Saturday, March 21, 2020

Double Shock


Double Shock

3/21/20

Investors looking to jump back in may be too early. The market went on sale this month, but only off of peak valuations. It is commensurate with the "value" most shoppers find at discount retailers and factory outlet malls. Inherent value is not equivalent to discounted prices.

And that is exactly what we are witnessing in the markets today. After a decade long post-2008 bull market driven by discounted rates, cheap money, a Fed put, and corporate buybacks, we are now seeing the deleveraging effect on the other side of the hill. It always falls off faster, quicker, and steeper than the climb up. And it will continue... in the short run. 

It will continue because the market is a function of 3 factors: (1) The supply of stock, (2) The demand for those shares, and (3) The economy. Global supply chains are frozen due to the Coronavirus, and the demand for non-essential products grinded to a halt. Companies across the globe are instituting their disaster plans. They are focused on preserving liquidity, not growing their companies. 

The supply of stock is not increasing as private companies are not even considering going public; but the supply of stock available for sale on the market is growing faster than the scary charts CNN is showing on the proliferation of the virus. This is partially driven by the near term outlook, a rush to liquidity over the uncertainty, fear from the prior banking crises, and forced selling from 401-Ks. Most Americans live paycheck to paycheck, so when their job prospects look grim, they must sell their equity portfolios regardless of valuations. 

True this is the environment Warren Buffet and other value investors love. True that valuations are certainly more reasonable today than at any time over the past few years. True that buyers today will perform well over the next decade if they buy and hold high quality shares. But the double supply and demand shock that is still in its infancy will prevail in the short term. 

A downside $150-$160/share EPS for the S&P 500 is reasonable given 1-2 quarters of material economic contraction. A downside multiple of 14x is possible. In 2008 it briefly dropped much lower, but interest rates are now at record lows, so spreads imply a more reasonable bear case S&P multiple. At 14x $150-$160, the downside for the S&P 500 in the double shock we are experiencing is 2,100-2,240. The S&P closed on Friday just over 2,300. We are getting close to attractive buying levels, but build your shopping list and wait a little longer. Do not be fooled by the intermittent pops from short term volatility.

     


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