|
The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Bennifer. Brangelina. TomKat. If the global asset boom were a celebrity
marriage, what would we call it? Chimerican? Americhinan? Or how
about...Japanica! Dan Denning looks at the events of the past week and
aims to answer the question: Is the whole current global asset boom
model in jeopardy? Read on...
What’s
with all the over-reaction? So a $130 billion was lost in China’s
market the other day. It’s not like it was real money. The sympathetic
corrections in other global markets were mostly occasions for profit
taking by investors and traders nervous about eight months of good
times. All those flashing lights and bells and whistles...those just
mean we’re in a casino.
There
are other explanations. But we’re not buying the theory that China’s
crash indicates real concern about the sustainability of its boom. The
China boom is happening in the real world. The China stock market boom
is largely fictitious.
So is
the whole current global asset boom model in jeopardy? No. There are
three pillars to the global asset boom, Japan’s easy money,
America’s free-spending ways, and China’s appetite for raw materials
in order to make things. If this were a celebrity marriage (with a bride
and two grooms, or two brides and a groom, or three brides, or three
grooms) what would we call it...Chimerican? Americhinan? Or how
about...Japanica!
Japanica
it is, the new name for the wobbly, triumvirate/mascot for the global
super asset bubble. And for the record, since we’re sure history is
paying attention to every word we write, our bet is that this asset
bubble has miles and miles to go before it sleeps. The unification of
global stock exchanges looms in the not-too-distant future. This will
facilitate even more rapid global capital flows...and bring even more
investment products on-line for surplus savers, be they in Australia,
China, or Amer...er...Japan.
Seriously,
you can see where all this is headed, a super asset boom. And there’s
a simple reason for it. The Boomer’s (or Japanese and Chinese savers)
are not ready to leave the gambling table just yet. You, see, they
can’t. They don’t have enough money to cash out their blue chips and
call it a day. They are still making up for the tech wreck, and still
wary of the durability of home price appreciation (and the liquidity in
the housing market, which, at least in America, is dropping like a
stone.)
Was
this week a wake up call for investors that markets are still risky? Of
course. But investors already they knew that. They love risk. More
importantly, they can’t afford not to take it. Day by day, we are
inching closer to the time when the Boomers will have to liquidate. But
it’s not that time yet. So the money pours into the market, and the
market itself, facilitated by the merger of exchanges, grows larger and
ever more integrated.
You
know what that means don’t you? The real liquidity crisis, when it
comes (18-26 months down the road, we reckon) will be much larger, much
more destructive, and impossible to contain. It will represent the end
of the post-war, post-Bretton Woods experiment with asset inflation as a
means to personal wealth-building. It will be nice to own some gold
then, preferably a lot.
The
incredible irony of what we’ve seen in the past few days is that most
investors almost always do exactly the wrong thing, from a rational
perspective, when confronted with “decisions under risk.” This
shouldn’t be that surprising, though.
Human
beings, under the duress of fast-moving global financial markets with
dozens of virtually untrackable variables, are programmed by nature to
do two things. First, they freeze, the way our ancestor used to do on
African savannah’s thousands of years ago when they saw a big cat on
the horizon. You can thank the amygdale, which takes control of the
brain at these crucial times, pulling rank on the thoughtful frontal
lobes that otherwise makes us distinct as primates.
This
temporary coup-de-brain is nature’s way of by-passing the frontal
lobes to arrest our action before we do something stupid like running
for our lives and attracting a lot of attention from other predators.
Panic does not promote survival. It’s this freeze in our musculature
that gives us enough time to tense up our muscles and either fight, or
flee.
The
second thing human beings do when confronted with risk is seek the
action which has the largest possible negative effect on them. Yes, you
read that correctly. And here we apologize for getting a bit
statistically geeky on you. But as this is The Daily Reckoning, we are
pretty sure you won’t read this explanation for market behaviour
anywhere else. From a novelty perspective at least, it should be worth
your time.
The
explanation takes us back to that crucially important year in financial
history 1979. That was the year Daniel Khaneman and Amos Tversky
published the second most cited economics article in academic history,
“Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk.”
The
paper was a landmark in the understanding of human behavior because it
pointed out the tawdry little lie at the heart of classical economic
models about human behaviour, namely that people weigh risks with
perfect information and then make rational decisions. Wrong! Homo
economicus is a complete fiction.
What
Khaneman and Tversky showed is that people make two kinds of decisions
with respect to risk and reward, and that neither decision is rational.
One the reward side, investors tend to overweight certain outcomes,
choosing lower returns with higher probabilities over higher returns
with lower probabilities. Or, in layman’s terms, most investors prefer
the appearance of certain, predictable, single-digit returns from blue
chip stocks or bonds than the higher but lower probability returns from
say, small cap stocks or emerging market bonds.
That
investors would over-weight outcomes that are considered certain isn’t
that surprising. It suggests that capital preservation is
psychologically (and financially) more important to investors, than
capital growth. The difference today may be that investors—at least
the retiring Boomers in the West who make up the bulk of the
market—need big capital gains in the next few years to increase their
retirement income. This may cause them to take more risk (to make up for
past losses) than would ideally be appropriate at this stage in their
investment career. But you go to war with the Army you’ve got, don’t
you?
What’s
really shocking from Kahneman and Tversky’s paper is how investors
approach losses. And the conclusion is inescapable: investors seek it.
Or, as the paper puts it, “This analysis suggests that a person who
has not made peace with his losses is likely to accept gambles that
would be unacceptable to him otherwise. The well known observation that
the tendency to bet on long shots increases in the course of the betting
day provides some support for the hypothesis that a failure to adapt to
losses or to attain an expected gain induces risk seeking.”
And
here we thought investors were seeking alpha, and that global risk
premiums were converging toward zero. But no! What you’re really
seeing is more bets on long-shots. This is, in the paper’s own terms,
a failure to adapt to the very risky world we invest in. But then again,
investors are only people. And this means that in the coming years, we
can expect investors not to avoid wealth-destroying beahviours and
investment decisions, but to greedily seek them out.
Incidentally,
Bill Bonner has a theory about this, which he hasn’t given an official
name to. His theory is geopolitical, that it is the nature of large
institutions (like empires) to find a way to destroy themselves, that
they must do so. Surpluses of any sort (financial, political, caloric)
are un-natural. Human beings, as every good student of Greek and
financial tragedies knows, find spectacular ways to squander their good
fortune.
Tversky
and Khaneman show that faced with a choice between a low-probability but
high-magnitude loss on the one hand, and higher-probability but lower
magnitude loss on the other hand, human beings tend to choose the higher
magnitude loss with the lower probability. Or, in layman’s terms, that
means if you were faced with the choice of a certain loss of $20 or the
30 percent probability of losing $60, you, if you were like most of the
other featherless bipeds on the planet, would choose the 30 percent
probability of losing $60.
It
does make sense with a weird kind of emotional logic. Faced with the
certain loss of $20 or the possible loss (one chance in three) of losing
three times as much, investors take the lower probability, higher
magnitude event.
But
when you apply this statistical, empirical, and psychological finding to
the markets—and here we mean equity markets writ large on a global
scale, reacting to one another in real-time—the result is stunning. It
means you can expect to see people engage in riskier and riskier
behaviour, nearly always choosing bigger losses over smaller losses.
“But
wait!,” you shout. “You’re forgetting about probabilities. Why
choose a certain loss over a probably loss?
Good
question. But perhaps our notion of probable losses is wrong as well.
Investors are operating under the assumption that larger losses in
today’s markets are lower probability events. There is also a
wide-spread believe that the larger the markets get and more integrated
they become, the lower probability of really gut-wrenching losses. The
problem with this academic theory is that it is exactly, emphatically,
categorically, wrong.
The
theory we refer to is that market crashes are statistically rare and can
be modeled on a bell curve, with a standard distribution of price
movements. Most movements, in a classic bell curve, would be within one
or two standard deviations of the mean. Or, in stock market terms, there
would be only a few instances when the market produced dramatically
above average or below average returns. Most returns would be rather
mundane, and rather predictable. There would be few crashes and fewer
still triple digit gains. But the evidence suggests otherwise.
“From
1916 to 2003,” Benoit Madelbrot writes in The Misbehaviour of Markets,
“the daily index movements of the Dow Jones Industrial Average do not
spread out on graph paper like a simple bell curve. The far edges flare
too high: too many big changes. Theory suggests over that time, there
should be fifty-eight days when the Dow moved more than 3.4 percent; in
fact, there were 1,001. Theory predicts six days of index swings beyond
4.5 percent; in fact there were 366. And index swings of more than 7
percent should come once every 300,000 years; in fat, the twentieth
century saw forty-eight such days. Truly, a calamitous era that insists
on flaunting all predictions. Or, perhaps, our assumptions are wrong.”
And
what about this new era, dear reader? When you combine Mandelbrot’s
observation with Kahneman and Tversky, you get a picture of increased
volatility and risk-seeking behavior. People, faced with more to lose,
risk ever more.
The
only question now is how large the stakes will get. And our observation
on that is that the global equity and asset pot has room to grow.
Volatility has been ominously quiet the last few years. It may have
returned this week through the backdoor in Shanghai. But don’t expect
it to make investors more conservative and trigger a rally in fixed
income and bonds.
Rather,
we may be seeing a whole new level of global speculation, an order of
magnitude larger than anything that came before it. This game, the world
series of speculation, is the end-game of the experiment with fiat
money, money not backed by a real asset. But it would be a mistake, we
think, to imagine that the end-game is now.
The
tragedy/comedy has at least one more act and a few years to go. And in
that time, we recommend you pull up a chair, pop some corn (if you can
afford it at today’s prices), and enjoy the spectacle.
Regards,
Dan
Denning
for The Daily Reckoning
P.S.
We do, however, advise against over-weighting expected certain
outcomes...that stock prices always go up, that sovereign governments
don’t default on their debt...and that investing for the long-term is
your best bet.
Just
what is your best bet? Cash in while you can, perhaps. Peace of mind
makes being a spectator more pleasurable. But, if you’re in the
markets, or must be in, our focus will continue to be on the
higher-magnitude returns that are priced as if they have lower
probabilities.
Or,
of course...you could always buy gold: Zero-Downside
Gold – Available for a Limited Time

© 2007 Dan Denning
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Editor’s
Note: Dan Denning is the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia. He’s
also the author of 2005’s best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley
& Sons), and spent five years as editor of Strategic Investment, one
of the most respected “big-picture” investment newsletters on the
market. A former specialist in small-cap stocks, Dan draws on his
network of global contacts from his new base in Melbourne,
Australia.
|