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Market Update: October 2014

It certainly was an interesting summer. From the Gaza strip through the Middle East and into the Ukraine, the global political landscape was rife with challenges and dilemmas. We look around the globe, and we see societies facing change on a scale that is unprecedented. While the financial ramifications are uncertain, we know that change is scary, and it is hard to predict who the clear winners will be, if there are any at all.

Against this backdrop, the financial markets have done… nothing. U.S. equities tried for a correction in early August, only to be stymied by reluctant buying two weeks later. Since then, the U.S. equity markets have progressed a couple of percentage points, but that gain has been tenuous as we saw last week.

The lack of strength across equities is notable. The large cap industrial index (Dow Industrials 30) has gained 4.6% this year against the S&P 500’s broader base with an 8.3% gain. [Note: The Dow has just 30 stocks in it and misses some key sectors that the S&P 500 represents with its 500 largest cap stocks.] But outside the U.S., the rest of the developed markets (namely Japan, The U.K., France, Switzerland and Germany) are flat for the year, kept out of the negative only by the dividends they generate. Their performance is anemic compared to the U.S. markets, and U.S. bonds have fared respectably at 4.0%.

Equities

As we have seen many times in the past, an extended bull market leads to some pretty odd behavior. Market bubbles, irrational exuberance, rising tides raising all boats: whatever you might be tempted to call these supposedly serendipitous trends, they have more to do with Fed policies than anything with financial fundamentals or dumb luck. We are seeing stock prices continue to climb in every situation, with individual companies getting valuations that induce acrophobia.

Amazon, one of the world’s largest online retailers, has yet to generate a consistent profit, but trades at a $150 billion valuation. On the other hand, Alibaba, which does generate a profit by selling just about everything online to everyone around the world, went public and pocketed $25 billion for its owners/investors; it now trades at 38-times the estimated earnings. Keep in mind that during the last equity bubble, Amazon hit a market capitalization high of $36 billion. Alibaba is now worth $220 billion.

The troubling aspect of the Alibaba IPO is the use of cash. When a company raises equity capital, such as with an IPO, it is generally expected that a large chunk of the new funds are used by the company while key investors are required to hold their stock for an extended period of time. This prevents the “pump and dump” incentive from those promoting the company to line their pockets at the expense of new investors. With Alibaba, up to half of the $25 billion that was raised in this IPO is going straight into the pocket of owners and past investors with no lockup period. The last time something this extreme happened during a bull market was the IPO of Blackstone. Back in 2007, they raised over $4.1 billion and the owners/investors were allowed to cash out immediately. That IPO coincided exactly with the top of the equity markets in 2007, and IPO investors have yet to see any gain on their investment after seven years.

But for all the crazy hype, the stock market has not gotten so out of hand that a correction would be as devastating as what we saw in 1999, when tech stocks lost 80% of their total value. As a reference point, the S&P500 is now trading at 18x earnings, which is notably above the historical average of 15x, but nothing close to the 30x that we saw in past bubbles.

October: image1

Chart 1. Year-to-date performance of three major indices without dividends (S&P500 in green, Dow in blue, and EAFE in orange) shows significant divergence and points to the sluggish nature of equity returns. Dividends are the only thing that keeps the EAFE (Europe, Asia and Far East developed) index positive.

This market rationality is seen in the way that individual sectors of the S&P have moved. Technology shares are doing well, but high-risk, nominal profit companies have fared poorly this year as investors shun the exuberant behavior of the past. In fact, the Russell 2000 (a small cap index) is down -4.4% for the year, as opposed to Healthcare being up 16.5% this year to date. These numbers are a far cry from 1999 and the dot-com bubble, when serious economists were predicting Dow 50,000].

Fixed Income

A big challenge we might face is the fixed income market. The “bubble” factors are fairly stark. The Fed has kept interest rates below historical norms for years now, with short-term rates near zero and 10-year rates barely above inflation. The inference is bleak if you invest in a safe, secure instrument now, you will lose out to inflation. Putting money away guarantees that you’ll lose purchasing power.

That dynamic has led to reduced bond rates across every bond class as investors chase returns, and inflated bond prices are a result. The hope is that the bond market is able to absorb any movement in interest rates without creating any significant disruption. The actual unwinding of the monetary stimulus by the Fed and a return to conventional interest rate structures could be far messier.

Another issue we face today is the changing bond market. Unlike stocks, which are relatively uniform (everyone knows what a share of Apple stock represents), bonds have thousands of different structures. The number of active CUSIPS (a unique identifier for each security) vastly differs between stocks and bonds: there are 18,000 active U.S. common stock CUSIPs, versus millions of active bond CUSIPs. To make the point even clearer, the total value of the top 500 stocks represents nearly 80% of public US companies. You would need tens of hundreds of bond issues to match that number in bonds.

Bonds trade in a very complicated manner as well. Unlike stocks, which have several electronic markets that are synchronized and relatively uniform, the bond market has fewer market makers with less inventory today, and trades are often completed with a phone call – how old-fashioned! With a total market cap that is significantly larger than the stock market, any sizable disruption to the bond market could result in mayhem. [On a side note: the departure last week of a key manager from PIMCO, the largest bond manager in the U.S., caused Treasury prices to drop. While he was an important figure in the building of PIMCO, it is disconcerting to think that one person in the private sector can influence the bond market that much.]

Because of such a disparate market, individual investors and advisors rarely use individual bonds in portfolios, and instead rely on mutual funds and exchange-traded funds. These funds need to reflect the market price of bonds each day, even if the bonds won’t sell for many years. As a result, public bond fund pricing can be far more volatile than the value of the underlying assets, which we have seen can lead to redemptions and selling into an already thin market. Such activity could make for the perfect storm for an asset devaluation.

There are many ways to mitigate these risks in individual portfolios (start by using individual bonds and sticking to known risks), but many institutions will be affected differently based on how they use bond investing. For those who are “hold-to-maturity,” it would take a major disruption in the economy, with significant bond defaults, to impair portfolio values.

Most institutional investors, however, do not have the luxury to look past current prices and plan for the long-term hold. They must mark their portfolios each day, reflecting “market” prices that are often grossly misaligned with asset value. The ramifications can be disastrous, as we saw in 2008, when the marks on mortgage products brought many institutions to failure. This is not a prediction of what is to come, but rather an outline of the concerns that are shaking the markets right now.

Economic Overview

The other factors we focus on have maintained a steady state these past three months. Labor force participation rates are still at historic lows, making unemployment numbers look quite good despite anemic job growth. While the number of people filing for unemployment continues to drop, the workforce itself remains at levels we haven’t seen in decades, harking back to the period when women began to enter the workforce. As I have emphasized for many quarters, the quality of our job growth is poor. The U.S. economy has not brought folks back into the workforce from the recession, and many of the jobs that we do create have relatively stagnant wages. The dynamic creates further strain on the divergent social classes in America, while slowing down economic growth.

October14 - image2

Chart 2. Workforce participation rates sit under 63% of the population, the lowest that is has been since women started to enter the workforce in historically large numbers. This trend undermines the notion that jobs growth in America is strong.

While slow, GDP growth in the U.S. does appears to be steady, in spite of the stalling economy we saw this past winter. The slow growth in Europe, combined with perceived weakness across the emerging market economies, has resulted in the U.S. looking like it is still the best place for equity investors. As I noted, the U.S. equity markets have substantially outperformed global markets, a trend that is interestingly based on this divergent economic picture.

The final piece of domestic activity that I closely monitor is real estate, which provided so many jobs in the last economic expansion. For good or bad, we are seeing slow but steady improvement in the housing sector, but not the sort of expansion necessary for stimulated economic growth. As an example, new home sales grew this summer to over 504,000 per year. This is a seemingly strong figure. That number, however, is less than half of where we were in 2005 when the real estate sector generated over 1,200,000 new single family home sales a year, even though our economy is 11% larger today. This might be good news, but we have a long way to go before the sector drives the economy forward.

Our view, whether looking at global politics, domestic wealth inequality, or equity market growth, is that we are facing a continued period of substantial change. The instability triggered by the global economic collapse in 2008 has not ended, and what we are experiencing right now is still based on extreme measures by central banks. When the global economy does eventually find its long-term footing, we will see a very different dynamic and balance of powers than we have ever seen. It is the change that creates panic, and so we at Vodia, focus our energies not only on the financial risks that are created by this change but the irrational market behavior it triggers.

All the best for an enjoyable fall.

Regards,

David B. Matias, CPA

Managing Principal

 

 

Market Update: July 2014

If you’ve seen the news over the past two weeks, you’ll have noticed there is much joy in the U.S. financial picture. The Dow has reached an all-time high of 17,000, unemployment dropped again in June to 6.1% after 280,000 new jobs were created, and fear levels, as measured by the various “fear indices,” are at lows that have not been seen more than once a decade. Stocks are up another 8% for this year, on top of last year’s meteoric rise, and bonds, which were assumed to be poised for a significant decline, are, in fact, up this year by 4%. There is no shortage of good news when it comes to investing.

The risks and realities, however, are very different. The U.S. economy actually contracted, for the first part of this year; long-term unemployment is still at levels never seen in the modern U.S. economy; and the level of global conflict has risen to a level not seen since the 1970s. Globally, sustained growth is still in doubt: Europe has still failed to extract itself from a recession and risks deflation, Asia is looking for that “soft landing” of slowing the asset bubbles without cratering the economy, and wealth inequality is beyond comprehension.

We are in fact, looking at a tale of two minds. One mind believes in the ability of stocks to rise in any situation; the other mind is on constant alert for the next set of bad news that could impact the global balance.

If we stick to home, and take a closer look at the U.S. economy, we can get a better picture of how the goods news we are used to seeing in asset prices is still ahead of the good news we need about overall economic recovery.

 

All major asset classes have shown similar growth in 2014 thus far, indicating a “risk-on” market mentality as investors seek returns through greater risk taking. While not matching last year’s performance in equities, the consistency of returns in unique.

All major asset classes have shown similar growth in 2014 thus far, indicating a “risk-on” market mentality as investors seek returns through greater risk taking. While not matching last year’s performance in equities, the consistency of returns in unique.

 

Markets – Equities

On the bright side, markets continue their rise after a rocky start to the year. Last year’s meteoric upswing in equities was quickly met with a harsh pause in January, as stock prices closed out that month down 6%. What could have been a further rout of markets was, it appears, a retesting of market levels and a chance for some to take risk off the table. With the market more than doubling since the lows of 2009, it is not unusual for an entire group of investors to take a breather and turn those gains into cash thereby protecting themselves again sudden declines.

By the end of Q1, the markets regained their equilibrium, and demonstrated a slight gain for the year. That gain of just a few percent was tenuous for the next few weeks until May and June, when equities reached new highs and are now posting 8% gains for the S&P 500.

Interestingly, in this rally, the gains have been in the larger valuation companies, not growth firms. Specifically, large and mid-cap value companies have gained 8% and 11% respectively, while small-caps are doing only a fraction of that at 2-4%. This difference reflects an interesting change from the dot-com rally of the 1990s – investors are looking for some substantiation of the company’s stock price, not just a whiff of promise that the firm might make enormous profits later. Although this is not a strict trend, it points to some sanity in the current rally.

Markets – Fixed Income

As opposed to stocks, whose rise was almost universally projected at the beginning of the year – albeit to varying degrees – bonds were supposed to fall. I did not read a single prediction that bonds would rise in 2014; naysayers pointed to the Fed’s reduction in quantitative easing and rising interest rates. Instead, rates have stayed level or gone down, with bonds up across the board.

While the average bond market return of 4% YTD (8% annualized) is impressive in any environment, the composition is even more interesting. High-yield bonds (non-investment grade corporates), have some of the lowest spreads to treasuries in recent history, posting a 5.5% gain for the year, while thirty-year U.S. treasuries posted a 14% gain this year. The compression of spreads on high-yield is an indicator of the continued economic recovery, amid predictions that corporate defaults will be extremely low. These phenomena are consistent with the complacency we have seen in the equity markets. The explanation I’ve heard on the treasuries is a little more complicated, but in short, there are simply not enough bonds to go around. Institutional investors, who need these risk-free bonds to hedge portfolios and meet investment mandates, demand them while the available supply dwindles.

All these dynamics are reflective of the accommodative monetary policies of our central bank, the Fed, as well as the global central banks. The Fed grew their balance sheet by $3.5 trillion from 2008 to today – all of that representing “new money” in the banking system. Around the globe, the figures are similar in size. From that new money, and the Fed’s use of it to purchase bonds in the market, we have seen rates down and prices up.

The downside of this stimulus is difficult to predict. The Fed will stop printing new money in the fall, as anticipated, yet we have not seen any of the market reaction that we might have expected. Notably, inflation has remained negligible. The fear four years ago was that inflation would run to extreme levels and hamper the recovery; now, we are now faced with the opposite problem. We need some inflation to stimulate consumption (encouraging buyers today, when things are less expensive), yet global developed markets have seen flat prices and the US inflation index is under 2%.

The immediate impact is on retirement planning. In effect, if you wish to invest your money risk- free for the next ten years, the spread between income and inflation is nearly zero. Your money, in terms of real dollars, will not grow. This can have a potentially devastating impact over the coming years as the economy returns to historical averages for these measures. Namely, some areas of price inflation hit ordinary people very hard – food prices, for example. In fact, food prices have risen steadily over the past few years with some basics, such as meats, seeing 15-20% annual price increases. Yet food is not counted in the inflation gauge (called non-core CPI), and hence we are left to feel the impact without acknowledging the problem.

Economy

The perverse dynamic of inflation is best understood in the context of the jobs market. As we continue to remind folks, the measure of jobs health used by the media is misleading. Unemployment does not reflect the jobs participation rate, ignoring those who have simply left the market. Instead, we look at total employment as a percent of the population, as you’ll see below. While the trend has been encouraging, it shows only marginal improvement from the end of the recession five years ago.

An equally disturbing trend is the long-term unemployed. As you can see from the chart below, those unemployed for 27 weeks or longer as a portion of the total unemployed population spiked to levels never seen before. And while the trend has brought that level down from 1-in-2 unemployed to 1-in-3, it is still well above historical levels.

 

Long-term unemployed (27 weeks or greater) as a percentage of total unemployed. We reached levels (45%) double the long-term average, and have not employed most of these workers in the recovery thus far. While the level has dropped to 33%, we still have an unprecedented problem.

Long-term unemployed (27 weeks or greater) as a percentage of total unemployed. We reached levels (45%) double the long-term average, and have not employed most of these workers in the recovery thus far. While the level has dropped to 33%, we still have an unprecedented problem.

 

The impact is devastating on the economy and on people. There has been a wave of forced retirees, folks who were at the prime of their career with vast experience and education who simply cannot find suitable work. This has also fed the inflation dynamic mentioned above – people are unwilling to switch jobs for fear of losing theirs. With fewer employed folks job-hunting, this puts a damper on wage increase and ultimately lowers the cost of labor for firms. Labor costs, being one of the major components of inflation, have helped to tamper inflation as measured by the government. Yet, while wages remain flat, basic costs such as food and fuel continue to rise, creating an impact on Americans’ daily lives.

As we look at the other aspects of the U.S. economy, the message is equally mixed. We are seeing a renaissance in energy, with U.S. reserves and production of natural gas and crude exceeding even the wildest estimates from just five years ago. Yet energy prices continue to climb as global conflict creates uncertainty and the cost of refining keeps prices high on gasoline and heating oil.

Another paradoxical phenomenon is general economic growth. Consumer confidence, the general measure of how likely people are going to spend, is back to its long-term average and touching levels not seen since the Great Recession began. Yet, GDP, the measure of production, and by inference, consumption, contracted in the first quarter by -2.9%, again the first time since the Great Recession ended. Although much of that contraction has been blamed on the bitter winter, it is still a reduction in the economy that requires a steep recovery.

 

GDP quarter-over-quarter annualized change from 2000-2014. While we have shown steady growth since 2009, Q1 saw a -3% decline. Q2 numbers, due out shortly, will test the assumption of a sustained economic recovery.

GDP quarter-over-quarter annualized change from 2000-2014. While we have shown steady growth since 2009, Q1 saw a -3% decline. Q2 numbers, due out shortly, will test the assumption of a sustained economic recovery.

 

Global Conflict and Perception

One of my earliest lessons learned as a student of international relations was the damning relationship between the economy and global conflict. As discussed in the Wall Street Journal (“An Arc of Instability Unseen Since the ‘70s,” July 14, 2014), we are facing the most challenging set of circumstances we have witnessed since the late 1970s and the height of the Cold War. There are two civil wars that have the potential to spill over into U.S. interests (Syria and Iraq); Afghanistan is facing an electoral crisis; Russia is promoting ethnic strife in Ukraine after invading Crimea; the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is heating up with little signs of easing. In short, we are seeing some of the worst conflicts of our generation peak at roughly the same time.

[Note: This article was being finalized as a Malaysian Airlines passenger jet was shot down over the Ukraine, emphasizing just how volatile these conflicts have become]

I am loathe to make any sort of political commentary, but each and every one of these conflicts has the potential to draw the U.S. back into an armed conflict, even during a time when the US has resoundingly shown little interest in engagement. This perception – that the U.S. will not engage to resolve conflict – has created the adverse effect of increasing the belligerence of rogue actors. It is a perverse situation that echoes through the history of nation-state politics: perceived weakness breeds conflict, while the threat of might promotes peace. The impact on our economy is unmistakable. Put succinctly, what happens abroad can destroy our recovery at home.

These conflicts are developing rapidly against a backdrop of pressing global issues that are damaging our ability to grow. From climate change and viral outbreaks to food scarcity, we are facing a growing global series of challenges that will require a coordinated and intelligent response. Yet the denial is palpable. For instance, rising sea levels have put major roads in Miami under water during regular tide surges, a trend that will continue to engulf the city in sea water in the coming years. Yet real estate prices continue to climb in the city, development is robust, and elected politicians continue to deny there is a problem.

The math is undeniable: the economy will suffer and our quality of life will be threatened. To combat the rising tides in South Beach, the city of Miami has already committed $1.4 billion to shoring up the roads. That is money spent to stem a problem, money that could have been better used to invest in a technology or build up our educational system. We are increasingly short sighted as a society as the world quite literally “heats up.”

As a parting thought, I offer this last chart, which shows the fear gauge on the S&P 500, a broad measure taken from the futures market that shows how stock traders view the short-term future. A lower number indicates a perception of calm and rising markets, a higher number indicates rocky or down markets. For reference, the index bottoms out at 10 during strong bull markets, and peaks at 80 during market calamities such as 2008, with an average level of 20. In the past two weeks, VIX has hovered between 10 and 12. Perception of financial risk, at this moment in time, is the lowest it has ever been. Are we putting our heads in the sand? And what will the consequences of our denial be?

 

VIX from 1990 to 2014. At only three times in the past 24 years has the VIX reached a low of 10 – a level that shows perception of financial risk is at its lowest possible. Once in 1993, another in early 2007, and today.

VIX from 1990 to 2014. At only three times in the past 24 years has the VIX reached a low of 10 – a level that shows perception of financial risk is at its lowest possible. Once in 1993, another in early 2007, and today.

 

As I am fond of saying, perception is reality. Today, the markets perceive low risk and rising assets ahead. That perception, however, will be fragile as broader issues take root in daily life. And as perception changes, so will the financial risks that we all face.

I want investors to be aware that although some things are stabilizing, we live in destabilizing times. It is this balancing act of perception against reality that drives our portfolio composition. We have seen that managed volatility in our portfolios, while capturing growth from a variety of asset classes and strategies, leads to stable returns over the long haul. Put another way, these portfolios are designed as an all-weather strategy, a welcome approach when the line between perception and reality becomes blurred.

Rest assured that we at Vodia are keeping abreast of current issues in order to keep our investors informed and our assets as protected as possible. We remain optimistic, and realistic.

It is our job to monitor the world and manage the portfolios. It is your job to enjoy the summer.

Regards,

David B. Matias, CPA
Managing Principal