10/22/15

This morning, the European Central Bank primed global stocks by telegraphing more action (more stimulus) to respond to the recent shake up in global economic activity and sentiment.

It had to happen. In the grand scheme of things, the ECB’s sentiment manipulation this morning was the bare minimum of what had to be done.

The global central banks (led by the Fed) have spent, committed and promised trillions of dollars to manufacture the tepid recovery that’s underway, in hopes that they can bridge their way to the point where economies begin to organically grow again. That bridge has not yet reached the point of organic growth. And it’s not even that close. With that said, the recent collapse in oil prices, and the threat to an implosion of the energy sector was getting narrowly close to undoing what the central banks have done to this point. And, not only is another downturn unpalatable, but it’s apocalyptic. The bullets have all been fired. Fiscal and monetary policy would have no shot to ward off another global destabilization.

The plan for the continuation of the global central bank-led (and manufactured) economic recovery has been clear. And the evolution, where the U.S. economy began leading global growth, while Europe and Japan were just embarking on big and bold stimulus is likely the reason Bernanke felt comfortable enough to exit. Think about it, the Fed hands off of the QE baton to the ECB (Europe) and the BOJ (Japan). Meanwhile, the Fed can make the first step in moving away from emergency policies. Europe and Japan have all of the ingredients to execute on their big QE promises to continue providing fuel for global growth and stability (they need a weaker currency).

The Fed’s exit from emergency policies shows their confidence in the economic recovery. And the ECB and BOJ can “print away”, suppressing global market interest rates (which helps the Fed), fueling higher global stock prices (which helps everyone), and fueling capital flows into the U.S. to further bolster U.S. recovery.

The question is often asked, when referring to QE, “what is the transmission mechanism?”

Here’s the answer: 1) Stability – QE assures people that the central bank(s) are there, acting, and ready to do more, if needed, to defend against any further shocks to the global economy and financial system. That creates stability. And with that stability backdrop, major central banks promote incentives for people to borrow again, to spend again, to hire again. 2) Risk-Taking – Ultra-low interest rates and a stable environment promotes the rebirth of housing activity, and encourages investors to reach further out on the risk curve for more return. That means more demand for stocks, and higher stock prices. Higher stocks and higher housing prices create paper wealth. Paper wealth gives people comfort to borrow again, to spend again and to hire again.

That has been the recipe. And it has worked! The key ingredients continue to be higher stocks and higher housing prices (even if at a modest growth rate).

Central Banks Need You To Buy Stocks

With the ECB doubling down on their commitment to do “whatever it takes” and with the architect of the massive
QE program in Japan, Prime Minister Abe, uttering those same words in the past month, the pressure valve on the Fed has been released and should clear the path for the Fed to make its first move on interest rates in nine years this coming December.

When we consider where we’ve been (fighting back from what was potentially the Great Apocalypse of economic crises), and how the economy is performing now, the fact that the Fed thinks the economy is robust enough to remove emergency policies is, indeed, a time for celebration.

And with that, there are plenty of reasons to buy stocks, not just because central banks need you to. But frankly, most people don’t seem to understand this central bank dynamic anyway. And that’s precisely why sentiment has been gloomy on stocks for the entire recovery, dating back to the 2009 bottom.

Given this negative sentiment, with respect to the economic outlook and the outlook for stocks, it’s not surprising that the declines in stocks along the way have been sharper and more slippery because of this pervasive fear in the investment community. Along the way that has created great buying opportunities. This recent decline is no different. Often market sentiment tends to over emphasize events. And it tends to be wrong (contrarian). Nonetheless, when events pass, as we’ve seen along the way, regardless of the outcome, the fog lifts, and the underlying fundamentals return to dictate performance.

From a valuation standpoint, when rates are “low,” historically, the P/E ratio of the stock market tends to run north of 20. And, of course, we are not just in a low interest rate environment; we are in the mother of all low interest rate environments, even with the Fed ready to begin moving. North of 20 is precisely where the valuation on stocks has gone in the past year. Now, based on next year’s earnings estimate, the market is valued at just 15x. A move to 20x earnings would mean an S&P 500 around 2,600 by next year. That’s 30% higher than current levels.

Why would a low rate environment tend to mean higher valuations for stocks?

Economics are about incentives, and when rates are ultra-low, people are incentivized to switch out of bonds and into stocks, to seek higher yield/higher returns. When we think about the direct implications of this incentive dynamic, we look no further than the amount of cash that big funds are holding, and where that might find a home.

Historically, one of the most predictive indicators of stock market bottoms is how much cash fund managers are holding. Right now, cash is at levels only seen during the 2008-2009 Great Recession period. Fund managers are holding 5.5% of their portfolio in cash and their allocation to stocks are at the lowest levels since 2012. Furthermore, 35% of all funds are now overweight cash.

When you see fund managers so pessimistic on stocks, while holding so much cash, it has historically been a signal for a huge move in stocks. These managers are paid to invest, and cash has always been the dry powder that’s fueled every rally in stocks throughout history. When fund managers are not holding cash and are fully invested, they have no powder left to buy stocks. The only way they can buy a stock is to sell another stock, which usually occurs at market tops.

The last two times fund managers held this much cash while being so underweight stocks was 2009 and 2012.

What happened? A huge rally! Between 2009 and 2011, the S&P rose 41%. Between 2012 and 2014, the S&P 500 rose 46%.

Sign up for our Free ebook, The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets, and learn how to follow the “best ideas” of the world’s top billionaire investors. You don’t have to be rich to take part. You don’t have to pay the hefty 2% management fee and 20% profit share to a hedge fund. You can follow the lead of powerful billionaire investors by simply buying the same stocks they do, in your own brokerage account.

How BillionairesPortfolio.com Predicted the Big Pop In Sarepta Therapeutics

The Carl Icahn Effect & How It Can Work For You

Related: stock market, stocks, finance, investing, billionaire, hedge funds, billionaires, dow jones, wall street

9/8/15

In the past month, U.S. stocks had the biggest one day spike in volatility on record, and while the percentage swing in stocks didn’t rank in the top five of biggest days, it wasn’t far off.

Since then, there have been violent swings across global stocks, and heightened uncertainty about what lies ahead.

Keep in mind, there was a lot of damage to investor psychology in the early days of this decade-long economic downturn. That has created a contingent of investors that have been fearing another shoe to drop.

That fear leads to under participation in stocks, and it also leads to weak hands in the stock market. The “weak hands” are those that may own stocks, but have little conviction (and likely a lot of fear). It’s this dynamic that has created the sharp swings we’ve seen a few times in recent years, and this most recent decline fits the bill. While the current decline was sharper and more extreme than anything we’ve seen since 2008, the reasons are far from the same. Bear markets in stocks are driven by recession or a major economic event that can lead to recession. We have neither.

In the U.S., fundamentals are solid and improving. For those that argue the economy is fragile, the bond market disagrees with you. The yield curve is the best predictor of recessions historically. Yield curve inversions (where short term rates move above longer-term rates) have preceded each of the last seven recessions. Based on this analysis, the below chart from the Cleveland Fed shows the current recession risk at virtually nil.

With no recession risk on the horizon, this dip in stocks looks like yet another valuable buying opportunity. We’ve had seven declines of close to 5% or more in the S&P 500 since late 2012. In each case, the decline was fully recovered in less than two months. In most cases, the decline was recovered inside of one month. This is an amazing fact, yet many people have been trying to pick tops, rather than preparing to buy the dip. We still have global central bank policies that continue to defend against shocks and promote global recovery (from Japan and Europe) and the Fed should continue its plan to slowly remove the crisis-driven emergency policies that have been in place for the better part of 10 years. Moving away from emergency policies is positive! With that, this broad correction looks healthy and could kick off another leg of a strong run for stocks.

Warren Buffett has famously said a simple rule dictates his buying: “Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful.” No surprise, he publicly said today that he’s on the prowl to deploy $32 billion of fresh capital to buy stocks on sale.

At Billionairesportfolio.com our specialty is following the lead of billionaire investors. Many will speculate on what Buffett might buy with a fresh $32 billion. But to find stocks on sale, we look no further than his current portfolio. There, we find stocks that have the “wide moat” characteristic Buffett covets. And after the recent sell-off, some have dividend yields higher than treasury bonds, and P/Es well below the market average.

Below are four blue-chip stocks owned by the great Warren Buffett, each of which is cheap, and with a catalyst at work that can reprice the stock higher:

1) American Express (AXP) is one of Buffett’s “four horseman,” yet American Express is down 20% over the past year, leaving it with a current P/E of only 13. Recently one of the top activist hedge funds, ValueAct Capital (an $18 billion hedge fund run by Jeffrey Ubben) took a $1 billion position in AXP. ValueAct takes a private equity approach to investing and many are predicting that ValueAct will shake up the current management of American Express. The last blue chip stock ValueAct targeted, Microsoft, is up almost 50% since ValueAct took a position — a good sign for American Express investors.

2) IBM (IBM) is another one of Buffett’s core holdings. Buffett owns 8% of IBM or almost $13 billion worth. Right now you can buy IBM at a much cheaper price than Buffett paid for his shares (Buffett paid around $162). Buffett rarely makes mistakes, so this is a once in a lifetime opportunity being able to buy Buffett at a discount. IBM is also dirt cheap with a P/E of 9 (almost half the P/E of the S&P 500) and has a dividend of 3.6%, well above the current yield on the 10-year Treasury note. The stock is so cheap any positive news could send IBM flying. Earnings could be the big catalyst for this stock. They report in October.

3) Wal-Mart (WMT) – Buffett currently owns more than $4 billion of Wal-Mart. The stock is down 24% in 2015. It trades at only 13 time earnings with a dividend yield of 3%. One could argue Wal-Mart is the cheapest “blue chip stock” at a price-to-sales of .42 (the lowest of any Dow component). Consumer discretionary is the strongest sector in the market this year, the only sector that has a positive gain for the year. With unemployment nearing “normal” levels, and with gasoline prices at 11-year lows it is only a matter of time before consumers start spending more, and Wal-Mart is usually one of the biggest beneficiaries of this trend.

4) General Electric (GE) is another large Buffet stake that has a huge dividend (3.8%) and sells for a forward P/E of 15. The real catalyst with GE is that the company expects to return a whopping $90 billion to shareholders over the next couple of years, which will mean a dividend increase and a stock buyback, all positive catalyst’s to reprice GE higher in the future.

To follow the hand-selected stock picks of the world’s best billionaire investors, subscribe at BillionairesPortfolio.com.