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Everyone Is In The Pool. More Buyers Needed

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Everyone Is In The Pool. More Buyers Needed

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Everyone Is In The Pool

At the halfway point of January, the market has struggled to hold onto its gains. Such is surprising given the recent passage of a $900 billion stimulus bill and Biden’s proposal for another $1.9 trillion on Thursday. With another $2.8 trillion in stimulus hitting the economy, inducing the Fed to do more QE, markets were seemingly unimpressed.

For the first two weeks of January, the market is up by 0.32% YTD.

As we discussed recently in “There Is No Cash On The Sidelines,”  the markets are driven by buyers’ and sellers’ supply and demand.

In the current bull market advance, few people are willing to sell, so buyers must keep bidding up prices to attract a seller to make a transaction. As long as this remains the case, and exuberance exceeds logic, buyers will continue to pay higher prices to get into the positions they want to own.”

Such is also the definition of the “Greater Fool Theory:”

“The greater fool theory states that it is possible to make money by buying securities, whether or not they are overvalued, by selling them for a profit at a later date. This is because there will always be someone (i.e. a bigger or greater fool) who is willing to pay a higher price.”

The problem comes when buyers are no longer willing to pay a higher price. When sellers realize the change, there will be a rush to sell to a diminishing pool of buyers. Eventually, sellers begin to “panic sell” as buyers evaporate and prices plunge.

3-Risks In 2021

As we will discuss in a moment, there is ample evidence that “everyone is currently in the pool.”  Such leaves the market vulnerable to three risks we debated over the past week:

  1. More stimulus and direct checks into the economy lead to an inflationary spike that causes the Fed to discuss hiking rates and tapering QE.

  2. The current rise in interest rates continues over higher inflation concerns until it impacts a debt-laden economy causing the Fed to implement “yield curve control.” 

  3. The dollar, which has an enormous net-short position against it, reverses moves higher, pulling in foreign reserves, causing a short-squeeze on the dollar. 

The reality is that both a rise in the dollar, with higher yields, is likely to start attracting reserves from countries faced with economic weakness and negative-yielding debt. Such would quickly reverse the tailwinds that have supported the equity rally since March.

The following video covers the current market exuberance and the importance of the dollar.

The Problem With Monetary Policy

There is also the problem of monetary policy. As discussed in “Moral Hazard,” investors are chasing risk assets higher because they believe they have an insurance policy against losses, a.k.a. the Fed.

However, this brings us to the one question everyone should be asking:

“If the markets are rising because of expectations of improving economic conditions and earnings, then why are Central Banks pumping liquidity like crazy?”

Despite the best of intentions, Central Bank interventions, while boosting asset prices may seem like a good idea in the short-term, in the long-term has harmed economic growth. As such, it leads to the repetitive cycle of monetary policy.

  1. Using monetary policy to drag forward future consumption leaves an enormous void that must get continually refilled in the future.

  2. Monetary policy does not create self-sustaining economic growth and therefore requires ever-larger amounts of monetary policy to maintain the same activity level.

  3. The filling of the “gap” between fundamentals and reality leads to consumer contraction and, ultimately, a recession as economic activity recedes.

  4. Job losses rise, the wealth effect diminishes, and real wealth gets destroyed. 

  5. The middle class shrinks further.

  6. Central banks act to provide more liquidity to offset recessionary drag and restart economic growth by dragging forward future consumption. 

  7. Wash, Rinse, Repeat.

If you don’t believe me, here is the evidence.

The stock market has returned more than 164% since the 2007 peak, which is more than 3.8x the growth in corporate sales, and 7.5x more than GDP.

But, for the 10% of the population that owns 90% of the stock market, the sentiment is now getting extreme.

Sentiment Is Getting A Bit Extreme

While the video discusses some of the extremes currently developing in the market, none better shows this than our investor sentiment gauge. As explained previously, this gauge compiles several measures of investor “positioning” in the markets in terms of actual equity exposure. As shown, we are at levels that have historically had poor outcomes.

Of course, seeing that, you shouldn’t be surprised to see that retail investor confidence (dumb money) is near its highest levels on record.

The interesting thing about the market is that investors are rushing into equities in anticipation of an economic recovery. However, while there will indeed be a recovery, it is likely to fall far short of investor expectations. Such is generally the case. However, with “euphoria” now at mania levels, the only question is just how disappointed they will be?

As noted above, it is quite clear everyone is “now in the pool.” Such raises the question of:

“Who is left to buy?”

Technical Warning Signs

While sentiment measures are certainly worth considering, as the old axiom goes, “markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.” Therefore, from a portfolio management point of view, we want to focus on the technical signs, suggesting that starting to hedge against “risk” is likely prudent.

When markets are exuberantly bullish, along with investors believing there is “no risk” to investing, you see virtually every stock moving higher. We can view this specifically in looking at the number of stocks trading above their 200-dma. As noted by Sentimentrader:

Of course, to no surprise, the put/call ratio is back to a record that usually has preceded short-term corrections.

Such does not mean the market is about to crash, although such would not be unprecedented. The combination of these indicators does suggest that a correction between 5-10% is likely within the next couple of weeks.

What will cause that correction? Who knows. But such is why we have slowly started adding some “risk hedges” back into our portfolios this week. Profit-taking will come next.

A Heat Map Of Valuations

By Michael Lebowitz, CFA

We talk a lot about valuations and their importance, but such discussions can be hard to put into context. Therefore, I have produced a series of charts that visualize various valuations of the S&P 500 companies. Not surprisingly, such also corresponds to the current behavior of Wall Street analysts and investors. Instead of cluttering up the commentary space on RIAPro.Net (30-day Risk-Free Trial), we thought you would better appreciate the charts and can share them more easily in an article format.

The charts below are called heat maps. What we like about heat maps is their ability to show two data points in one easy to read format. The following maps show the S&P 500 components market cap and along with a second factor. The larger the company’s market cap is in relation to other companies in the sector, the larger the square. Each graph has a scale on the bottom right relating to the second factor. In the first graph (Price to Earnings), the brighter the red, the more overvalued a company is. Conversely, green is relatively cheaper. Companies are sorted by their sectors and sub-sectors.

The first three graphs are popular measures of valuation. The fourth graph shows that analyst recommendations, despite valuations, are pretty bullish. As shown in the fifth graph, investors are also overly bullish as there is a very low percentage of short positions in general. Lastly, the sixth graph shows this is not just domestic, but high valuations are occurring in many other countries.

1. Price to Earnings:

You have to look pretty hard to find stocks that are not wildly overvalued.

2. Price to Sales:

A ratio between 2-3 is considered somewhat normal, especially for well established mature companies.

3. Price to Book:

P/B is also typically in the lower single digits for mature companies.

4. Analyst Recommendations

You have to look pretty closely to find stocks that do not have buy recommendations.

5. Short Interest as a % of total float:

The continual grind higher has scared away almost all short sellers.

6. World Price to Earnings:

These are not as extreme as the U.S., but P/E ratios around the world are very high. Keep in mind that historical P/E ratios in most countries are lower than in the U.S. for several reasons. But importantly, P/E ratios are relative to the country that domiciles the company. Therefore, just because it may appear cheap relative to the U.S. does not necessarily mean it is a value.

No matter how you look at the markets, either from a technical or fundamental point of view, the long-term risk/reward is not favorable.

What eventually derails the bullish bias is unknown. However, what is certain is that when it occurs, given the more extreme levels of leverage combined with a lack of liquidity, the reversion will be swift.

During a bull market advance, investors always take on substantially more risk than they realize. Unfortunately, it is a painful lesson taught quickly and repeatedly throughout history.

Investor Resolutions

Here are my annual resolutions for the coming year to be a better investor and portfolio manager:

I will:

  • Do more of what is working and less of what isn’t. 

  • Remember that the “Trend Is My Friend.”

  • Be either bullish or bearish, but not “hoggish.” (Hogs get slaughtered)

  • Remember it is “Okay” to pay taxes.

  • Maximize profits by staging my buys, working my orders, and getting the best price.

  • Look to buy damaged opportunities, not damaged investments.

  • Diversify to control my risk.

  • Control my risk by always having pre-determined sell levels and stop-losses.

  • Do my homework. I will do my homework. I will do my homework.

  • Not allow panic to influence my buy/sell decisions.

  • Remember that “cash” is for winners.

  • Expect, but not fear, corrections.

  • Expect to be wrong, and I will correct errors quickly. 

  • Check “hope” at the door.

  • Be flexible.

  • Have the patience to allow my discipline and strategy to work.

  • Turn off the television, put down the newspaper, and focus on my analysis.

These are the same resolutions I attempt to follow every year. There is no shortcut to being a successful investor. There are only the basic rules, discipline, and focus that is required to succeed long-term.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 01/17/2021 – 10:20


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