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Commentary:   January  2022

Dennis C. Butler, President
Centre Street Cambridge Corporation

Private Investment Counsel

See also:
General Index
    of all guest columns written by Dennis C. Butler, CFA                                                        

January  2022

K

EEP CALM and CARRY ON. The people who came up with that slogan over eighty years ago arguably faced a more insidious peril than mere investors did in early 2020 when the reality of the Covid pandemic dawned on the markets. Yet wartime Britons persevered and maintained their spirits. The same cannot be said of financial market participants recently, who reacted in panic, triggering the most rapid market collapse on record. Even today, after seeing the markets defy doomsayers to reach new highs, investors remain nervous, and have resorted to hedging strategies in record numbers to protect themselves against a feared market reversal. Had investors maintained their equanimity, and looked beyond the fears of the moment, they would undoubtedly be better off today, having avoided unfavorable selling and the anxiety of trying to second-guess the markets. This was the case in all market crises in the last century, at least in the U.S., but it could be argued that one day a crisis will come along which results in lasting misery and extinguishes capitalism as we know it. Anything is possible, but so far, the markets have always recovered from even the worst downturns.

                              

 Signs of the times: easy money and high animal spirits. Following a record year for tapping the markets in 2020, corporate entities of various kinds took out loans and sold stock and bonds to raise over $12 trillion in 2021, besting the prior period by seventeen percent. Established issuers did their share of fundraising, but it was the speculative sectors that made the difference in 2021. “Special Purpose Acquisition Companies” (i.e., “SPACS,” corporations that have no business, but hope to find one soon) found favor early in the year although they fizzled out by summertime. Initial stock offerings boomed, up twenty-four percent globally, and doubling in the U.S. to a new record. In addition, massive loans funded hot merger and acquisition activity. Such episodes of devil-may-care finance usually end poorly for the buyers, and already there are indications of potential weakness in poorly received IPOs; an index of the performance of the U.S. market for newly public companies was down eight percent at year-end. Likewise, an index of global bonds worth $68 trillion fell nearly five percent, the worst year in over two decades, as rising inflation and possible changes in central bank monetary policies led some to fear an end to the forty-year bull market in fixed-income instruments.

This turnaround from the situation in early 2020, when markets collapsed and economies ground to a halt in the face of the pandemic, is extraordinary — a turn of events that few could have imagined at the time. One statistic stands out: the U.S. stock market staged its fastest ever recovery from a big plunge. Following its 35% drop in March-April 2020 when the pandemic scare was getting underway, it took only five months to recoup the losses. By way of contrast, recovery from the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 took over four years for the S&P 500 and NASDAQ indexes, and the latter did not scale its dot-com bubble heights until late 2017. After the Great Crash of 1929, markets required twenty-five years to get back to pre-crash levels. In March-April 2020, commodities also saw incredible price volatility, but after crashing to sub-zero dollar levels, crude oil futures returned to pre-pandemic prices within a year and rose 55% in 2021, the biggest annual increase since 2009. As in many facets of modern life, the vicissitudes of finance happen at a much faster pace than ever experienced before.

Reflecting the exuberant demand for financial assets, prices for most rose strongly in 2021, building on their recovery from the initial pandemic shock nearly two years ago, and moving on to multiple records over the course of the year. The S&P 500 reached a record closing high on 70 occasions, the highest count since 1995. It should be noted, however, that much of the gain was attributable to a small number of issues, as broad swaths of the stock list remained below earlier highs. Nevertheless, for the third consecutive year the major U.S. equity indexes sported double-digit returns, rising 20% to 29%, depending on the index — remarkable results given the ongoing and increasing complexity of the Covid crisis. Fixed-income returns were modestly negative, but in fact they were the worst results in forty years after accounting for inflation. Even so, the poorest showing since Volcker was Fed Chair did not deter issuance in the face of relentless yield-seeking in all corners of the bond market.

It seems unlikely that 2022 will see yet another year of gains that are well in excess of long-term equity averages. Valuations are already very high by almost any standard, and rampant speculation in such areas as “meme” stocks and options would indicate that we are well along in the “greater fool” process. Yet the same could have been (and was) said of market conditions a year ago, and the markets rose strongly despite daunting challenges. Looking ahead, the potential roadblocks seem formidable — rising geopolitical tensions, inflation, and declining economic stimulus, to name a few. Much of the market risk depends on the extent to which these concerns are already “priced in” to stock valuations; we suspect that to a great extent they are. Then there is the “unknown unknowns.” The surprises in 2021 turned out to have been benign to markets. We will see what 2022 brings.

                               

Behind the almost one-way rise in stock markets since March 2020 has been an avalanche of money from “retail” investors, or individuals. At least to some extent, this was fueled by government stimulus programs. Success breeds success, and those riding an upward-sloping curve can and do win big, attracting the attention of others who have money burning a hole in their pockets, and there is a lot of money in those pockets nowadays. In early December the Financial Times reported that cash inflows into retail-facing funds had reached a record. Other reports showed that stock funds had taken in more cash in 2021 than in the last nineteen years combined. In addition to using available cash, borrowing on margin has also been popular, sending margin debt to near peaks. A significant amount of the torrent of cash has been facilitated by new technology, including mobile telephone trading apps intended to “democratize” share trading. We weren’t aware than buying stocks is undemocratic (it’s called “free enterprise,” after all), but we’ll concede this point to the trader bros, as long as they don’t democratize gains and “socialize” losses, a game we have seen practiced far too often by the entrenched hierarchy they supposedly aim to unseat. When the slope of the curve turns negative, we’ll see how strongly these “democratic principles” are held.

Public interest in markets has not been confined to the U.S.; it has become a global pasttime. Retail trading in China has been popular for years, but in India — China’s neighbor and sometimes rival — participation by small players (some with only a few hundred dollars equivalent) has recently soared. As reported by the Financial Times in an article entitled “Millions of Indians join pandemic-fueled rush into retail investing,” nearly twenty million Indian “investors” have registered with the national stock exchange, where retail trading now accounts for forty-five percent of share volume. As in the U.S., technology has fueled the increase by making markets easily accessible to anyone with a smart phone. And as often happens in these frenzies (in the beginning, at least), some novices make more money from trading than they do at their jobs, enticing friends who hope to do the same.

The interest in stocks is not confined to retail punters; professional investors are also keen participants. Here the fear of missing out (“FOMO”) on future gains takes on a different character. As we have often noted in the past, institutional investors are motivated by competitive pressures, most notably the aim to “outperform” other funds and benchmarks. To be fair, their position is often complicated by poorly-timed inflows of customer money, usually after markets have already risen appreciably and investment opportunities have withered as a result. Still, institutional imperatives require that all money be “put to work” — investment principles be damned. This, too, is a worldwide phenomenon. In addition to the onslaught of retail investors, Indian investment funds have also grown strongly — up sixty-eight percent in the past year — providing an additional boost to stock prices.

As is often the case, this sort of financial folly will likely end badly for those caught up in the tail end of the speculative rush. Professional investors should know better. Retail enthusiasts for the “democratization” of investing may discover the downside of “participatory democracy” when it comes to financial markets.

                               

Finally, the fourth quarter of 2021 marked the twentieth anniversary of the collapse of Enron, an event that was little noted, perhaps due to the press of current concerns. The infamous Texas energy company, felled by management deceit and shady accounting practices, took down a big accounting firm and left the investment community nursing wounds. There are few better examples of poor business and bad investment behavior and judgement; thus, the name “Enron” has become synonymous with crooked corporate practices.

Investors who bothered to study the freely available public information about Enron in its heyday could discover that there was “no there there;” the business produced little in the way of real cash flow. Nevertheless, investment funds were heavily committed to its shares. This was due to the fact that only months prior to its demise, Enron was one of the most valuable public companies in the investment universe, figuring prominently in the stock indexes; failing to own the stock, therefore, entailed a risk of negative “performance” relative to an index. In the end, by ignoring investment facts and principles, many investors suffered poor absolute performance instead.

Enron is a lesson that serious investors should take to heart; it is particularly relevant today, when, once again, a relatively small number of very large companies dominate a very expensive stock market, thus skewing the indexes. Dealing with weak relative results can be embarrassing and difficult to explain, but suffering absolute losses is painful, made more so when the evidence for avoiding them is readily at hand for those who take the trouble to look.

___________________________

Dennis C. Butler, CFA, is president of Centre Street Cambridge Corporation, investment counsel. He has been a practitioner in the investment field for over 37 years and has been published in Barron’s. He holds an MBA from Wharton and a BA in History from Brown University. His quarterly newsletter can be found at <www.businessforum.com/cscc.html>.

Current low valuations reward the long-term view”, an article by Dennis Butler, appears in the May 7, 2009 issue of the Financial Times (page 28).   “Intelligent Individual Investor”, an article by Dennis Butler, appears in the December 2, 2008 issue of NYSSA News, a magazine published by the New Yorks Society of Security Analsysts, Inc. “Benjamin Graham in Perspective”, an article by Dennis Butler, appears in the Summer 2006 issue of Financial History, a magazine published by the Museum of American Finance in New York City. To correspond with him directly and /or to obtain a reprint of his featured articles, “Gold Coffin?” in Barron’s (March 23, 1998, Volume LXXVIII, No. 12, page 62) or “What Speculation?” in Barron’s (September 15, 1997, Volume LXXVII, No. 37, page 58), he may be contacted at:

Dennis C. Butler
President
Centre Street Cambridge Corporation
Post Office Box 390085
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Telephone: 617.441.9695

Email: [email protected]
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