Monday 26 December 2016

Stock Rally Ending Not With A Bang, Maybe With A Whimper


My asset allocation is roughly 60% equities (80% long, 20% short equities, 50% developed, 50% em equities). 30% bonds (40% developed, 60% em debt), 10% gold, silver, oil and hedge funds.

My model is surprisingly signalling a BUY for global equities. Technicals are also positive. So I remain aggressive for now.






 

Stock rally ending not with a bang but a whimper

Market bubble expert says US equities will limp downwards with decade of low returns
What comes next? We have had the political surprise and the counter-intuitive response as markets grabbed on to one of the most powerful narratives for the forthcoming Trump administration — a new era of growth fuelled by tax cuts. Now, with stock markets wobbling slightly but still not making any change of direction, the question is whether the rally can be sustained and whether there is a risk of a bubble if it does.
The bull market of the last eight years has seen US stocks rise threefold without any of the animal spirits that normally mark the top of a bull market — and talk of a “rational bubble” driven by low bond yields. Now, animal spirits are back, when valuations are near the top of their historical range. Using Robert Shiller’s cyclically adjusted earnings multiple, the S&P 500 entered the election at almost exactly the valuation at which it peaked in 2007 and a little higher than its peak in 1966.
It is also at its level of 1996 when then Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan launched a brief attempt to talk down share prices by warning of “irrational exuberance”. We know the sequel. We instead moved to the “Greenspan Put” — a perceived promise that the Fed would support share prices — and US stocks went into a historic bubble. We are still paying the price.
If Trumpflation pushes the market up now, is that what awaits us? Intriguingly, GMO’s founder Jeremy Grantham, the world’s best-known diagnostician of market bubbles, published a letter to investors on election day to say that this would not happen.
He said he had come to believe that “we bubble historians have been a bit brainwashed by our exposure in the last 30 years to four of the perhaps six or eight great investment bubbles in history”. He added: “Well, the US market today is not a classic bubble, not even close. The market is unlikely to go ‘bang’ in the way those bubbles did.”
This is not, alas, reason for rejoicing. He cautioned that, instead, mean reversion to normal valuations would be slow and incomplete with “dismal” consequences for investors. Rather than with a bang, this bull market would end with a “whimper” and “limp into the setting sun with very low returns” for a decade or more.

All eyes on oil

I asked him if the return of animal spirits with the Trumpflation trade had changed his diagnosis. Only slightly. The chance of a true bubble has risen a bit — but remains unlikely. The chance of an old-fashioned bear market, taking down stocks by 20 per cent, has risen more.
Here is his reasoning. A bubble would require a move to about 3,300 on the S&P within a year or two. It also requires genuine strength of fundamentals — true bubbles always start from healthy positions and take them too far, as happened in the booming 1990s. The chances have risen with the advent of Mr Trump but remain slight.
Meanwhile, the risk of a perceived “regime change”, in which markets grasp that the “Greenspan Put” has ended, has also increased somewhat. A few rate rises would not accomplish this on their own but a sweeping change in personnel at the Fed would do so. That would allow the “whimper” to play out much faster.
Most importantly, Mr Grantham thinks the risk of an “old-fashioned, inflation-driven bear market” has also risen. This is because of the labour market. As he puts it, the recovery under Obama has seen 10m new jobs for those with some college education but maybe only 100,000 jobs for people without college.
Before the election, data showed that wage inflation was beginning to increase. In these circumstances, with an incipient shortage of graduates, “even a modestly strong economy [now more likely with a probable fiscal stimulus from Mr Trump] may well be enough to push labour inflation up, despite the lack of jobs at the lower end”.
The response to rising inflation would be higher rates, at a much faster speed than now expected, which would force down equity multiples. “That isn’t a bubble breaker. It’s quite different. And for a year it can sink the market by 15 or 20 per cent. And that looks quite likely.”
So as far as Mr Grantham is concerned, there is now a high probability of an inflation-driven bear market “without the need of a bubble and a crash”. It is a sound argument.
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Evolution of a Traveller

I started visiting faraway lands like Australasia in 1992 when I studied down under. Since then, I've done Perth, Sydney, Brisbane, Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Dunedin for months in my vacations.

Since I started work though, I've restricted my travels to Malaysia, neighboring Indonesian islands, Hong Kong, coastal China like Beijing, Shanghai, Seoul, Bangkok.

In 2007, I went to the UK and watched Arsenal play at the Emirates. I fell in love with London. It is a bigger city than Singapore, but nevertheless there were so many more things to do in the city. I could also drive to other cities and the countryside for a change of environment, yet return to bustling London during the weekdays.

My initial trip was to Milan, then to the Alps to attend a wedding, to London and then to Rome. I was like a tourist, taking photos everywhere I went. Everything was foreign to me. But I loved to speak to the locals. In the cab, I'd strike a conversation with an Italian about Serie A football, or politics.

In 2008, I travelled to northern France, visited the Louvre, fell in love with the food and culture. Went to Barcelona and watched the El Classico in the Nou Camp. Food was better in Spain in my opinion.

But something was amiss. I wanted more. I wanted to be more involved in the culture and lifestyle of the various people in the countries that I visited. I moved from visiting museums and being a foodie to making more "permanent friendships" with locals. I also considered investing in properties abroad.

In 2009, I travelled to London again, to visit relatives, watch my beloved Arsenal play again, stayed in a bed and breakfast in Bath, Strafford, Leicestershire. I watched the Premier League games at the local pubs, cheered together when our favourite teams won.

In 2010, I travelled to Japan, did Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka. Tried the food, spent Christmas in a tower in Tokyo. Did the countdown. Stayed in a serviced apartment and decided I prefer a serviced apartment over a hotel room as the former allowed me to cook, wash clothes and is more spacious. If you travel for over 7 days and wish to pack light, it is better to have a washing machine and dryer in the room. four months after I returned to Singapore, the earthquake struck Japan. I was lucky and counted my blessings.

In 2011, I visited London and started my investment journey. I visited the office of a real estate investment guru. It changed my life. I began to look at real estate investing in countries outside of Singapore as a better option. Properties were much cheaper than Singapore's. I visited Notting Hill, saw a one bedroom apartment of around 600 sf asking for GBP250k then. It was much cheaper than Singapore which would have cost over GBP350k for a similar location.

In every year since, I've forged friendships with many locals. I've begun to immerse myself in their lifestyles. Everywhere I go, there will always be friends and relatives to visit, topics like investing, culture and politics to discuss over bottles of good wine.

The third phase of my journey is to consider uprooting myself. It is something that I've always anticipated. I never felt at home in Singapore because it never quite gave me a sense that it was home to me. The weather, the competitiveness, the stifling atmosphere, small area, and most importantly, authoritarian work culture turned me off. I wanted to be successful wherever I go and I will need to chart a path in the future that allows me the best of both worlds: monetary rewards and lifestyle.