Quarterly Investment Update – 1st Quarter 2008
QUARTERLY INVESTMENT UPDATE
1 ST
QUARTER 2008
April 7, 2008
Dear Friends and Clients,
Wow, for eight long months now, a ferocious ‘credit crunch has trapped investors into a deep freeze. Not only stocks and real estate, but even some of the (reputedly) safest bonds and money market instruments fell victim to this deep freeze. The Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index was down 10% for the quarter ended March 31, 2008.
During the past 35 years, we experienced too many financial crises to count. From the Watergate scandal (1973-1974) to Jimmy Carter’s runaway inflation and skyrocketing interest rates (1979-1980) to the 1987 stock market crash; and then the S&L meltdown (1990), the Asian contasion (1998), the collapse of the Internet bubble (2000-2002) and finally, the subprime debacle (now). Always, it seemed that “the authorities” (primarily the Federal Reserve) were facing a new and complex threat that could have unraveled the whole financial system. Yet in the end, cooler heads prevailed and life went on. As long as we live and breathe, risk walks with us.
This investment business is full of paradoxes-truths that surprise, and even shock, because they appear to go against everything we thought we had learned in other areas of life. Take fear, for example. Most of us try to avoid scary situations if we can. And yet, in the financial markets, an all-enveloping sense of fear often signals a great buying opportunity. When fear prevails, as it does now, share prices for very good companies gets knocked down with the bad. Our job is to pinpoint those companies that will outlast the trouble and to buy these at fear-cheapened “value” prices.
As far as the current market environment is concerned, early in March, the stock markets put in a climatic low with much striking resemblance to the great bear market bottoms ofthe past. Then, on March 11th, the Federal Reserve unveiled a plan to lend certain banks as much as $200 billion of its own treasury bonds and bills for 28 days. The move raised hopes that it would ease the credit crisis that has caused financial markets to seize up. Several other Fed initiatives have helped prop up stocks since, including its bailout of Bear Stearns, which was purchased at a fire-sale price by J. P. Morgan Chase. Despite the flurry of bad news in recent weeks, stocks have been on a solid upward trend, in terms of volume and breadth, as well as percentage gains.
Let’s now take a look at the direction of the market for the remainder of 2008 and find out why we are now a few steps closer to the end of this troubled period for stocks and the economy.
First of all, we feel that the stock market’s relentless slide from the highs of last summer and autumn is clearly showing signs of exhaustion. In fact, it is quite possible that the “bottom” was reached on March 10, when the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index touched its closing low for the year at 1273.37. The number of individual stocks making new lows has shrunk dramatically, compared with the January 2008 and the August 2007 lows for the indexes. That is the typical pattern as the market carves out a major bottom. The indexes can’t go up until a lot of individual stocks stop going down, which is what’s happening now. This pattern continued throughout the end of the quarter where very few individual stocks were making new lows on the latest downward lunges.
Another indicator regarding the direction of the market is the massive cash reserves that are building up in money market funds. A recent article noted that investors have recently poured $3.4 trillion into money funds, the traditional parking spot for cash awaiting investment in the stock market. How significant is that figure? As a percent of the total market value of the S &P 500 Index, money fund assets now stand at virtually the same level as they did at the two historic stock market bottoms of the past quarter-century: in August 1982, when the great Reagan bull market began, and in March 2003, when the first bull market of the new millennium lifted off.
We feel that the pieces are falling into place for a much stronger stock market but we are not so naive as to think there won’t be any more shocks. There will be. We are in a critical stage right now for stocks as the markets carve out a durable base. We continue to feel that the Federal Reserve, so far, is doing all it can to balance low interest rates and high liquidity to keep economic growth at a sustainable rate but without allowing inflation to accelerate. But we don’t feel that there is too much more that can be done without inflation being a primary concern.
We continue to have a positive outlook for stocks but we will continue to take defensive measures and use any correction as an opportunity to buy more of our favorite stocks and mutual funds. We feel confident that we will have a very good year in all of our portfolios during 2008.
Again, thank you very much for the trust and confidence you have placed in our firm and it is always appreciated. Please contact me with any questions or comments.