Warren Buffet's hoarding of record amounts of liquid cash was questioned by market pundits, similar to that of every other economic peak. Predicting a recession triggered by a global pandemic was only predicted by a few (see Bill Gates TED speech). Nobody could accurately see the timing until the stories from Wuhan emerged, and many like Bridgewater's Dalio still refused to accept the inevitable spreading from forecasting models. Based on what we see in Italy and China, things could get worse but should still recover in 2020 if our political responses are effective. Trading based off healthcare related modeling could be difficult to those without industry experience, like most Wall Street investors.
My prediction is that the wild volatility of -9% followed by +9% trading days will continue as the institutional capital and algos react to news and margin calls, but the trend will continue down. When looking at the massive uncertainty over how long this could impact the economy, even the most realistic bullish case implies a still frothy market. I understand that valuations warrant a strong PE multiple when interest rates dropped to record lows. But the EPS on the S&P 500 can drop a lot more when the global economy (Main Street) just ground to a halt. Goldman predicted a menial 5% EPS hit to 2020 S&P earnings. I was not buying it. Then they lowered it 5% again to $157/share. They estimate the S&P could drop to 2,450 before rising to 3,200 by year end. I am not going to discuss the upside target for now. It is realistic should everything work out. However, let's focus on actionable trading for the next 3-6 months. Where should you start allocating? Ignoring individual positions, a realistic downside multiple on a recessionary outlook with super low rates could be 15x trough earnings.
We are starting to see some individual bargains too which can be picked up while recognizing the impact of extremely high correlations, indexing, and deleveraging when considering allocations.
Get your equity shopping lists ready!
Dan Shainberg#DanShainberg#RecessionResister@DanShainberg
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