UNDERSTANDING MARKET CYCLES

Importance of Market Cycles in Investing

How to assess where we currently stand in the market cycle and adjust portfolio positions accordingly

Importance of Market Cycles

Mastering the Market Cycle: Getting the Odds on Your Side by Howard Marks

The Rationale for Utilizing an Understanding of Market Cycles

Passive investing in S&P 500 Index is the best option for average investors

But to aim for a higher return, utilizing an understanding of market cycles may be the easiest option

An Analysis of 94-Year S&P 500 Returns Data

S&P 500 Index annual return deviations vs. the 94-year average of 7.97%
A table of interesting S&P 500 returns data over 94 years (1928~2021)

What We Can Take Away From This Analysis

  • In any year, the S&P 500 return tends to deviate substantially from an expected long-term average return
  • While the S&P 500 returns tend to deviate substantially, a large portion of those deviations tend to be to the upside rather than to the downside. More concretely, we had quite a many years with return greater than +20%, but very few with less than -20%. In other words, the S&P 500 Index returns distribution seems quite skewed to the upside!
  • Long-term investing (rather than short-term trading) is in your favor because the market tends to rise in the long term at roughly 10% a year on average, even if you don’t do anything other than stay invested
  • Short-term tendency of the market to deviate greatly from the average is also in your favor because a large portion of those deviations are to the upside rather than down
  • If you don’t do anything about short-term swings and invest 100% passively in the long term, your average annual return will be equal to the roughly 10% average return of S&P 500
  • But if you want to outperform the average, you need to be more active
  • How? You can use an understanding of how market cycles work to minimize your losses in times of big market corrections — which tend to be not very often — and try to maximize your returns by taking advantage of such corrections
  • The general tendency of the market is already in your favor. You just need to know how to improve the odds even more to your side

How Market Cycles Work

What is a Market Cycle?

While the market tends to rise in the long run along a long-term trend line, in the short term (and much less frequently even in the longer term), it is subject to volatile swings, often triggered by fundamental factors and pushed to extremes by psychological factors.

Various Cycles Together Influence The Market Cycle

  • Long term trend represented by average GDP growth rate
  • Short term swings in growth created by various factors including credit (money supply) and human psychology (e.g. wealth effect)
  • Long term trend represented by average profit growth rate
  • Short term swings in profits created in large part by degree of operating leverage (% fixed cost) & financial leverage (% debt), which can be affected by various factors including business prospects and psychology
  • Long term trend represented by average level of credit availability
  • Short term swings in credit availability & money supply influenced greatly by the general mood of the economy, market participants’ psychology, and very importantly, the central bank’s monetary policy (easing vs. tightening)
  • Long term trend represented by average rate of stock market return
  • Short term swings in market price affected by a complex inter-workings of various other cycles (including all of the above) and of course, psychological factors

The Effect of Psychology on the Degree of Market Swings

Because markets are heavily influenced by psychological factors in addition to quantifiable fundamentals & events, the markets have swings that shoot up enormously in times of growth with the added effects of euphoria and then crash down enormously in times of contraction with the added effects of panic, far beyond levels that would be justified solely by the actual fundamentals.

So What Causes the Ups & Downs of Market Cycles?

The phases of a market cycle: Recovery/Growth -> Euphoria -> Slowdown/Contraction -> Panic
  • The Quantitative — the fundamentals & events (e.g. GDP growth rate, unemployment rate, corporate profits, breakout of a war, …)
  • The Qualitative — the psychology (e.g. wealth effect, FOMO, panics, …)

Assessing Where We Are in the Current Market Cycle

  • In a bubble, investors should turn cautious and cash out exisiting profits to get ready for a potential market collapse and adjust their portfolio positions by reducing market exposure and preparing more cash
  • In a panic, investors should turn aggressive to take advantage of the low price levels by using the cash positions prepared during the bubble to load up on the many bargains that have become available

How Do We Know We Are In a Bubble?

Signs of Bubble from Past Bubbles

The Tech Bubble (late 1990s ~ 2000)

  • A burst in the number of new & hot internet companies being started and going public with very high valuations because it was in the “internet” business
  • Continued shoot up in the price of many internet companies with no meaningful revenue or profits (price doesn’t matter mantra)
  • Everyone going crazy about anything that has the word “internet” in it

The Housing Bubble (mid 2000s ~ 2007)

  • People with no income and no job taking excessive mortgages to own not just one, but several houses (sign of absurdity)
  • Banks didn’t care to truly assess the underlying risks of all the complex financial derivative products created and sold with the ever-expanding housing market because everyone just kept buying them like maniacs, creating an enormous cash flow and profit party for the banks
  • Even the major credit ratings institutions (S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch) all gave AAA ratings to securities with underlying subprime mortgages just because they were “diversified” and because the banks would otherwise “go to their competitor for the ratings” (sign of absurdity)
  • Major leaders of the finance industry and even government figures like the Secretary of Treasury and even the Fed chair all assuring the market that “times are so good” and that “it’s hard to see a recession coming” even as the banks were immersed in the maniac-like sales of the mortgage derivatives

Signs of Bubble from the Current Market Cycle

The 2nd Tech Bubble — Blockchain, Crypto, NFT, Metaverse, AI, EV, Mobile, Platforms, etc.(~early 2022)

  • A burst in the number of new & hot blockchain/crypto/NFT/EV/platform companies being started and going public with very high valuations because they are “blockchain”, “NFT”, or “tech companies”
  • A burst in the number of new & hot coin offerings and valuation of many coins going over tens of billions of dollars with most coin investors having no idea how exactly blockchain works or what the coins really are
  • Continued shoot up in the price of most coins, NFTs, and tech companies with no meaningful revenue or profits (price doesn’t matter mantra)
  • Coins that were created by some developers as a “joke” — e.g. Doge coin — and even those created as a joke on top of other jokes — e.g. Shiba Inu coin —being valued at tens of billions of dollars (sign of absurdity)
  • Random selfies taken by a student in Indonesia being sold in total for $1 million after being made into NFTs, with the seller saying that he is happy to have earned a lot of money, but doesn’t understand why people would buy them at such high prices — https://www.businessinsider.com/indonesia-student-makes-a-million-selling-expressionless-selfies-as-nfts-2022-1 (sign of absurdity)
  • Mainstream Wall Street and government institutions who have rejected the coins as “scam” just a couple years ago now accepting them as a new “asset class”, without any better understanding of the underlying technology or the future growth implications of the networks other than the fact that the coin prices have shot up absurdly
  • Everyone going crazy about anything that has the word “blockchain”, “crypto”, “NFT”, “metaverse”, “AI”, “EV”, “growth” in it

Conclusion

The Single Most Important Sign of the Market Turning Points

The Role of the Federal Reserve

The Importance of Money Supply

BONUS: My Personal View of the Current Market Cycle (~2022)

If we disregard that skinny vertical line indicating the “fake” recession for 2020, we technically haven’t had a recession since 2010. That is the longest period of expansion since The Great Depression (1929). Also, note the degree of growth between 2010 ~ 2021. It’s simply amazing. Source: macrotrends.net (https://www.macrotrends.net/2324/sp-500-historical-chart-data)

Reference

  • Mastering the Market Cycle: Getting the Odds on Your Side by Howard Marks
  • S&P 500 Index annual return data from slickcharts.com

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Investor | Trader | Software Engineer | CEO, LDH Group Inc. (ldhgroup.com)

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