Sometimes Mr. Market is depressed. Sometimes he is
euphoric. And sometimes he is just downright confused.
I’ve warned in the past December that most stocks
seemed to be a bit overvalued. Come
January 21, we saw a bit of a pullback. In fact, by February 3, we saw a drop
of nearly 6%, both in domestic and international stock prices.
Keep in mind that “markets” are made up of millions of
investors but these millions can be placed into five major groups: Speculators,
Institutional, Not Yet Retired Domestic Individuals, Retired Domestic
Individuals, and Non-US Individuals. Each of these groups reacted a bit
differently to the pullback.
All of the three groups of “Individuals” decided that
the pullback was just the beginning of something worse and many sold off—so much
that nearly $30 Billion was pulled out of equity mutual funds and ETF’s. To put
this into perspective, flows into equity mutual funds in 2013 totaled about
$130 Billion. So $30 Billion out in only
two weeks is a significant wave of selling.
Speculators, and Institutional Investors still
confident that a “Buy the Little Dip” program would be successful (As it was in
2013) decided that 6% was enough for a “buying opportunity” and markets have
recovered nearly half of the recent drop. Even bad economic news did not hold
them back. No matter what bad news they hear, they seem to excuse it away…… It’s the weather. Or, some parts of the
terrible employment report are good. If
it really is bad, then the Fed will step in and fix it. Since there are no
other alternatives for making money thru investing, they convince themselves
that the stock market must be on its way up. Keep in mind this is all “wishful
thinking” and quite dangerous.
The truth….nobody is quite sure what, in fact, the
near term future holds. The economy has been improving, but very slowly and
only with the most massive global monetary stimulus experiment ever attempted. And, the Fed is slowly unwinding that stimulus
with the “Taper”.
So who is right..the pessimistic individuals or the
optimistic risk taking hedge fund speculators and institutional investors? Only time will tell for sure, but if you are
part of the Retired Domestic Individuals Group, reasonable caution should be
the order of the day. Stay with a
conservative asset allocation. (Not too hot and not too cold) and be
particularly cautious with any excess cash. If the speculators are right, you may miss
some of the upside, but if they are wrong, you will have protected your nest
egg. Sometimes doing nothing is exactly the right thing to do.
Keep in mind that speculators will exit the markets
very quickly and “en masse” when they decide that “momentum” has turned to the
downside. The longer we go without a healthy 10% correction, the more likely it
will be larger than 10%. Remember the saying “Be fearful when others are greedy”.
Well not everybody is now greedy, but a significant number are. So perhaps the
appropriate saying for now is “Be careful when speculators are feeling greedy”.
It is hard to make money in these types of market conditions but history
teaches that it easy to lose money in times like these.
My best guess, markets will fluctuate and it is better
than 50/50% that we will see better buying opportunities sooner than later. Be patient and think long term---like 5 to 10
years out.
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