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Before embarking upon another assault
against the liquidity forces that be, it is worth recognizing that the
remaining bears in this world have done well despite the fact that their
macro beliefs have proven untimely. To be sure, ‘bears’ (or
value investors) that purchased select stocks during the current bull
market have produced acceptable returns, bears with precious metals
exposure since the 2003 liquidity-fest started have done exceptional,
and bears that reduced their exposure to the U.S. dollar along the way
have outright thrived. As bullish market prophets lob verbal bombs into
the bears’ camp claiming that since equities have performed well the
bears must be bleeding, these are important points to remember.
After all, being ‘bearish’ on most stocks doesn’t necessarily mean
that you are heavily shorting stocks. Being bearish and being foolish
are two separate matters altogether.
Yet as prosperous as many bears have been
in recent years, there is nonetheless the uncomfortable reality that
bubbly asset price movements have attacked and undermined the bear case.
Moreover, there is the possibility that the bear case is flat out
wrong, and that the financial markets have evolved and entered a new
epoch of potency. Economists have coined this ‘evolutionary’
trajectory ‘The Great Moderation’; which basically contends that
there has been a permanent reduction in macroeconomic volatility (Bernanke).
Most recently the Times
picked up on this theme, claiming that “Historians will marvel at
the stability of our era”. Forgive us for equating these
types of phrases with ‘stocks have reached a permanently high
plateau’, but the temptation is simply too great.

Ironically, even some notable bears have
started to tinker, albeit quite loosely, with the idea that the global
economy and financial markets are in a ‘new’ paradigm. Most
notably, Stephen Roach, who briefly turned bullish last year, questioned
his stripes even further in a recent
commentary:
“For longer than I care to remember,
my base case has argued that ever-mounting imbalances will ultimately
crimp vigorous growth in the global economy. While there can be no
mistaking the imbalances of a US-centric world, there can also be no
mistaking the extraordinary resilience of the great global growth
machine. Is it time for a new approach?”
Have Bears Lost Their
Center?
With the VIX resting near all-time lows,
the S&P
500 not having corrected by even 2% in the last 6-months, and weakness
in one asset class (i.e. US housing) simply padding expectations for
spectacular gains in other asset classes, it is difficult for pessimism
to build in the marketplace. For that matter, with some very basic
valuation measures (namely trailing operating P/Es) not exactly
screaming mania, it is difficult to point to traditional overvaluation
models to extol doomsday scenarios. Suffice to say, as their forecasts
prove inaccurate bears have had to resort to less conventional platforms
to build their case, including contrarian analysis of dovish credit
spreads, potential yield curve demons, and the oft-used conclusion that
there is ‘excessive liquidity’ in the marketplace.
But while on the surface it would appear
that bears have simply been hopping from one sinking platform to the
next, whether theorizing of an inflationary shock, an emerging market
blow-up, a collapse in housing prices, or a systemic hedge fund default,
the macro conclusion from bears is much the same: a yet unknown catalyst
is destined to arrive and expose many of the unsustainable imbalances in
the world. These ‘imbalances’ include, among others, the burgeoning
US trade deficit, the negative US savings rate, and the overall
increased reliance of many economies on the performance of asset prices.
Suffice to say, while ‘The Great
Moderation’ talks about new smoothing mechanisms at work in the
financial markets and new policies/global interlinkages that have helped
steady the global economy, bears are less concerned with the last
20-years of harvests and more concerned with the seeds that have been
planted. Indeed, economic growth that is powered in large part by rising
asset prices, inflationary monetary policies, and debt creation may
produce the picture of strength, but it also causes the shadows of
unsustainability to intensify rather than vanish.
Conclusions
“If the great global growth machine
doesn’t start to slow by the end of this year, it’ll be high time to
give up the ghost.” Jan 16, 2007. Roach
With long-term bears like Richard
Bernstein recently changing teams, and analysts like Roach attaching
their convictions to a timetable, it can be speculated that we are
nearing the point of universal bullishness. The bears that still exist
today should remain cognizant of this trend, and also of the fact that
as more people clamor into hedge fund hallways and volatility becomes
more widely accepted as a barbarous relic of an unsophisticated
financial past, the bear case strengthens rather than weakens.
That said, the exact point wherein the
bears synchronize their macro beliefs with the prevailing reality
remains largely a mystery, and with investor risk tolerance tests at or
near all-time highs Sherlock Holmes himself is left to scratch his head.
Indeed, those who need a lesson in just how senseless things can get
should recall the late 1990s. After the Asian Crisis and LTCM blow-up
many, ourselves included, believed that an equities bust and US economic
slow down had been triggered, but in 1999 the Nasdaq gained 85%! For the
record, being bearish in 1999, even as the Nasdaq and other indices
soared, proved to be an excellent idea, although at the time the exodus
from camp bear certainly made those who remained feel a little bit
lonely.
“If you need a friend, get a dog.”
Gordon Gekko
Being wrong about short-term movements in
stock prices is not the same thing as losing money. Those that did
well in the late 1990s as well as in 2000, 2001, and 2002 (three
devastating years for stocks) were those that never bought into the idea
that stocks were in a new paradigm, and those that will likely do well
in the years ahead are those that chose not to chase rising asset prices
today.
In short, with precious metals, equities,
bonds, and cash (non USD) all performing strongly in recent years,
almost everyone has profited…but only one animal is prepared for the
potential damage that excessive liquidity in the marketplace can unfurl.
As bears wait for the great liquidity dam to break, the bulls pour
concrete angels around the ‘Great Moderation’ and hope that this
time things remain different.


© 2007 Brady Willett
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