How Do
You Spell Correction?
During
every correction, I encourage investors to avoid the destructive inertia that
results from trying to determine: "How low can we go?" and/or
"How long will this last?" Investors who add to their portfolios
during downturns invariably experience higher values during the next advance.
Yes, Virginia, just as certainly as there is a Santa Claus, there is another
market advance in our future. And despite a still much too high DJIA, we are in
the third month of a correction. (A fourth month if you own income securities.)
Corrections
are part of the normal "shock market" menu, and can be brought about
by either bad news or good news. (Yes, that's what I meant to say.) Investors
always over-analyze when prices become weak and lose their common sense when
prices are high, thus perpetuating the "buy high, sell low" Wall
Street line dance. Waiting for the perfect moment to jump into a falling market
is as foolish a strategy as taking losses on investment grade companies and holding
cash.
Repetition
is good for the brain's CPU, so forgive me for reinforcing what I've said in
the face of every correction since 1979... if you don't love corrections, you
really don't understand the financial markets. Don't be insulted, it seems as
though very few financial professionals want you to see it this way and, in
fact, Institutional Wall Street loves it when individual investors panic in the
face of uncertainty. Psstt, uncertainty is the regulation playing field for
investors, and hindsight isn't welcome in the stadium.
A
closer examination of the news that's fit to print (but isn't printed often
enough) should make you more confident about the years ahead, whatever your
politics. There is still plenty of good news, but neither the media nor the
presidential hopefuls pay much attention to it: (1) Employment, jobs, and
unemployment numbers are good. (2) Manufacturing numbers are strong. (3) The
inflation rate is historically low. (4) Interest rates are closer to historical
lows than to hysterical highs. (5) Durable goods orders are fine. (6) Corporate
earnings reports have been strong. (7) Corporate dividend payouts have not been
cut. (8) Our economy is still the biggest and strongest in the world, in spite
of government efforts to prevent that from continuing. (9) We are in our second
consecutive mild hurricane season, so far.
The bad
news isn't all that bad either, pretty much the same ole stuff: (1) There's
always been a war of some kind, particularly in the Middle East. (2) Energy
prices are high, but I still don't see any gas lines, or any new exploration or
refining capacity in North America. More than half the cars you see are SUV
gas-guzzlers. (3) Trade deficits, and
jobs leaving the country are really not news; they are the result of misguided
tax and tariff policies. (4) High
consumer debt. New? Not. (5) The terrorism threat has been a major serious
problem for the past how many years? We're trying to deal with it. (6) The
federal regulatory agencies probably do more damage to the economy than
everything else combined. (7) Social Security, the IRC, and health care are
still the major problems we face and ignore.
Clearly,
there are no new economic problems to be overly concerned about. And for now,
we simply have to deal with the opportunities at hand. Low, but increasing,
interest rates force fixed income prices down and yields up... Opportunity One!
Economic good news encourages higher rates to reduce inflationary pressures
causing equity prices to trend downward... Opportunity Two! These forces of
good are intersecting with the Market Cycle, something Wall Street tries to
ignore and the media constantly misunderstands. Markets move in both
directions, it's their thing, just like women changing their minds... Opportunities
One and Two, squared!
There
is an Investment Mindset Solution for the problems that most people have
dealing with corrections, and rallies too, for that matter. I've never
understood why "yard sale prices" here are so scary. Prices of high
quality securities always seem to bounce back eventually. And there need be no
rush for this to happen...
In
recent years, Wall Street and the media have turned the process of investing
into a competitive event of Olympic proportions and stature. What was once a
long term (a year is not long term), goal directed activity, has become a
series of monthly and quarterly sprints. The direction of the market isn't
nearly as important as the actions we take in anticipation of the next change
in direction. Performance evaluation needs to be rethunk (sic) in terms of
cycles!
The
problems, and the solutions, boil down to focus, understanding, and retraining.
You need to focus on the purposes of the securities in the portfolio. You need
to understand and accept the normal behavior of your securities in the face of
different environmental conditions. You need to overcome your obsession with
calendar period Market Value analysis, and embrace a more manageable asset
allocation approach that centers on your portfolio's Working Capital. You need
to elect new people who know how to connect the economic dots, and who remember
that "the business of America is business".
But for
now, relax and enjoy this correction. It's your invitation to the fun and games
of the next rally, when you will see that correction is spelled
o-p-p-o-r-t-u-n-i-t-y.
Note:
The 2nd Edition of "Brainwashing" is coming this fall.
Steve
Selengut
800-245-0494
http://www.sancoservices.com
Professional
Portfolio Management since 1979
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
correction,Investment,portfolio,Market
Value,Social Security,Investors,DJIA,Wall Street,strategy,financial
markets,economic problems,fixed income,Working Capital,rallies,Market
Cycle,stock market
How Do
You Spell Correction?
In
recent years, Wall Street and the media have turned the process of investing
into a competitive event of Olympic proportions and stature. What was once a
long term (a year is not long term), goal directed activity, has become a
series of monthly and quarterly sprints. The direction of the market isn't
nearly as important as the actions we take in anticipation of the next change
in direction.
The
problems, and the solutions, boil down to focus, understanding, and retraining.
But for now, relax and enjoy this correction. It's your invitation to the fun
and games of the next rally, when you will see that correction is spelled
o-p-p-o-r-t-u-n-i-t-y.