The
Rally Is Coming! The Rally Is Coming!
Always
buy too soon--- because no one will tell you either when the rally will start
or, more importantly, how long it will last. Of course those are the two things
you want to know, but all you really have to go on is the experience of the
past. This is not going to be a technical analysis of a series of numbers or
chart formations that have predictive capabilities. Instead, it is intended to
be a mild sedative to calm your collective fears and to allow for a relaxed
analysis of the corrections of the past. You have to prepare yourself for the
rally that is surely coming, and it may just arrive sooner than you think---
today, even.
Yesterday's
classic e-mail question wondered: "Is this ever going to end?" The
reference was to the eleven-month correction playing out concurrently in both
the investment grade value stock (IGVS) and the income securities markets---
the anxiety was cloaking the monitor screen in doom and gloom. Most of you
would be surprised at how frequently the current scenario has repeated itself
during the last 80 years. Quite typically, a new set of abuses has been
identified as the cause of the problem, and it is likely that a new set of
regulations will be enacted for monitoring by new legions of enforcers.
There
is more in those six little words (Is this ever going to end?) than meets the
eye, and too many investors share the misconceptions that lie beneath the
surface: The market has never and will never be a one way ticket to ride (smile
Beatles fans). None of the important aspects of the voyage (advances, declines,
speed, beginning, or end) are predictable, by anyone, no matter how overpaid or
well credentialed. It has become clear to me over thirty-five plus years
muddling through the investment exercise, that most of the mistakes are made by
people who over complicate the process. This is not at all rocket science. In
fact, the only science(s) that are at all helpful are economics and
management--- mostly management, since the market and economic cycle realities
are fairly clear.
Good
investment portfolio management, for example, would have you looking for
quality additions to your portfolio inventory for later sale at a reasonable
profit. Management includes the discipline, rules and procedures that are
necessary to create, implement, and control an investment plan. It requires an
understanding of what is going on, in and around the portfolio, so that you can
react rationally rather than emotionally. If you have been taking losses over
the past several months in investment grade securities, and/or if you have been
buying the currently more popular, but historically more speculative, fear
products of the moment, you are on the wrong track. The rally is coming on this
one!
In the simplest
of terms, stock market corrections are caused when there are more sellers in
the markets than buyers. Corrections in the income securities markets are
normally caused by changes in interest rate movement expectations. The duration of stock market corrections
will vary with the nature of the events that cause the correction in the first
place. There are six types of selling, but only two types of buying. What?
People buy stocks either to hold them for profit taking, donating, or
bequeathing in the distant future, or to trade them in a more businesslike
manner for profit taking ASAP. Securities are not purchased with the hope (or
knowledge) that the market values will diminish--- except in the case of
portfolio window dressing, where the institutional money managers really don't
care one way or the other.
Selling,
on the other hand, is a much more complicated decision, with six separate and
distinct motivations and an expectation of financial loss: (1) Loss taking on securities that have
fallen in market value because of the irrational fear that they will never be
able to recoup the losses quickly enough, if at all. Why speed is important
puzzles me, but analysis of a few charts of IGVS would quell such fears. With
regard to income securities, this fear of market value erosion is somehow
equated with loss of income--- a relationship that just doesn't exist. Fear
selling is generally more prevalent in inexperienced investors.
(2)
Window Dressing is normally a quarter or year-end phenomena where money
managers cull unpopular issues from portfolios to appear wiser to their
clients. But with most investors addicted to personal on-line portfolio access,
many individual managers have succumbed to client pressures and have begun to
look a lot like their institutional brethren. Wrap Account managers are likely
to use these strategies on a monthly basis as well. (3) Greed driven switching
from a weak stock or bond market to a hot new speculation is another form of
selling that peaks toward the end of corrections, as investor patience wears
thin. These sellers push whatever vehicle has had the best recent performance
even higher, helping to create the next bubble.
(4)
Pure profit taking is my favorite reason for selling, but a surprising number
of professional money managers hold on to their winners far too long, and
little of this type of selling takes place so deep into a correction. (5) Stop
loss profit taking in Mutual Funds and in individual securities produces a
significant number of sell transactions, and much of the liquidity produced
falls into the managers' wait-and-see, or market-timing, cash allocation.
(6)
Finally, and most importantly, there is the financial adventure of Short
Selling, in which speculators expect to make money from a continued decline in
a stock's market value. It is disturbing that the elimination of the up-tick
rule has allowed large-scale traders to sell securities they don't even own in
large enough quantities to wage war on target companies. This strategy involves
selling borrowed securities at the current price and then "covering"
the position with stock purchased at a lower price and pocketing the
difference.
So, the
various categories of sellers, regardless of their motivation, create large
pools of money, while the buyers accumulate larger and larger stock holdings.
Now the buyers, you'll recall, have no interest in selling their positions at a
loss. Sooner or later, some gutsy
financial gurus will declare the stock market oversold and full of bargains;
some of the brighter ones have already been talking about how cheap municipal
bond based securities have become. A few days of positive market numbers will
create some itchy-trigger-finger, short covering that will spiral the equity
markets into its next feeding frenzy, gobbling up even the memory of this
correction.
But the
markets cycle onward to newer highs, and to higher lows, with no right or
wrong, no good or bad--- just some simple truths, that experienced
decision-makers learn and thrive upon. No person ever became richer by selling
at a loss during a correction or by waiting for the market to achieve new high
ground to get new positions started. Always, yes always, buy too soon during
corrections.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockindex.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"
stock
market,rally,correction,short,profit taking,investment manager,mutual
funds,window dressing,
The
Rally Is Coming! The Rally Is Coming!
The
market has never and will never be a one way ticket to ride (smile Beatles
fans). None of the important aspects of the voyage (advances, declines, speed,
beginning, or end) are predictable, by anyone, no matter how overpaid or well
credentialed. Sooner or later, some gutsy financial gurus will declare the
stock market oversold and full of bargains.