I made a decision to reduce my exposure to large-cap tech a few months ago. The decision wasn’t an easy one… these are great stocks. For example, did I sell prematurely? The answer will be more obvious in 6-12 months when the cycle has had sufficient time to play out. For now (as was the case when I sold) – I think the downside risks meaningfully outweighed further upside gains. In this post, I explained how selling is a way of managing your risk. I was ensuring I banked the appreciable gains realized over the past few years. In light of the rotation out large-cap tech we’ve seen this week – I thought it was opportune to share some thoughts on (a) how I calibrate my portfolio in a changing environment; and (b) when to be aggressive and when to play defense. It all comes back to understand the economic cycle…
Real PCE: Seeing Around Corners
As an investor, your job is to carefully assess the risks against the rewards. A large part of that equation is knowing exactly where we are in the business cycle. For example, consider the following questions: (a) do you think we’re at the beginning or middle of an economic advance (with more to go)? or (b) do you think we’re about to encounter a significant change in direction? and (c) if so, is that change for the better or for the worse? Your answer is very important. It’s far better to invest (or take more risk) at the start of the business cycle vs the end. Therefore, how will make that decision? How are you able to determine where we are? I will offer a market signal which is arguably more consistent and reliable than most indicators.
Wall Street Cheer a “Strong Jobs” Report… Should They?
Wall St. cheered a perceived ‘strong’ monthly June jobs report. The economy added 206K jobs last month – however the unemployment rate moved to 4.1% – its highest level in 2 years. Here’s the thing: there was a lot of weakness in the labor market – with most of the jobs coming from government. In addition, April’s job gains were revised lower by 111K. And May was revised lower by almost 60K. I think there is material underlying weakness (reflected in slower Real GDP and PCE) and perhaps enough for the Fed to start cutting rates in September or November.
It’s Fed Week… Market Sees Cuts Coming
Are rates restrictive? And if they are – how do you know? That’s the question the Fed will address tomorrow – but it’s not easy to answer. For example, on the one hand there’s a (large) cohort who believe the Fed are falling ‘behind the curve’ – therefore increasing the odds of a recession. They feel that growth risks are to the downside – and do not need to wait for both inflation and employment data to confirm what’s ahead. On the other side of the coin – there are those who think we still run the risk of higher inflation if acting too early.
For a full list of posts from 2017…