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Market Cycle Investment Management
by
Steve Selengut
Whatever happened to the Stock Market Cycle; the Interest Rate Cycle;
Baby Jane? How did Wall Street get away with pushing these facts of
financial life down the basement stairs? Most investors, I'm beginning
to believe, and all financial advisors, media representatives, and
market gurus have abandoned these fascinating curves for the comfort of
a straight-edged twelve-month playing field... simple, yes; realistic,
not. I have to wonder if things would be different with a more
investor-friendly tax-code, but that would be far less lucrative for The
Wizards...
Investing with a calendar year focus has no basis in the realities of
finance, business, or economics... isn't it obvious that the Stock and
Bond Markets are far more closely related to the Business Cycle than to
the Earth's around the Sun? Investopedia reports that, during the last
sixty years, most business cycles have lasted three to five years from
peak-to-peak. The Stock Market Cycle (in terms of the S & P 500 Average)
is the period of time between the two latest highs of that average which
are separated by at least a 15% decline in the average. The second high
needs only to be 15% above the nadir, it doesn't have to represent a new
All Time High (ATH). Interest rates (based on the 10 Year Treasury
Bond), seem to cycle in the two to five year range, and are much more
closely related to Business or Economic cycles than they are to the
Stock Market Cycle. Confused?
Well, you should be. Although they are closely intertwined, none of
these financial realities are predictable and, therefore, need to be
dealt with as hindsightful tools in the performance analysis process...
a process that needs to be undertaken using personalized expectations.
How many times in the last 20 years do you think that any of these
cycles peaked on a December 31st? The "I'll try this approach for a year
or so and then change if it doesn't work out better than everything
else" mentality, combined with a regressive tax code that rewards losses
more than gains, has killed cyclical analysis dead. It's time to get
back on our hogs and try something old. Let's re-cycle peak-to-peak
analysis like we do plastics and paper products. It might just put more
"green" in our retirement programs. As recently as 1980, Separate
Account (the first Mutual Funds) Investment Managers were reporting fund
performance in terms of income generation and peak-to-peak growth in
Market Value. But that was before investing became the number-two
spectator sport in America.
Few investment professionals would argue with the observation that a
viable investment program begins with the development of a realistic
plan, and most would agree that investment planning requires the
identification of long-term personal goals and objectives. Some experts
would even agree that the end result should be a near autopilot,
long-term and increasing, retirement income. Asset Allocation is used to
organize and control the structure of the portfolio so that it operates
in a goal directed manner. Is this easy or what! It would be if the
average investor would just let things alone long enough for them to
work out according to the plan. That's the rub. Wall Street, the
financial media, and financial professionals (including CPAs) have no
interest in letting things work out according to plan... even if it's a
plan that they designed.
Is it clear that calendar year performance evaluation allows an average
of just six months for an equity selection to 'perform'? Is it clear
that the change in Market Value of an income security over the course of
a year is meaningless? Is it clear that a portfolio containing both
types of securities cannot be compared with an average or index that is
comprised of just one or the other? It is crystal clear until it's your
portfolio that has had the audacity to shrink in Market Value over the
course of the year! Human nature is predictable but not necessarily
rational. Mother Nature's financial twin's twisted sense of humor,
though, is both... and totally unrelated to third rock movements.
If the change in a portfolio's Market Value is really so important (the
Working Capital Model would argue that it is not), why not do it over a
period of time that recognizes where we happen to be, cyclically?
Interest Rates have cycled seven or eight times over the past
twenty-five years; the stock market has been nearly twice as volatile.
Peak-to-peak analysis, although hindsightful, raises a type of question
that can, at least, be portfolio personalized for analysis:
* Did my Equity portfolio grow in Market Value between January 2000 and
January of 2002, or between January 2002 and either January 2004 or June
of 2006? These were cycles on the DJIA, which at its high in June 2006,
was still below the ATH established in early 2000. These are meaningful
time periods that can be used to study the effectiveness of various
equity-only portfolio strategies. S & P 500 cycles were pretty much the
same.
* Does my Income Portfolio generate more income today than it did the
last time interest rates were at these levels is still the most
important question that should be raised... regardless of Market
Value... sorry.
But as important as it may be to determine the answers to such
questions, it is equally important to understand why the results were
what they were. Did I withdraw money from the portfolio, or take losses
on investment grade securities for tax reasons? Did I fail to follow the
plan, or lose control of my Asset Allocation? Did I change variable
expenses into fixed expenses or allow tax considerations to keep me from
realizing profits. Were there changes in the investment markets that
would make peak-to-peak analysis less meaningful than in the past?
So by taking away the move-your-money, racetrack, mentality that runs
today's investment performance evaluation methodologies, we create a
calmer, more cerebral, management exercise with which to tweak our
investment strategy. We may have gone backwards because we stayed on the
sidelines instead of buying when prices were low. It may have been the
strategy, it may have been the management, it could have been the
diversification formula, or the buy-sell-hold decision-making rules. It
may even have been the fear or greed that influenced our judgment. By
looking at things cyclically, and analytically, instead of celestially
and emotionally, we either allow our strategy to prove itself over a
reasonable period of time or obtain the information needed to change it
constructively.
The recent popularity of Index ETFs has detracted from the usefulness of
both the popular market averages and the most useful market statistics.
Issue Breadth, 52-week High and Low, Most Actives, Most Advanced, and
Most Declined figures now include thousands of these hybrid and
derivative securities. A bigger problem is the artificial demand
created for index-included securities, a demand unrelated to corporate
financial statement fundamentals. Another problem for Investment Grade
Value Stock only investors is the absence of a well-recognized average
or index to use for analysis... the IGVSI and related Market Stats
should help.
Analyze this: if the strategy makes sense in the long run, why knock
yourself out in months, quarters, and years? Where have all the cycles
gone...
Steve Selengut
800-245-0494
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.investmentmanagementbooks.com
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that
Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret
Investment Strategy"
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Last modified:
April 05, 2008
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