Sage, historical perspective is rare and valuable

I have been professionally following and analysing world markets for the past 15 years. In retrospect I had no idea what I was signing up for when I started into this work. Fresh from studies of the Efficient Market Hypothesis, Capital Asset Pricing Models and other staples of Modern Portfolio Theory I was initially a confident proponent of widely held views on the merits of stocks for the long run, diversification and passive asset allocations.
But something happened on my way to confident consensus views and complacency: the world entered a blow-off top in stock markets from 1997-1999. A predictable crash followed and governments around the world jumped to “rescue” the system by bailing-out weak companies and slashing interest rates to virtually zero. In that long-building burst, the investing climate made a violent shift from a secular bull to a secular bear. The past 15 years have turned out to be one of the most volatile, risk-filled series of asset bubbles and bursts ever seen in the history of the world. And we are not through to the other side yet.
In the early 2000’s as we were starting our management company, I took great inspiration and help from Peter Bernstein who had managed an investment counsel firm through the secular bull of 1942-1960 and into the last great secular bear in world markets that followed it from 1960-1982. His decades of real life experience in both climates along with his unique intelligence, honesty and humility made Peter a rare mentor in a world of short-sighted nonsense and salesmanship. When Peter died on June 5, 2009 at the age of 90 he left a space that cannot be filled. Thankfully he also left a large body of books and other writings which recorded his insight and wisdom for the generations to come. The last time he wrote to me was September 2007 when I was complaining to him about the perilous prices we saw in asset prices all around us and how dangerous the conventional buy and hold “long-run mantra” seemed to be to real life investors.
Peter replied:

“I do agree with you perhaps more than you realize, because I have been preaching to institutional investors that they lean too much on the long-run mantra. Clearly, individuals should be aware of that strategy. But more people should be preaching your sermon. You put it with great effect.
I also agree that complacency has induced people to take big risks that converted a low-risk environment into a high-risk environment, and recent events prove that to be the case in spades.”

A few years ago I befriended Dennis Gartman on the speaking circuit and instantly also came to appreciate his 30 years + of real life market experience coupled with those rare attributes in the financial world of independence and humble, honest analysis. This morning in his market letter I was struck by what Dennis had to say about the market conditions we are living through today:

“The violence of the moves these days and the unanimity of the moves is unlike anything we can recall seeing in our thirty five years of watching, participating in and commenting upon. We mean that quite honestly. We cannot recall a period of time when all correlations in the forex market have gone so perfectly to “one” and when they have done so with the vehemence we are witnessing presently. Make of that statement what you will and do with it as you must, but to see the dollar/EUR rate move “greenly”… i.e., more than 1% in the dollar’s favour… one day and then to see it move “red-ly” … more than 1% against the dollar… the next seems quite nearly unprecedented. However, to see the dollar do that vs. the EUR and then to see it do the same, and even more radically, relative to the Aussie and Kiwi dollars has to be unprecedented.
…As in the forex market, we cannot recall a time when markets were so correlated into one strangely cohesive unit, rising in international unison and falling the same. There is no such thing, it seems, as diversification. If one is long of Brazilian stocks it is the same as being long of German stocks or of American stocks or of Irish stocks. Almost as puzzling is the fact that one might be long of Indonesian retail shares and that will be almost perfectly equal to being long of Canadian oil shares, within reason. In the past one could diversify across various industries and countries; now there is no such thing. Correlations have indeed “all gone to one.” But in the past they’ve gone to one during periods of duress. Now they are going to one when markets are under duress and when they are joyful. Would that the old days of diversity returned!”

These historical perspectives from sage market followers with twice my experience are valued. It reminds me that like in 2007 just before the bubble burst, risks today are extremely high again. The markets are acting crazy. We are not crazy to be concerned!
I will look forward to telling the youngsters about this remarkable period years from now and how we managed to navigate our capital carefully through it to the next secular bull.

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7 Responses to Sage, historical perspective is rare and valuable

  1. Anonymous says:

    Rogue Trader Jerome Kerviel
    'I Was Merely a Small Cog in the Machine'
    http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,729155,00.html

  2. Anonymous says:

    In the old WW2 films when the battleship sank you could see all the sailors like little specs running to the point of the ship that was highest out of the water. (This is a great visual to make this point.) But eventually the ship did sink. I think the high market correlations are all the sailors (investors) running to what they think is the safest point. But the ship is sinking!

  3. Anonymous says:

    What a wonderful writer you are Danielle; so rare in this age of meaningless populist blather.
    Thanks for your ongoing crusade and please keep it going. I'm sure there are many out there who, like me, are patiently waiting for a sign from you, telling us it's safe to invest in the overall stock market again.

  4. Anonymous says:

    On a lighter note Dazzo: the Mayor of Toyota is a Suzuki?

  5. Anonymous says:

    Bernanke: It's a Depression And I Should Be Imprisoned
    http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=172751

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