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BCN Advantage -2021 Annual Report
February 14, 2022
Jeff Bratzler, CFP
BCN Financial
For 2021, the S&P 500 gained +26.9% to 4,766, the Nasdaq +21.4% to 15,645, and the Dow +18.7% to 36,338. Marking an important divergence: the IBD Mutual Fund Index lagged +13.5% for the year. January 2022 saw the S&P 500 fall more than 5%, its worst start since 2009. The Dow declined more than 3%, while the Nasdaq shed about 9%, nearly matching 2008 for its worst start ever. Guidance – or lack thereof – has been the biggest red flag. Streaming giant Netflix plunged 21.8% after serving up a tepid outlook. Meta Platforms, the social giant formerly known as Facebook, cratered 26.4% as investors reacted to its Q1 forecast. With the drop, Meta shed $237 billion in market cap – the biggest one-day wipeout in U.S. stock market history. Five companies (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google) account for one-quarter of the market capitalization of the entire S&P 500. Thanks largely to ETFs and the overweight inflows into these handful of stocks, an illusion of market stability is not surprising. The small cap Russell 2000 has been a canary in the coal mine for much of the past year, lagging the S&P 500 by 25 percentage points – its worst 12-month relative return since 1999. 46% of Nasdaq companies are down at least 50% from their 52-week highs. Not since 1999 have so many stocks been cut in half while the Nasdaq held near its peak. Historically, when at least 35% of stocks are down by half, the Nasdaq has been down by an average of -47%. Consumer prices surged an annual 7.5% in January, the biggest jump since 1982. Core PCE, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, is at 4.7%, more than double their 2.0% target. The rate of change in Core PCE over the past year is the second fastest on record, exceeded only by 1974 – 1975. For the first time since 1974, over half of small businesses expressed their intent to raise prices. Today’s tight labor market increases the possibility that inflation will become entrenched via a wage-price spiral. Fed Chairman Powell recognized the danger during his Senate confirmation, when he stated that a smaller labor force “can be an issue going forward for inflation, probably more so than these supply-chain issues.” The specter of inflation has futures markets pricing in a full percentage point of Fed rate hikes by August, and the equivalent of six quarter-point moves in 2022. The Fed’s attention has turned squarely toward inflation, a battle they haven’t had to fight in roughly four decades. And suddenly, investors may no longer be able to count on the Fed coming to the rescue at the first sign of trouble. That guarantee – widely assumed on Wall Street – is known as the “Fed Put.” In late 2018, a 20% decline prompted the Fed to quickly reverse policy. As COVID spread in March 2020, the S&P 500 collapsed 33% and the Fed responded with 2-years of near-zero interest rates and $120 billion per month in additional “quantitative easing.” Though the Fed could temporarily suspend rate increases if markets fall this time, they’ll be much less likely to swiftly reverse course by cutting rates and ramping up QE. Not if inflation is still raging. As a result, we could see a series of rolling corrections: declines of 10% or more but without the corresponding V-recoveries investors have grown so dependent on. Interestingly, Powell has yet to specify when the Fed will begin reducing its nearly $9 trillion balance sheet – now 40% of U.S. GDP. Draining liquidity from “quantitative tightening” poses the most significant risk to U.S. markets, all the more so when there are clears signs the economy is slowing. Expectations are for GDP to grow 4.0% in the first and second quarter of 2022 and then slow to 3.3% and 2.5% in the third and fourth quarters. Mere talk of rate hikes has already pushed the front end of the yield curve higher, but the long end of the curve is low, flattening the curve – a classic precursor of recession. The effectiveness of Fed policy can only be evaluated once the policy has gone full cycle. Cutting rates to zero, holding them there for years, and creating trillions in debt through quantitative easing will prop up an economy. That much has been established. But can that stimulus be reversed, and that liquidity be drained, without pushing the economy into recession – one deeper and more damaging than any that preceded it? The S&P 500 took 7 years to reach a new high from 2000 to 2007 after a 51% decline between March 2000 and October 2002, and 6 years to notch a fresh high from 2008 to 2014 after a 58% loss between October 2007 and March 2009. Have we entered another period when investors will be happy to have been largely out of the market? We believe so – because we will have saved money by being out – while reducing risk and volatility on the round trip. Our definition of a successful bear market call.
Credit Card Delinquencies Near Great Recession Peak
November 22, 2024
Avi Gilburt
Seeking Alpha
According to a new report on household debt published by the New York Fed, credit card balances increased to $1.17T, 8.1% above the level a year ago. More importantly, as the chart shows, the share of delinquent credit cards has reached the highest level since 2012. This share is now just around 300 ...
October Inflation Muddies Feds Path
November 14, 2024
Josh Schafer
Yahoo - Finance
October inflation readings out this week have shown little progress toward the Fed's 2% inflation target, putting into question how deeply the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in 2025. The "core" Consumer Price Index (CPI), which strips out the more volatile costs of food and gas, showed prices ...
Stock Prices At Historical Extremes
November 4, 2024
Investech
InvesTech
“A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful.” Warren Buffett’s sage advice offers timeless guidance. Bull markets that incite investor frenzy can drive stocks to extremes that are supported merely by hype and the promise of future gains. ...
Two Charts You Cannot Unsee
September 23, 2024
Investech
InvesTech
According to JP Morgan, a record 42% of U.S. household financial assets are now invested in the stock market. That has more than doubled since the last major bear market in 2009, and is far above previous peaks hit in 2007 prior to the Financial Crisis, the Tech Bubble top in 2000, and the end of the ...