Bubbles Everywhere…

Via AdventuresInCapitalism.com,

About a year ago, I read The Great Beanie Baby Bubble by Zac Bissonnette.

It details how basic human greed, an artificial sense of scarcity and newly created technology like eBay, were used to artificially inflate re-sale prices and convince otherwise intelligent humans to sink their life savings into plush toys that were being created by the millions at a price-point measured in the pennies.

In fact, it isn’t all that dissimilar to the current bubble in crypto-currencies—another asset class with; thin trading volume setting the market price and new technology that enraptures investors, that is likely to prove entirely worthless at some point in the not too distant future.

It would seem that every time the Federal Reserve reduces interest rates for too long in order to bail out some past bubble they created, it leads to some new and bigger bubble that also needs bailing out (tech stocks in 2000, real estate in 2007, everything this cycle) along with some hilariously silly collateral bubbles along the way.

With that in mind, last week, I was at a flea market (yeah, I’m a value guy who likes bargains) when I noticed multiple tables with Beanie Babies. I thought to myself; that’s strange—I haven’t seen one of these things in years. Why are all these adults paying so much attention to stuffed toys that were popular 20 years ago?

Naturally, I turned to my wife, who happened to be buying a few Beanie Babies for some cousin of ours.

Me: Why are you wasting money on those? Wait, …did you just buy like 10 of them?

Wife: Yeah, our cousin collects them. He says he has one that’s gone up 5 times in value, in just the past 3 months?

Me: Whaaahh??!!!

Vendor: Yeah. They’ve been out of print for two decades, even some of the real common ones are quite rare now.

Me: Whaaahh!!??? (practically with smoke shooting from my ears)

Vendor: Yeah, a few have gone from $5 to over $1500 in just the past 2 years.

Me: Holy Shit!!! That’s INCREEEEDIBLE!!! The Fed printed so much, they even managed to re-inflate the great Beanie Baby bubble of 1998 (at this point I’ve gone from abject shock to bemused laughter)

Wife: Maybe I should buy some more for our cousin. Sounds like they’re going up fast.

Me: …I’m going to get a beer. My head hurts

 

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2FpwSwA Tyler Durden

“What Might The Market Do Next?” A Bullish Marko Kolanovic Answers

The past month has been mixed for JPM’s head quant, Marko Kolanovic.

On one hand, just days before the Feb 5 quant puke, he published a report,  predicting that the late January selloff would not lead to widespread systematic liquidations. A few days later, on “Volocaust Monday”, that’s precisely what happened and to a never before seen extent.

Then, in keeping up with his recent cheerful outlook, shortly after the selloff, Kolanovic doubled down, and said that after the initial deleveraging of quants, vol-sellers, CTA and risk parities, the forced selling is now over and it was safe to buy the dip. Here, his call has been far more accurate, as almost nothing is left of the early February 10% correction following a barrage of BTFDers.

In fact, the speed of the rebound appears to have surprised Kolanovic himself, and in his latest note, published moments ago, he writes that the subsequent one-week rally was very fast (~99th percentile one-week up move vs. S&P 500 trading history).

As such, “the question is: What might the market do next?

To answer this question, Kolanovic first looks at his favorite indicator, capital flows, and specifically “the positioning of investors and expected flows”, especially among the systematic, vol-targeting funds.

First, we note that the Hedge Fund beta to equities experienced an unprecedented drop over the market sell-off (Figure 1).  This de-risking (and in some cases shorting) happened largely via buying of downside options (and selling of index products) and might not be entirely captured by prime brokerage data. For instance, open interest on index put options rose by ~$500bn shortly after the sell-off. Hedge funds went from a near-record-high equity beta, to a near-record-low equity beta.

This move started to revert last week, but has plenty of room to increase (table in Figure 1). In terms of systematic selling, this is largely over. In fact our models show that volatility targeting strategies may now start very slowly rebuilding their equity positions.

Then there is the potential bid from pension funds, whose rebalancing at the end of the month could make for a rare buying imbalance, something we discussed two weeks ago in “An Unexpected Consequence Of Last Week’s Selloff

One should also keep in mind that most pension funds rebalanced at the end of January, and global markets are now ~5% lower from that point (~90th percentile by size of the drop). Next week is month-end, and buying from fixed weight allocators could be substantial. These flows will be a headwind for any near-term bearish thesis.

In other words, from a client positioning and flows standpoint, it’s smooth sailing ahead according to the JPM quant. What about any near-term bearish thesis? Kolanovic is quick to dispense with these too:

We have, for instance, heard theories that the market ‘needs to re-test’ the bottom quickly. This seems to be a somewhat arbitrary argument with no significant structural or statistical evidence to support it.

The JPM quant then goes on to point to the record bearish positioning in the rates complex, warning that if anything, we could have a vicious squeeze, which would send yields much lower, unleashing even more buying:

A second thesis is based on fear of rapidly rising yields and inflation. While we think that inflation and yield fears are overblown near term, this is more difficult to disprove. We would like to point to the record speculative bond futures shorts from both fundamental and systematic investors. Figure 2 shows that speculators have amassed the largest short position in the history of bond futures trading. When there is such a large short position, there is always risk of profit taking, or worse a proper short-squeeze.

Looking at the longer-turn, Kolanovic points out that the biggest threat remains one of deflation, not inflation, based on the three D: demographics, debt and disruption.

We also note extreme sentiment swings and the media playing into fears of inflation, while largely ignoring important points such as those most recently voiced by the Fed’s Harker and Bullard. Inflation discussions have recently centered around ‘linear extrapolation’ of inherently noisy data points, and focus on ‘old news’ (e.g., the nearly month-old Fed minutes yesterday). There is no mention of structural deflation via demographics or technology/AI.

Having dispatched with the bearish bogeyman – assuming of course that yesterday’s market reaction to the non-Goldilocks Fed was wrong and the selling won’t return later today – Kolanovic goes on a tangential to comment on short volatility strategies which have been all over the news lately:

Selling of equity index risk premia (via implied correlation, volatility, skew, etc.) is a strategy that underwrites insurance on an inherently risky asset. These strategies are well documented (over 3 decades) and have strong theoretical justification. The risk-reward profile of these strategies is highly ‘non-Gaussian,’ and there is a trade-off between the typically high Sharpe ratio but also high downside tail risk. Over time, and when properly risk-managed, these strategies work well (equally well as underwriting insurance, e.g., for natural disasters). Fires, hurricanes, and market sell-offs do happen, and this is a normal part of an insurance strategy cycle.

Of course one needs to understand the risk/reward, and manage exposure and tail risk. This is where some investors or products might have miscalculated and suffered large losses. If one is collecting a 20% or 30% premium (return) per month, one should suspect that there is a significant risk for the loss of entire principal (e.g., similar as with credit – which is another form of insurance). We pointed to this in our previous reports and it was covered in press extensively before the recent events.

However, history shows that insurance strategies tend to work better in the aftermath of ‘disasters,’ when the level of premia is elevated, there is less market participation and leverage, and the probability of another tail event might be lower.

In other words, assuming stocks will keep rising, just don’t sell vol to hedge. Which, of course, is precisely what investors are doing…

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2Fn2ouX Tyler Durden

WTI/RBOB Jump After DOE Confirms Surprise Crude Draw, Production Slows

Following last night’s surprise crude draw (from API), and USD weakness, WTI/RBOB rallied overnight, but faded into the DOE data. However, as DOE confirmed API’s reported surprise crude draw (-1.616mm) and production slipped very modestly, prices jumped.

API

  • Crude -907k (+2.9mm exp)

  • Cushing -2.644mm

  • Gasoline +1.644mm

  • Distillates -3.563mm

 

DOE

  • Crude -1.616mm (+2.35mm exp)

  • Cushing -2.664mm

  • Gasoline +261k (+742k exp)

  • Distillates -2.422mm (-1.1mm exp)

In quite a shocking moment – it seems API was right for once – DOE reports a 1.6mm crude draw – and RBOB prices are up as Gasoline saw a smaller than expected build.

As Bloomberg notes, Cushing is being emptied at a very, very, very fast pace. It’s the 9th consecutive week of crude draws, bringing the total to its lowest since December 2014.

Bloomberg’s Javier Blas notes that U.S. oil exports surged last week above the key 2 million barrels a day mark for the second time ever, contributing hugely to the draw in crude stocks.

Once again all eyes are on US crude production (after yet another week of rig count increases) as it tops Saudi Arabia and closes in on Russia’s output, spoiling the OPEC-Deal party. But, US crude production slowed last week… if you squint, you can see it dropped 1k b/d…

NOTE – Lower 48 production rose 10k b/day to a new record…

 

WTI/RBOB bounced notably higher overnight (weak USD and API-reported draw) but faded into the DOE data. However, the confirmation of a crude draw (and smaller than expected gasoline build) sent both WTI/RBOB back to the highs…

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2FnQWzu Tyler Durden

Florida Teachers Demand State Pension Funds Sell Gunmaker Shares

Two days ago, while going through the holdings of the Florida teachers pension fund which amount to over $37 billion, Bloomberg found a surprising entry: 41,129 shares in American Outdoor Brands (valued at a meager $528,000, including $306,000 in unrealized profits) according to a Dec. 31 securities filing  listing the plan’s holdings. The company, formerly known as Smith & Wesson, is the market of the semiautomatic AR-15 assault rifle that was used in the Valentine’s Day shooting on the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

In addition to American Outdoors, the filing also showed that the Florida Retirement System Pension Plan also invested in gun company stock issued by Sturm & Ruger, Vista Outdoor and Olin Corp. All of these companies manufacture firearms or ammunition, including assault rifles.

Following the Tuesday news, we said that “we expect that these holdings will be liquidated promptly in the aftermath of the highly politicized shooting, and that the anticipation of said liquidation is why AOBC tumbled 5% today.”

The case study for this was already present:

“after the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Connecticut, in which 26 elementary school students and teachers were gunned down, CalSTRS and the California Public Employees’ Retirement System sold off their stakes in both Sturm Ruger and Smith & Wesson.”

And, we predicted, “the same will take place over the coming days as the political scandal over the Parkland shooting peaks, and numerous pension systems seek to put pressure on gunmakers by dumping their stock.”

It didn’t take long to get validation, because according to Bloomberg, the Florida Education Association is urging the state body that manages pension funds for its members to sell its holdings in companies that make a semi-automatic rifle used in the recent massacre at a high school in Parkland, Florida.

“Surely there are better places for the state to invest its public employee retirement money than in companies that make products that harm our children,” said Joanne McCall, president of the association.

And now that one teachers retirement fund has officially demanded the liquidation of AOBC shares, we fully anticipated they all will, especially since the rest of the portfolio has generated such outsized gains in recent years.

Meanwhile, the impact on American Outdoors stock was immediate, and after spiking at the open by 9%, AOBC is almost back to unchanged.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2sNwhBV Tyler Durden

After Releasing Oil-Backed Petro, Venezuelan President Hints At Gold-Backed ‘Petro Oro’

Authored by Molly Jane Zuckerman via CoinTelegraph.com,

After the ‘successful’ launch of the Venezuelan government-backed cryptocurrency the Petro on Feb. 20, President Nicolas Maduro has already hinted at second government cryptocurrency soon to be released, according to government-sponsored news outlet TelSsur.

image courtesy of CoinTelegraph

This time, the government-backed cryptocurrency will be backed not by oil, but by gold.

image courtesy of CoinTelegraph

During a Patria Para Todos [Fatherland For All] party event at the National Theater in Caracas, Maduro announced,

“The petro is a cryptocurrency unique in the world that is supported by oil, and I have a surprise that I will launch next week, the Petro Oro [gold], backed by gold, even more powerful.”

Since the petro’s Initial Coin Offering (ICO) opened on Feb. 20, $735 mln has allegedly been raised, according to Maduro’s Twitter. No official numbers for the ICO had been released by press time.

Some Venezuelans on Twitter have used the hashtag, “#AlFuturoConElPetro,” [the future with the petro], to support the release of the coin. User José David Cabello R wrote,

“#AlFuturoConElPetro against any meddling, against the economic war, against the blockade. For the peace and Venezuela.”

Before the launch, foreign investors from Brazil, Poland, Denmark, Honduras, and Norway had reportedly said they were open to receiving the petro, which is backed by one barrel of oil per coin, for goods and services.

Venezuela is currently facing hyperinflation of more than 4,000 percent in the last year, with the national currency, the Bolivar, having lost around 96 percent of its value.

The president’s decision to launch a cryptocurrency was at odds with the views of the country’s opposition-backed parliament on crypto, which declared the petro an illegal currency on Jan. 9.

Critics in parliament see the petro as a way for Maduro to avoid the financial sanctions imposed by the West on Venezuela.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2EUXjMP Tyler Durden

Ivanka Trump Will Be “Face To Face” With North Korean General During Winter Games Closing Ceremony

North Korea reportedly canceled a meeting with Vice President Mike Pence set for Saturday Feb. 10, the day after the opening ceremony of the PyeongChang Winter Games, but, now that tensions have had some time to ease, is the US planning a clandestine meeting at Sunday’s closing ceremonies?

It’s certainly beginning to look that way.

As the Wall Street Journal reports, senior Trump adviser (and America’s surrogate first lady) Ivanka Trump will attend the closing ceremonies, raising the possibility that she might “accidentally bump into” a high-level North Korean delegation led by Kim Yong Chol, a vice chairman of the Central Committee of North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party and one of the country’s most powerful generals.

Kim Yong Chol, vice chairman of the Central Committee of North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party, will arrive in the South on Sunday for a three-day stay, South Korea’s Ministry of Unification said Thursday. The Seoul government said that it approved the visit to further its goals of improving inter-Korean relations and pursuing denuclearization.

The notification by the North came hours after the White House announced a high-level delegation that includes Ms. Trump, the daughter of President Donald Trump, and Sarah Sanders, the White House press secretary.

Pence was famously caught on camera steadfastly ignoring the North Korean delegation seated right behind him at the Opening Ceremonies – but was planning the whole while to meet up behind the scenes, reportedly to “deliver the administration’s tough stance in person.”

As WSJ explains, Kim Yong Chol, who isn’t related to the North Korean leader, is widely believed to be the leader of Pyongyang’s military-intelligence apparatus. The Seoul government said Kim will be accompanied by Ri Son Gwon, who’s responsible for managing relations with the South, and represented the North when the two Koreas met last month at the demilitarized zone dividing the Korean Peninsula. The two men will be accompanied by a six-man support staff.

Ivanka

Ivanka Trump will be accompanied by James Risch, R-Idaho, and also by White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who will give particular support to the female athletes competing at the Games, according to RT. US Army National Guard soldier and Olympic medal-winning bobsledder Shauna Rohbock will also join the delegation.

“Sarah’s going as a female to help cheer on all of the female athletes and highlight the women’s sports and success our female athletes have had at this year’s Olympic Games,” a White House official said.

“I am honored to lead the US delegation to the closing ceremonies of the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics,” Ivanka Trump said.

“We look forward to congratulating Team USA and celebrating all that our athletes have achieved. Their talent, drive, grit and spirit embodies American excellence, and inspire us all.”

The delegation’s primary goal is to reaffirm America’s cooperation with South Korea over denuclearizing the peninsula, while highlighting American athletes’ achievements at the 2018 Games.

* * *
In a separate report that, in our opinion, raises the likelihood of a North Korea meeting, Ivanka Trump will reportedly meet with South Korean leader Moon Jae-in on Friday.

According to Reuters, a senior administration official, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity, said Trump will dine with Moon at the Blue House in Seoul on Friday night.

The White House insisted Trump has no plans to meet with the North Koreans – but we’ve heard that excuse before. In an amusing twist, Trump will fly commercial to South Korea, a gesture of good faith after no fewer than five administration officials have already been investigated for travel-related abuses.

There are no plans for Trump to engage in “substantive discussions”  about the dispute with North Korea.

“The purpose of the trip is to cheer on American athletes, reaffirm the U.S.-South Korea alliance and celebrate the successful Games,” a White House official said.

 

 

 

 

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2sIqMEG Tyler Durden

Spot The Sentence That Dooms Pension Funds (Don’t Worry, We Highlighted It)

Authored by John Rubino via DollarCollapse.com,

The “pension crisis” is one of those things – like electric cars and nuclear fusion – that’s definitely coming but never seems to actually arrive.

However, for pension funds the reason a crisis hasn’t yet happened is also the reason that it will happen, and soon:
 

The Risk Pension Funds Can’t Escape

(Wall Street Journal) – Public pension funds that lost hundreds of billions during the last financial crisis still face significant risk from one basic investment: stocks.

That vulnerability came into focus earlier this month as markets descended into correction territory for the first time since February 2016. The California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the largest public pension fund in the U.S., lost $18.5 billion in value over a 10-day trading period ended Feb. 9, according to figures provided by the system.

The sudden drop represented 5% of total assets held by the pension fund, which had roughly half of its portfolio in equities as of late 2017. It gained back $8.1 billion through last Friday as markets recovered.

“It looks like 2018 is likely to be more turbulent than what we have experienced the last couple of years,” the fund’s chief investment officer, Ted Eliopoulos, told his board last Monday at a public meeting.

Retirement systems that manage money for firefighters, police officers, teachers and other public workers are increasingly reliant on stocks for returns as the bull market nears its ninth year. By the end of 2017, equities had surged to an average 53.6% of public pension portfolios from 50.3% one year earlier, according to figures released earlier this month by the Wilshire Trust Universe Comparison Service.

Those average holdings were the highest on a percentage basis since 2010, according to the Wilshire Trust Universe Comparison Service data, and near the 54.6% average these funds held at the end of 2007.

One reason public pensions are so willing to bet on stocks is because of aggressive investment targets designed to fulfill mounting obligations to millions of government workers. The goal of most pension funds is to pay for those future benefits by earning 7% to 8% a year.

“Equities always take up a disproportionate share of the risk budget that any plan has,” said Wilshire Consulting President Andrew Junkin, who advises public pension funds. “You can never get away from it.”

That stance paid off during 2017’s market rally as public pensions had one of their best years of the past decade. They earned 12.4% in the 2017 fiscal year ended June 30, according to Wilshire Trust Universe Comparison Service.

But the risks are sizable losses during market downturns, which then can lead to deeper funding problems. The two largest public pensions in the U.S.—California Public Employees’ Retirement System, known by its abbreviation Calpers, and the California State Teachers’ Retirement System—lost nearly $100 billion in value during the fiscal year ended June 30, 2009. Nearly a decade later, neither fund has enough assets on hand to meet all future obligations to their workers and retirees.

Many funds burned by the 2008-2009 downturn tried to diversify their investment mix. They lowered their holdings of bonds as interest rates dropped and turned to real estate, commodities, hedge funds and private-equity holdings. These so-called alternative investments rose to 26% of holdings at about 150 of the biggest U.S. funds in 2016, according to the Public Plans Database, compared with 7% more than a decade earlier.

At the same time, the amount invested in stocks crept upward as markets roared back—and equities remain the single largest holding among all funds. The $209.1 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund increased its equity holdings to 58.1% as of Dec. 31 as compared with 56% as of June 30. That allocation is now higher than the 54% held as of March 31, 2008.

The $19.9 billion Teachers’ Retirement System of Kentucky now has 62% of its assets in equities, close to the 64% it had in 2007. It sold $303 million in stocks Jan. 19-20 to rebalance its portfolio following gains. From Feb. 6-8, as U.S. markets plunged, the fund bought another $103.5 million of stocks.

“We are definitely a long-term investor and look to volatility as an investing opportunity,” said Beau Barnes, the system’s deputy executive secretary and general counsel.

Calpers had a chance to pull back on stocks in December and decided against it. Directors considered a 34% allocation to equities, down from 50%. They also considered a higher allocation.

In the end, the fund opted to raise its equities target to 50% from 46% as of July 1 and its fixed-income target to 28% from 20%. It had 49.8% of its portfolio in equities as of Oct. 31, according to the fund’s website. That is close to the 51.6% it had in stocks for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2008.

To put the above in historical context:

Thirty or so years ago, state and local politicians and the leaders of their public employee unions had a shared epiphany: If they offered workers hyper-generous pensions they could buy labor peace without having to grant eye-popping and headline-grabbing wage increases. And if they made unrealistically high assumptions about the returns they could generate on pension plan assets they could keep required contributions nice and low, thus making both workers and taxpayers happy. The result: job security for politicians and union leaders and a false sense of affluence for workers and taxpayers.

This scam worked beautifully for as long as it needed to – which is to say until the architects of the over-generous benefits and unrealistic assumptions retired rich and happy.

But now the unworkable math is coming to light and pension funds are responding with two strategies:

1) Roll the dice by loading up on equities – the most volatile asset class available – along with “real estate, commodities, hedge funds and private-equity holdings.”

2) Buy the dips. As the above highlighted quote illustrates, stocks have been going up so steadily for so long that pension fund managers now see “volatility as an investing opportunity.” When the next downturn hits they’ll throw good money after bad, magnifying their losses.

Eventually a real bear market will shred the duct tape and chewing gum that’s holding the public pension machine together. And several trillion dollars of obligations will migrate from state and local governments to Washington, which is to say taxpayers in general, at a time when federal debts are already soaring.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2GDLKH5 Tyler Durden

Curb Your Expectations

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

“The great economist John Maynard Keynes once said: ‘Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist.’” – John Coumarianos

The whole idea of “efficient markets” and “random walk” theories play out well on paper, they just never have in actual practice. The reality is investors make repeated emotional mistakes which are ultimately driven by the very volatility they are supposed to withstand.

These emotional mistakes, as I have discussed repeatedly in the past, are the biggest reason for underperformance by investors. These behavioral biases can be broadly defined as Loss Aversion, Narrow Framing, Anchoring, Mental Accounting, Lack of Diversification, Herding, Regret, Media Response, and Optimism.

When prices rise on a consistent basis, investors begin viewing stocks as a “no lose proposition which simply deliver high-rates of return over the long-term. The reality has actually been quite different. The chart below shows the real, total return, (inflation and dividends included) versus it’s annualized rate of return using a geometric average.

It took nearly 14-years just to break even and 18-years to generate just a 2.93% compounded annual rate of return since 2000. (If you back out dividends, it was virtually zero.) This is a far cry from the 6-8% annualized return assumptions promised to “buy and hold” investors.

But such a low rate of return should not have been surprising.

What drives stock prices (long-term) is the value of what you pay today for a future share of the company’s earnings in the future. Simply put – “it’s valuations, stupid.”  

Instead of magical lottery tickets that automatically and necessarily reward those who wait, stocks are ownership units of businesses. That’s banal, I know, but everyone seems to forget it. And it means equity returns depend on how much you pay for their future profits, not on how much price volatility you can endure.

Stocks are not so efficiently priced that they are always poised to deliver satisfying returns even over a decade or more, as we’ve just witnessed for 18 years. A glance at future 10-year real returns based on the starting Shiller PE (price relative to past 10 years’ average, inflation-adjusted earnings) in the chart above tells the story. Buying high locks in low returns and vice versa.

Generally, if you pay a lot for profits, you’ll lock in lousy returns for a long time.

While volatility is the short-term price dynamics of “fear” and “greed” at play, in the long-term it is simply valuation. Despite the recent correction, valuations are once again pushing more extreme levels which suggest lower future forward returns.

With valuations at levels that have historically been coincident with the end, rather than the beginning, of bull markets, the expectation of future returns should be adjusted lower. This expectation is supported in the chart below which compares valuations to forward 10-year market returns.”

“The function of math is pretty simple – the more you pay, the less you get.”

As a long-term investor, we experience short-term price volatility as “opportunity,” and high prices as “risk.” With economic growth to remain weak, and valuation expansion elevated, the risk of high prices has risen sharply.

Nothing But “Net”

This brings me to one of the biggest myths perpetrated by Wall Street on investors. Individuals are often shown some variation of the following chart to support the claim that over the “long-term” the stock market has generated a 10% annualized total return.

The statement is not entirely false. Since 1900, stock market appreciation plus dividends have provided investors with an AVERAGE return of 10% per year. Historically, 4%, or 40% of the total return, came from dividends alone. The other 60% came from capital appreciation that averaged 6% and equated to the long-term growth rate of the economy.

However, there are several fallacies with the notion the markets will compound over the long-term at 10% annually.

1) The market does not return 10% every year. There are many years where market returns have been sharply higher and significantly lower.

2) The analysis does not include the real world effects of inflation, taxes, fees and other expenses that subtract from total returns over the long-term.

3) You don’t have 146 years to invest and save.

The chart below shows what happens to a $1000 investment from 1871 to present including the effects of inflation, taxes, and fees. (Assumptions: I have used a 15% tax rate on years the portfolio advanced in value, CPI as the benchmark for inflation and a 1% annual expense ratio. In reality, all of these assumptions are quite likely on the low side.)

As you can see, there is a dramatic difference in outcomes over the long-term.

From 1871 to present the total nominal return was 9.15% versus just 6.93% on a “real” basis. While the percentages may not seem like much, over such a long period the ending value of the original $1000 investment was lower by millions of dollars.

Importantly, the return that investors receive from the financial markets is more dependent on “WHEN” you begin investing with respect to “valuations” and your personal “life-span”.

Curb Your Expectations

Following on with the point above, with valuations currently at one of the highest levels on record, forward returns are very likely going to be substantially lower for an extended period. Yet, listen to the media, and the majority of the bullish analysts, and they are still suggesting that markets should compound at 8% annually going forward as stated by BofA:

“Based on current valuations, a regression analysis suggests compounded annual returns of 8% over the next 10 years with a 90% confidence interval of 4-12%. While this is below the average returns of 10% over the last 50 years, asset allocation is a zero-sum game. Against a backdrop of slow growth and shrinking liquidity, 8% is compelling in our view. With a 2% dividend yield, we think the S&P 500 will reach 3500 over the next 10 years, implying annual price returns of 6% per year.”

However, there are two main problems with that statement:

1) The Markets Have NEVER Returned 8-10% EVERY SINGLE Year.

Annualized rates of return and real rates of return are VASTLY different things. The destruction of capital during market downturns destroys years of previous capital appreciation. Furthermore, while the markets have indeed AVERAGED an 8% return over the last 117 years, you will NOT LIVE LONG ENOUGH to receive the same.

The chart below shows the real return of capital over time versus what was promised.

The shortfall in REAL returns is a very REAL PROBLEM for people planning their retirement.

2) Net, Net, Net Returns Are Even Worse

Okay, for a moment let’s just assume the Wall Street “world of fantasy” actually does exist and you can somehow achieve a stagnant rate of return over the next 10-years.

As discussed above, the “other” problem with the analysis is that it excludes the effects of fees, taxes, and inflation. Here is another way to look at it. Let’s start with the fantastical idea of 8% annualized rates of return.

8% – Inflation (historically 3%) – Taxes (roughly 1.5%) – Fees (avg. 1%) = 3.5%

Wait? What?

Hold on…it gets worse. Let’s look forward rather than backward.

Let’s assume that you started planning your retirement at the turn of the century (this gives us 15 years plus 15 years forward for a total of 30 years)

Based on current valuation levels future expected returns from stocks will be roughly 2% (which is what it has been for the last 17 years as well – which means the math works.)

Let’s also assume that inflation remains constant at 1.5% and include taxes and fees.

2% – Inflation (1.5%) – Taxes (1.5%) – Fees (1%) = -2.0%

A negative rate of real NET, NET return over the next 15 years is a very real problem. If I just held cash, I would, in theory, be better off.

However, this is why capital preservation and portfolio management is so critically important going forward.

There is no doubt that another major market reversion is coming. The only question is the timing of such an event which will wipe out the majority of the gains accrued during the first half of the current full market cycle. Assuming that you agree with that statement, here is the question:

“If you were offered cash for your portfolio today, would you sell it?”

This is the “dilemma” that all investors face today – including me.

Just something to think about.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2optJEV Tyler Durden

Gartman: “Bloomberg Has Damaged Our Reputation”

One day after we reported that “Dennis Gartman Blows Up With Investment In Riot Blockchain“, Bloomberg followed up with a virtually identical article, titled “Risky crypto bet blows up Dennis Gartman’s retirement account.

And yet, oddly, despite being one of the most read features on Bloomberg this morning, the title was surprisingly changed, to the more bland “Risky crypto bet dents Dennis Gartman’s retirement account.”

The reason for that quiet change to the title can be found in Dennis Gartman’s latest investor letter, in which he slams Bloomberg’s reporter for “miss-representations” [sic] that “we were materially and dramatically damaged perhaps to the point of insolvency, let us be quite clear: That is far, far from the truth. We did indeed lose money on Friday on a “block-chain” related equity that we had owned for the previous several days. However, the reporter told the story that we would be required to work several more years because of the losses suffered.

Here Gartman takes offense because the “world-renowned commodity guru”, who two months after saying that “Bitcoin is nonsense and I’ll never buy any!” bought stock in a fake blockchain company that was exposed as a fraud and dropped 33% in a single day, hardly suffered “material losses.”

And while “the reporter in question has indicated in a phone conversation yesterday that she will repair the tenor of the article she wrote” which explains the change in “blows up” to “dents”, Gartman then laments that “that shall not repair the damage done to our reputation. Time only shall do that and we do indeed have time on our side.

Indeed you do Dennis, and we look forward to observing all the future follies of your “retirement account” for a long, long time.

here is the full section from Gartman’s letter in question:

Regarding our retirement account, and regarding the serious miss-representations made by a reporter for Bloomberg.com yesterday suggesting that we were materially and dramatically damaged perhaps to the point of insolvency, let us be quite clear: That is far, far from the truth. We did indeed lose money on Friday on a “block-chain” related equity that we had owned for the previous several days. However, the reporter told the story that we would be required to work several more years because of the losses suffered.

These comments by the reporter are seriously exaggerated. These were disconcerting losses to be certain, but were they material? No, they were hardly that. Further, the reporter in question has indicated in a phone conversation yesterday that she will repair the tenor of the article she wrote, however, that shall not repair the damage done to our reputation. Time only shall do that and we do indeed have time on our side.

Finally we want to thank our friends who came so quickly to our support yesterday after reading the reports in question. Now, ‘tis time to move on. We’ve other concerns that are material in nature.

Now if only Gartman can tell us if he finally covered his “retirement account” short on which we was stopped out yesterday, so algos will finally stop buying the dip…

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2sT1mob Tyler Durden