Risk vs Reward

Warren Buffett once told us “the stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient”. Which one are you? And while it sounds cliché, the power of patience is real. We need patience for two things: (i) allow our existing investments to work over time; and also (b) if buying, waiting for prices to come to us (eliminating FOMO). For example, some investors may have felt left out the past three months (I certainly did) – as ‘hot’ momentum stocks like Nvidia, Netflix, Meta and others surged. Fundamentals were not front of mind – where investors thought nothing of paying 40x plus earnings. The momentum trade had taken hold. But as we know – things inevitably revert to the mean.

Mean Reversion: Index Risks & the ‘M7’

In the game of asset speculation – mean reversion suggests that over time an asset will eventually return to its average price if it drifts or spikes too far from that average level. If applied, it can often help you avoid paying too much. My thinking is the S&P 500 has now drifted too far from the longer-term mean. History has always told us that inevitably prices will mean revert. This post explores the potential risks to investors if simply choosing to passively invest via the benchmark Index. Look no further than the so-called “Mag 7” – which constitute more than a 30% weight.

Will Earnings Deliver on the Hype?

Q4 2023 earnings are starting to hit the tape. From mine, if the market is to continue rallying – it’s less about inflation and the Fed – it’s whether corporate America will deliver on 12% earnings growth in 2024. Coming into earning’s season – my view 12% felt ambitious – given the slowing economy and relative health of the consumer. This post talks more to the concentration in the market – the relative influence from NVDA – and why diversification will be key this year.

Did We Just Pull 2024’s Gains Forward?

Stocks were already partying into the Fed meeting (up ~12% over 6 weeks) – however when Powell provided his December update on monetary policy – he simply turned up the music. Risk was on. So here’s my question – with stocks up an incredible 15% in just 7 weeks – how much of next year’s potential gains have been pulled forward? Is it riskier now to buy stocks than it was a few weeks ago? To be clear, stocks are likely to add to their gains before the year is done – however we are now trading close to 20x next years earnings. That’s not a bargain.

For a full list of posts from 2017…