities.

Recently, HSBC estimated that by the end of 2006 institutions will hold some US $100 billion in commodity indexes. This compares to US $10 billion held at the end of 2003 and very much less at the cyclical low for commodities in late 2002.

This is the first direct venture by such funds in history and marks a remarkable departure from “The Prudent Man Rule” into the fad de jour.

In the past, the clash between the aloof long term view and undeniable market forces has resulted in corporate damage.

Observations: In this article, the term actuarially-driven investors refers to insurance companies and almost anything related to pension funds. These, of course, include sponsors and pension fund managers, with the connecting theme being long term studies by actuaries on mortality rates as well as projected investment returns. Obviously, so- called federal government pension plans are not included as falling under a heading of electorally-driven promotions.

In contrast with a rapidly changing financial world (particularly with volatility exceeding that typical of previous new financial eras), mortality rates change at a glacial pace. Often this culture of a virtual constant state sets itself up as removed from the variable nature of investment markets. At other times, it locks on to investment fads.

It is one thing to be detached from shorter term fluctuations, but the pedestal of the “dignified long term perspective” has, in a number of cases, been isolated – particularly from the remarkable financial volatility typical of great asset inflations.

For example, at interest rate lows in the 1940s and 1950s, insurers were very comfortable with the fashion to favour fixed income investments over risky equities.

Regrettably, the unthinkable was building and that was soaring CPI inflation which, in the early 1960s, was considered a plague that could only happen in inferior countries. Looking back on it, the irony is exquisite. As bonds were being trashed, salvation was found in equities which, in turn, were soon trashed by soaring alternative investments in commodities or real estate, which eventually turned disappointing as well.

Some History: As with generals always fighting the last war, the complacency that seems to go with many large funds leaves them vulnerable to the inevitable major changes in investment fashions. Since the late 1600s, insurance companies have been the largest investors, but this review is limited to North American life insurers since the 1860s. One observation is that the financial violence found with our period of asset inflation occurred in two previous examples. Another is that the steadiness of mortality calculations may foster a complacency vulnerable to the extraordinary events that attend great asset inflations.

In the mid-1800s, some insurers in England had shown a long success of operating conservatively, providing full protection for their policyholders, with a return of 3% on their funds. In Canada and the U.S., this was about half the return from first class securities.

Businessmen in Canada, for example, saw the opportunity that, with a wider margin of safety, they could charge lower premiums and show a good return to shareholders.

The Sun Insurance Company of Montreal was incorporated in 1865 and initially the Board of Directors reviewed each policy applicant and investments. Disqualifying rules were complex and included sailing on ships crossing the Atlantic and travelling too far south into the U.S. Malaria and a variety of enteric diseases in the hotter climates were a real risk.

Of interest, the fine print also forbade payout on death due to suicide, dueling, or at the “hand of justice”.

Sun, which became a global giant, is a suitable representative of the industry. Actuarial review by a consultant was first engaged in 1876 and a full-time actuary was appointed in 1881.

The New Era That Ended In 1873: While our review is by no means thorough, the sampling is random as to which reports were readily available. For example, the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance company started in Sacramento had their operations reviewed in 1871 by an actuary from Boston. In 1873, one was hired who had the only calculating machine in the West.

This was an “Arithmometer of Sir Thomas de Colmar” and the company’s history describes it as a big brass machine that, in accomplishing astonishing feats, “its wizardry brought in many visitors”. Unfortunately, it required frequent trips to San Francisco for repairs by an expert watchmaker.

In the 1870s’ boom, the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company extrapolated confidence and took “long term” positions in higher yielding but lower grade securities. The “new era” climaxed with a bubble in 1873 and narrowing quality spreads reversed to widening in the consequent distress and collapse of liquidity. Chagrined, the investment committee discontinued the policy of trying to obtain high returns through risky investments. The 1873-1895 contraction was called “The Great Depression”, which became an enduring illustration of risk forcing prudent investing.

The New Era That Ended in 1929: The next new era developed in the 1920s and Sun became one of the great companies in the world. T.B. Macauly was both an actuary and a visionary who had, at the end of WWI in 1918, sensed the coming of a new era of industrialization. As history records, he didn’t understand the risks of the subsequent great financial boom. His way to participate was through equities, with selection the key, and no investments were to be made for early sale or making a quick profit. In the mid-1920s, Macauly wrote, “We are conservative in our selections and we retain our holdings indefinitely, regardless of market fluctuations.”. The rationalization was, “We have enlisted the brainiest and most experienced men on the continent to manage the investments.”. (This compares with the boasts from a hedgefund in March, 1998 that their staff included “a disproportionate number of the world’s leading computer scientists, system architects, and financial engineers”. The fund became insolvent in September, 1998.)

With the benefit of hindsight and the duress of the early 1930s, this policy came into question and was rejected.

But, in foresight, this was an impossible view as the 1920s progressed and Sun’s aggressive approach to equities was unique in North America and was matched by only a few life companies in England. In 1927, 55% of their investments were in various classes of corporate bonds and some 30% was in common shares which, at the top in 1929, amounted to 52% of the company’s assets. This was well appreciated by speculators as the stock soared from 560 in January 1927 to 4100 in September 1929. The low on the consequent debacle was 145.

Infatuation With Fixed Income At Secularly Low Interest Rates: A 1971 history of the company observed that if the wagon is hitched to the star it must follow the star. Sun’s business contracted with the bust and no dividends were paid for four years. In the mid- 1930s, management proudly announced that since 1931 they had exclusively invested in “fixed interest-bearing securities”.

This, of course, brings us around to the regard in the 1940s for fixed income that pushed long treasury yields down to less than 3% as concerns for risk in equities had investment- grade shares at a 6% dividend yield. Since the early 1700s, there have been six “new eras”. Typically at bear market lows, investment-grade stocks traded at a 6% dividend yield and with the enthusiasms at bull market tops at 3%. On the credit cycle, interest rates for senior government bonds typically traded around 3% at an economic trough and at the height of a boom near 6%. (Over 300 years, the 15% in 1980 was the exception.)

By the late 1960s, widespread concerns about another depression were dispelled by a wonderful bull market. As that one was peaking, the popular projection claimed there would be so much institutional money coming into the stock market that there would be a “shortage of equities”. Expanding earnings multiples and new issues were also featured.

Despite this allure, the policy at a large life company was that any investment that fluctuated in value had no value because the actuary could not match with any certainty the sanctified 30-year forecast of mortality rates. Investments, therefore, required fixed income. All bonds were held to maturity. Even if the issue was rated as junk, it qualified as an “in” investment while equities and real estate were “out”. In the early 1960s, equities were restricted to 15% of investment funds and undesirable real estate was kept at 1%.

Infatuation With Real Estate At Secularly High Interest Rates: The greatest bear market in history for bonds accelerated in the 1960s, making fixed income investments unpopular. As the rate of inflation was getting well beyond most coupons, actuarial assumptions suddenly forced direct investments in real estate. Pension funds bought a wide variety of properties at inflated prices.

Out of the speculative real estate collapse in the early 1980s, another great bull market for common shares started. With this, another cult of equities developed with actuaries eventually recommending a 60%+ weighting. Despite the collapse of radical speculation in techs, this has maintained. This compares with the aggressive 52% weighting by Sun Life in 1929.

Using the DJIA, equities didn’t break even until 1955. This, so to speak, is an actuarial life-time and, although there was little change in mortality rates, the investment culture had changed to minimize rather than celebrate equities.

More recently, equities are very much in fashion, real estate again has been wonderful, and confidence in the Fed’s ability to depreciate the dollar “forever” is so strong that former champions of fiduciary responsibility are speculating in commodities.

Recent changes in the yield curve and credit spreads are indicative of the financial stresses that accompany the culmination of any great boom. This review starts with the asset mania that blew out in 1873 when the leading New York newspaper editorialized that nothing could go wrong because, without a central bank on a gold standard, the Treasury Secretary had ample powers to prevent a contraction. It lasted from 1873 to 1895 and senior economists called it “The Great Depression” until as late as 1940.

However, as history has shown, institutional infatuation with a fashionable asset class provides a reliable indicator of a paradigm change.

For around 150 years and despite an august dedication to the long term, financial institutions have flocked to fashion and then suffered chagrin. This ranged from being overweight in bonds at a 3% yield in the 1940s to being overweight equities in the late 1960s when the S&P started a 66% decline in real terms.

If Sun Life, for example, suffered considerable remorse in being overweighted in stocks in 1929 at a 3% dividend yield, is a similar remorse possible with being overweight now at a 1.84% dividend yield?

Taking this line a little further, what is the potential for chagrin when positioned in commodities with no coupon, let alone dividend?

The history of the investment behaviour of financial institutions provides an answer.

BOB HOYE,

INSTITUTIONAL ADVISORS

E-MAIL bobhoye@institutionaladvisors.com

WEBSITE: www.institutionaladvisors.com 

Armstrong Canada Report – EXCLUSIVE OFFERS

Marty and his team have been kind enough to allow us to provide a MoneyTalks exclusive 25% discount on his recent Report on Canada and the video of Marty’s conversation with Michael from his Orlando Conference last November. Offer expires Sunday. ~ Ed

armstrong 2018 offer

The State of the Union – Markets

Global stock and bond markets: Watch out below!

I discussed over-priced markets here and here and here.

2017 was an outstanding year in many markets. 

  • DOW up 24.7%
  • NASDAQ 100 up 31% (Wow!)
  • Nikkei up 19%
  • DAX up 12%
  • Gold up 13.6%
  • Silver up 7.1%
  • XAU (gold mining stocks) Index up 8%
  • Dollar Index DOWN 10%

We can be certain of the following:

  • Death, Taxes and Politics.
  • When markets move too far and too fast in either direction, they correct.
  • Bubbles crash!

SO WHAT?

We live with the inevitability of death, and the predations of taxes and politics. Stock markets rise as the dollar inevitably devalues, and as investors become optimistic (higher P/E ratios). Stock prices fall when investors lose faith in the narrative that things are good, central banks are in control, this time is different… whatever. P/E ratios fall as investors lose confidence or earnings weaken.

Where are stock prices now?

Examine the 26 year chart of the DOW. 

  1. Prices accelerated into a near vertical (unsustainable) rise and corrected.
  2. The monthly and weekly RSI (Relative Strength—one of many timing indicators) reached all-time highs (over 116 years). The DOW moved too far and too fast, and then, as always, corrected.
  3. A high RSI (like late January 2018) shows high risk. It does NOT guarantee a turn down. Bubble markets often move from crazy (December 2017) to even more crazy (January 2018). And then they correct or crash!

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Examine the 26 year chart of the NASDAQ 100.

 

  1. Same as the DOW – a near vertical rise and up over 30% in 2017.
  2. RSI reached high risk and unsustainable levels.
  3. The NASDAQ (including Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Netflix and others) in January 2018 reminded me of 1999 when people were glued to CNBC watching their “internet stocks” rise to the sky. The consequences were ugly and the NASDAQ 100 fell 84%.

Examine the German DAX. This market is correcting. The peak was January 23. We shall see if central bankers can manufacture another rally, or not.

CONCLUSIONS AND ACTIONS:

Stock Indices have moved too far, too fast, were over-bought at the end of January and ready to correct. The daily peaks, so far, have been:

Bitcoin December 2017

DAX January 23, 2018

Nikkei January 23, 2018

DOW January 26, 2018

NASDAQ January 26, 2018

Action: Stock market risk is high while potential reward is low. Don’t expect the correction to finish soon. Expect wild volatility, up and down! Consider moving profits and capital into something with less risk and more safety. Silver, gold, platinum and cash come to mind.

What Others Think:

From the always brilliant John Hussman, Ph.D.: Three Delusions: Paper Wealth, a Booming Economy, and Bitcoin

“So even given the level of interest rates, we expect a market loss of about -65% to complete the current speculative market cycle.”

“At present, U.S. investors are under the delusion that the $37.3 trillion of paper wealth in their equity portfolios represents durable purchasing power. Unfortunately, as in 2000 and 2007, they are likely to observe an evaporation of this paper wealth. Nobody will ‘get’ that wealth. It will simply vanish.”

Note to readers: If you cash out paper wealth from overvalued stock markets (and bonds and Bitcoin) and place that capital into gold and preferably silver, the wealth and purchasing power will NOT vanish.

“Warren Buffett’s Favorite Indicator Just Flashed Warning”

Stock market capitalization ratio to GDP (Buffett Indicator – not shown) is too high. Price to sales ratio is at all-time highs. These indicate bubble valuations and high stock market risk.

From David Stockman in December 2017: Gold and Silver Only Safe Asset Left

“Stock prices are going to collapse big time when the underlying predicate of cheap debt, massive stock buybacks and M&A deals and everything else supporting the market today finally reverses. So, we are going to have deflation in the canyons of Wall Street, and that will not be a happy day.”

From Wolf Richter in late December 2017: Peak Good Times? Stock Market Risk Spikes to New High

“The growth in margin debt has far outpaced the growth of the S&P 500 Index in recent years. The chart below (by Advisor Perspectives) shows the percentage growth of margin debt and the S&P 500 index, both adjusted for inflation:

“In other words, the stock market is far more leveraged than it has ever been before.”

BONDS: They Move Opposite to Yields

Martin Armstrong in December 2017: We Are In the Biggest Bond Bubble In History

A declining or crashing bond market means much higher interest rates. After 35 years of declining yields, most people have no memory of higher rates.

From Armstrong: “Our computers are showing that interest rates are going to go up faster than anybody has ever seen in history.”

How long can central banks maintain near zero rates (U.S.) or negative rates (Europe)? Such craziness cannot continue forever without massive and destructive consequences.

Graham Summers sees “The Everything Bubble,” a breakout higher in the yields on 10 Year Notes, and higher consumer price inflation.

“When the Bond Bubble bursts, the EVERYTHING bubble follows.”

Bonds have risen in a bull market from the early 1980s until 2016. But yields are now rising from mid-2016 lows. However, other astute individuals believe yields must fall again, partially because over-indebted global governments will demand suppressed yields so they can spend less for interest expense. We’ll see.

With yields so low (negative in several European countries), how much lower can they go? Bonds look like a high risk and a minimal reward investment during 2018 for most investors. Consider moving capital out of the debt markets and into something real.

Ask Yourself:

How sensible is buying dodgy debt paper from insolvent governments – yielding peanuts – when those governments have assured you they will repay (if they do) with devalued currencies? Argentina sold 100 year bonds to “yield starved” investors. Insanity!

CONCLUSIONS:

Stock Markets: Prices and valuations, even after the losses from the past two weeks, are too high. John Hussman, Ph.D. expects a drop of 65% or more. Do your own due diligence, but consider moving capital to safer investments, such as silver bullion and coins.

Bonds: The 35 year bull market looks tired or dead. Yields are negative in much of Europe. Pension plans are increasingly insolvent (Look at CalPERS) thanks to central bank and government created low yields on dodgy debt. The bubble in sovereign debt could implode in 2018 with ugly consequences for currencies, bonds, economies, governments and central bankers. Gold and silver prices will rise.

Convert over-valued stocks, idle cash, devaluing currencies, corporate debt and dodgy sovereign debt to something real.

Gary Christenson

The Deviant Investor

Wild Trading To Kickoff February But This Will Be The Big Surprise For 2018

The following is from Andrew Adams at Raymond James:  S&P 500 Was 5 Standard Deviations Beneath the 10-Day Moving Average: One of the many signs of downside extremes this week was the fact that the S&P 500 was 5 standard deviations beneath its 10-day moving average, the most “oversold” it had been since August 2015. Hopefully, this is yet another sign that the worst is behind us.

S&P 500 5-Standard Deviations Below 10-Day Average!

KWN-Adams-III-272018

 

…..continue reading HERE

 

…..also from KingWorldNews:

Is inflation around the corner?

 

Bob Hoye: Climate Stats

Solar Minimum Continues

January’s Sunspot count came in at 6.7, which was down from December’s 8.2. The following chart includes the latest post and covers Solar Cycle 24.

The high was 145 in February 2014, which compares to the high of 238 in September 2003.

With the decline in solar activity, the number of Spotless days continues to grow. It’s the way it works. So far, this year there has been 17 days, or 52% for the year. In all of 2017, the number was 104 days or 28% and the year before it was 32 days or 9%. For 2015 the count was zero, as it essentially was back to 2010.

On the weather front (pun not intended), there has been a brief warming in the El Nino region, which shows in the next chart.

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The main thing is that on the longer-term, the El Nino and its warming influence is waning.

Sunspot Number 2009-2018

Cosmic Stuff

As solar activity diminishes the Earth’s magnetic field also diminishes. This lets more cosmic rays through, which prompts more clouds. This not only increases the probability of precipitation. By reflecting more of the sun’s energy to outer space it forces cooling.

This influence is beyond weather, it is climate and it is changing. The current part of the decline has yet to bring the average temperatures down. It will.

The chart below shows the steady rise in cosmic radiation as the sun’s activity declined. It begins in 2015 and the feature is the decrease in cosmic radiation with a strong, but brief solar outburst. So the concept works on the nearer-term.

The theory about cosmic ray influences is gaining widespread acceptance.

Stratospheric Radiation

The next chart is from the Danish Met and it shows the brief surge in the mean temperature. The current number is not down to the mean for this week. Thank heaven for small mercies. However, the restoration of the mean is now probable.

Danish Met: Arctic Mean Temp

Arctic Mean Temp
Source: Ice Age Today

Unusual Weather Reports

From the Northern Hemisphere:
“First Snow in 50 Years Paralyses Southern Morocco” – January 30.

Then from the Southern Hemisphere:
“Summer Blizzard in Tasmania” – January 31.

Wherever it occurs snow needs clouds and cool.

Northern Hemisphere Snow Content

Northern Hemisphere Snow Content

Part of the season was at the high-side of normal. Lately it is in the middle of normal.

This, of course, depends upon cold and precipitation. The following link to the Great Lakes Ice Cover shows a material increase for this season.

Readers are invited to contemplate the establishment’s insistence that expanding ice and snow cover is caused by Global Warming.

Have a Happy Groundhog Day.

Great Lakes Ice

Great Lakes Ice
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Global Temps: Satellite

Global Temps
Source: Dr. Roy Spencer

• Highlights Are the El Ninos of 1998 and 2016

Say NO to Gasoline


Link to January 26, 2018 Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.comhttps://www.howestreet.com/2018/01/26/equity-markets-have-taken-on-a-life-of-their-own/

Listen to the Bob Hoye Podcast every Friday afternoon at TalkDigitalNetwork.com