The Folly of Forecasting

July 24 this year the S&P 500 traded around 4600. At the time, gains were almost 20% for the year. The bulls had all the momentum and analysts were ratcheting up their end of year forecasts. Some felt 20% YTD gains were not enough – calling for even greater upside. What happened? Stocks corrected around 10% offering investors a better opportunity. The game of near-term forecasting is a fool’s errand…

Did Ackman Just ‘Ring the Bell’ on Bond Yields?

Over the weekend – I made the case for investing in fixed income. I think there’s a compelling longer-term opportunity for investors – where fixed income warrants exposure in your portfolio. Turns out, it may not be just me thinking this way. For example, last week I referenced Howard Marks’ latest memo. He explained how some are offering equity-like returns for investors (e.g., above 8% for non-investment grade debt). What’s more, Warren Buffett said he was increasing his exposure to bonds (at the short and long-end) a couple of months ago. Today billionaire investors Bill Ackman and Bill Gross were sounding the horn. Question: are we getting closer to a near-term peak in long-term yields?

Why Powell Oscillates b/w Dovish & Hawkish

Is Powell dovish or hawkish? The answer is he is both. And it’s intentional. Part of the Chairman is looking in the rear-view mirror (strong jobs, GSP growth, wage pressure and inflation); and part of him is looking ahead (weaker growth; falling jobs; lower inflation). He straddles both sides. But what she he pay more attention to? The answer is the latter – but he can’t ignore the former. That said, I also think the Chair’s choice of language was interesting. He believes above trend growth and strong jobs are what’s causing inflationary pressure – maybe in part. But I will argue it’s the lagging effect of monetary policy… when you increase money supply by 40% in just 2 years.

Is it Still Going to be a “Soft Landing”?

2023 has been one of the more difficult years to navigate. For example, if you chose the wrong stocks, sectors or simply decided to hide in cash – you didn’t fare well. However, what’s also made it hard has been the various shifts in sentiment the past ~9 months. These shifts have ‘whipped’ traders around. Today, with the US 10-year yield challenging almost 5.0% – the “R” word is back in the vernacular. Much of this can be explained by understanding where we are in the economic cycle… and today it’s “late cycle”. The challenge is navigating this phase is the most difficult of any… as it will often last longer than many expect.

For a full list of posts from 2017…