Monday, November 22, 2010

Market Commentary for the week of November 22, 2010

The science of risk.

We’re in a particularly vulnerable time in world financial markets.  Having just completed a significant 2 year market response (upwards) to the global credit crisis, the question of whether or not we can sustain similar economic magnitude has everyone’s attention.  Although financial data seems more or less in line with a nascent recovery, investor confidence and activity are still less than robust.

The absence of empirical consumer spending and corporate capital expenditures becomes the basis of a self fulfilling prophecy.

By no means am I suggesting that all economic activity has come to a grinding halt.  Aggressive deal-making has benefited from low cost of cash, and currency revaluation has boosted foreign trade.  Indeed, some emerging markets have raised prospects for growth due to accommodative monetary policy and concentrations of natural resources.  While these isolated portfolios have raised their probabilities of outperformance, outright global bullishness remains an unattainable afterthought for now.

Thus, the name of the game is still “risk management.”  More dangerous, though, are the players who fail to heed these data, choosing instead to speculate, without science, on half-truths or rumors.  Wise decisions derive from a strict adherence to methodology and discipline.  Our thesis begins by worrying about consequences now, not later.

For these reasons alone, I am worried about bond speculators, gold speculators, oil speculators, investment banking and merger transactions, or any other financial transaction that smells of “fad” or “immediacy.”

Take, for instance, the sudden and recent rise in commodity prices.  While I have written for several years about burgeoning inflation forces within the economic landscape, it has only been in the last 6 months that investing and relative strength activity in commodities has taken off.  What had been in hibernation for years suddenly became the “sector-du-jour.”  As if by accident, investors (speculators) stumbled into the world of fundamental analytics and made a mockery out of it by riding a trend, then looking to cash out.

It may sound like it, but I do not begrudge these “faddists” their profits.  What I do object to are the latecomers who accelerate fundamental demographic economic shifts by injecting speculative capital, then leave as if the party might migrate elsewhere.  As a youngster, I was taught to leave my “play area” exactly as it was when I arrived.  The vigilantes who abuse the markets for avarice and quick gain have failed to do the same, thus exacerbating the feelings, by some, that the markets are unfair and that true economic cycles of recovery don’t really relate to their lives.

Finding confidence.

Much to the dismay of many, a consensus still exists that the financial markets are not “real” for them, other than the occasional winner they might uncover in their portfolio.  The hubris exhibited by the dot.com legions, the credit mavens, and the commodities speculators serves to lay the groundwork for investors to abandon their curiosity and withdraw from the game, altogether.

I don’t share that negativity.  First and foremost, confidence comes from process.  Acting in good faith and with prudent scientific methodology is a start.  Regaining, or building, trust is a solemn duty and begins with self awareness.  If one’s motives and methodology are legitimate, then control and results are likely to follow.  It is not sufficient to be part of a manic herd that follows rumor or mania.  Instead, we might try substituting scientific observation and common sense for hyperbole.

Today’s global marketplace, while hampered by negative fundamentals that we all acknowledge, is fertile ground for discovery in biosciences, agriculture, healthcare, infrastructure, technology, telecommunications, alternative energy, and consumer product innovation.

No amount of speculation can change the lifecycle of human ingenuity.

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