Quarterly Update – 1Q19

The market peaked in early October, 2018, and came very close to the official 20% decline that defines an official “bear market.” The real issue is not the depth of the decline, but how long it takes to recover. After the market roared back (+13.06%) in the first quarter, we are nearly there.

Last quarter I shared a chart I use, that indicated the market was valued at 88% of fair value. Today, that reading is about 98%. There is a natural regression to fair value. We’re about where we are supposed to be, not cheap but not too expensive.

There has been a lot of talk in the media about the “yield curve” and what that means about recession risk. I wrote a blog post on the issue the day the curve inverted on March 22. Link here: https://www.daltonfin.com/2019/03/22/what-volatility-looks-like/.  Sure enough, the inversion was transient, with the 3-month T-Bill currently at 2.4% and the 10-year Treasury Note at 2.41%, virtually flat.

(Caution –  the next 2 paragraphs are on the wonky side)

The spread between the 10 and 2-Year Treasury is Worth Watching. When it goes negative, it is inverted.

The main problem with conventional yield curve analysis is that current conditions are a lot different from past circumstances, after 10 years of central bank intervention. The absolute level of interest rates has not been this low in any prior inversion analysis. To illustrate why this is important, consider an economy with no inflation. If the interest rate is the price of money, how much would you need to be paid to lend your money to the U.S. Federal Government? Now, add that rate to the expected inflation rate to get the level that the 3-month T-Bill should yield today in a normalized environment. Anything short of that is like a morphine drip to the economy. The Fed is trying to wean us, but that requires balancing the market’s tantrums (see December) which can become a self-fulfilling prophecy if a stock market decline causes a slow-down.

The Fed only controls the short end of the curve. The market controls the long end. When bond traders bet the Fed will cut rates, they buy the long end because interest rate changes compound and prices move inversely to rates. Increased demand on the long end causes long rates to fall. The greater concern is when the Fed starts cutting short rates. That signals trouble because they have more information than anyone else. What does the Fed do when they see trouble? They cut short rates to juice the economy. The problem is, there’s usually trouble on the horizon when that happens. The good news? That’s not the case today.

Volatility is the price of equity returns. We can manage risk if we understand your liquidity requirements. If we can anticipate distributions, we can reduce or eliminate the possibility of being forced to sell when the market is cheap. That’s what converts a temporary loss of capital a permanent loss.