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The Popularity Contest in Mega Caps

August 28, 2020 by Jon

The popularity contest is alive and well in the stock market. The S&P 500 is at all-time highs, up 9.2% year to date. That’s total return, by the way. If that seems surprising in any way, you’re not alone.

On the surface, one might conclude that we’re in a raging bull market. The enthusiasm, the speculation, the day trading…all the ingredients are there.

A more nuanced answer is that there’s a bull market in a handful of names hiding a bear market in many more.

The largest companies in the S&P are performing exceptionally better than the rest. So much so, that it’s having an outsized impact on the index. The numbers are mindboggling really. Continue Reading…

Peter Bernstein: Lessons from Long Run Market Returns

August 26, 2020 by Jon

Long term stock market performance can be deceptively misleading. It can often lead to costly assumptions by investors.

The first issue is that no one ever experiences the long run. That is unless you began investing in 1871 or 1926 or whatever year is the currently accepted start of “reliable data.”

Next is the vast difference in the industry breakdown of markets today versus the past. Railroads and banks dominated markets in the late 1800s/early 1900s. How relevant are those returns to today? Industries like technology and healthcare didn’t exist a century ago. The rest was a sliver of the overall market.

Then there’s the problem with averages. The long-run average return smooths out and hides the extreme experiences investors face in the short term. The nature of markets is far less certain than its long-run average return projects. Surprises abound.

Finally, how long is long enough for long-run data to be reliably useful? For instance, there’s been nine (or is it ten now?) bull markets since 1926. What kind of conclusions can we draw from a sample size of nine? That bull markets come in all shapes and sizes seems to be the best conclusion so far.

Peter Bernstein came to similar conclusions in 1974 after auditing a century of stock market performance. However, he didn’t write off long term performance entirely. He shared a few lessons that should help when making assumptions about the future. Continue Reading…

How Much is “Likely” and Other Issues with Probabilities

August 21, 2020 by Jon

In most games of chance, the odds are easily figured out. You can calculate the odds in advance for coin flips, dice throws (craps, backgammon), or a spin of the roulette wheel because each has a fixed set of outcomes.

Now take a game like the stock market. Calculating odds gets trickier because it adds complexity and uncertainty. The outcomes are no longer fixed and the number of variables to consider grows exponentially.

Unfortunately, human nature makes this worse. It turns out, we’re terrible at estimating probabilities. Our biases get in the way.

Our troubles begin with availability. A simple rule of thumb tells us to put higher odds on something that happens more often. Unless we have trouble remembering how often that something really happens.

The availability bias screws with how we estimate probabilities. When we weigh the probability of an event happening, our estimate is based on how easily we remember a similar event and how often we remember it happening. Unfortunately, how easily we recall something has more to do with recency, vividness, and personal involvement. Continue Reading…

Paper Shuffling to Fool Investors

August 14, 2020 by Jon

I have nothing against a stock split. I did two in the Sixties, but this is really a non-event… It’s really paper shuffling. — Henry Singleton, CEO Teledyne

Mathematically, nothing changes with a stock split. The number of outstanding shares increase in proportion to the split, but the share price decreases in an inverse proportion.

In other words, a 2-for-1 stock split doubles the share count but halves the stock price. The market cap stays the same. So if the company was “expensive” before the split, it’s still expensive afterward. Thus, the paper shuffling.

And yet, companies still do it because they believe there’s a benefit. But why?

The latest announcement by Apple might shed some light. Its press release claims a stock split will “make the stock more accessible to a broader base of investors.”

That appears to be a popular answer. Similar responses have been used throughout history. Continue Reading…

How the Ferris Wheel Went from Innovation to Fad to Deep Value Play

August 14, 2020 by Jon

The 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago needed a centerpiece attraction. It had to be novel, different. Daniel Burnham wanted something to rival Gustave Eiffel’s tower built for the 1889 Exposition in Paris.

Proposals came in from everywhere. Everyone had the same mindset — a bigger tower. A log tower 500 feet taller than Eiffel’s, a telescoping tower, and an 8,947-foot tower with an elevator to the top and toboggans to get down were proposed. Even Eiffel submitted a larger version of his tower for the fair. It was denied.

Burnham wanted something unique. So he challenged American engineers to come up with something spectacular.

George Washington Gale Ferris Jr. accepted the challenge. The idea came to him in a momentary flash. He envisioned a giant steel “bicycle” wheel, 250 feet in diameter carrying 36 cars that could hold 60 people each. A complete revolution of his wheel would propel 2,160 people around in 20 minutes. Continue Reading…

Hindsight Bias: I Knew It All Along, Even Though I Didn’t

August 7, 2020 by Jon

Did you expect a market crash in 2020?

How bad did you think the market crash would be?

How quickly did you think the market would recover?

Are you sure that’s what you thought?

Our minds play tricks on us. The worst part is knowing about it doesn’t help. Hindsight bias is one such trick that messes with our memories in a couple of different ways.

  • We tend to look back on our past predictions as being more accurate than they were.
  • We tend to look back on events as being more foreseeable than they were at the time.

Richards Heuer, in Psychology of Intelligence Analysis, related a couple of examples. Continue Reading…

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