Speaking of irrational exuberance, several of our clients have been interviewed in the national media
about whether our economy and financial markets
are heading into bubble territory.
Dr. Guy Baker, CFP, Ph.D founder of Wealth Teams Alliance (Irvine,
CA) said a bubble occurs whenever one sector of
the economy is doing much better than would be expected if it were not for a few
specific factors in play. “The dot-com boom became hyperextended because more
and more dollars were flowing into companies that had no viable economic record,”
added Baker a member of the Forbes 250 Top Financial Security Professionals List and author of The
Great Wealth Erosion, Manage Markets,
Not Stocks and Investment Alchemy. “The
gold rush mentality drove the urgency to not lose out. As a result, the value
of Internet companies soared and became a bubble,” observed Baker. “When the bubble
popped, only the strong survived. When we look at bubble thinking today, the
only real bubble driven by economics is cryptocurrency,” he added.
Regulatory
bubble
While some readers also pointed to meme stocks like GameStop, non-fungible
tokens and the boom in SPACs, Baker said he is more worried about another type of
bubble that most folks aren’t paying attention to – the government
regulation bubble. “We saw this in 2009-2010 when the government caused
disfunction in the mortgage market,” explained Baker. “Homebuyers were able to
qualify for mortgages based on nothing more than their signature and a statement
of ‘fact.’ The free money came home to roost when the economy slipped, and
these homeowners walked away from the houses leaving the lenders with an empty
house and an inflated value,” he added.
Baker
maintains that economic bubbles are part of the capitalistic system, and usually
isolated to the companies affected, but regulatory bubbles are not. “They are
dangerous and can cause huge damage to institutions and businesses,” he added.
So, how
can investors protect themselves from speculative investments related to economic
bubbles?
The
best way to protect yourself is through wide diversification, advised Baker,
adding that in a “well-balanced, smart portfolio” most of the companies that
would be “disasters when a bubble burst” will not be included in the mix. He
prefers ETFs and mutual funds that are well diversified. “It’s important not to
buy funds that do the same thing,” said Baker. “Also, stay away from funds that
say one thing and do another. Low turnover is a key metric to watch. Low
turnover means the portfolio managers are making good choices and sticking with
them. High turnover suggests the fund is chasing yield.”
Five stages of an economic bubble
In his landmark book Stabilizing an Unstable Economy (1986), economist
Hyman Minsky identified five stages in a typical credit cycle which follow the typical
stages of an economic bubble:
1. Displacement.
Investors get enamored by a new paradigm, such as an innovative new technology or interest rates
that are historically low.
2. Boom. The asset in question attracts
widespread media coverage. Fear of missing out (FOMO) on what could be a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity spurs more speculation, drawing an increasing
number of investors and traders into the fold.
3. Euphoria. Caution is thrown to
the wind, as asset prices skyrocket. Valuations reach extreme levels during
this phase as new valuation measures and metrics are touted to justify the relentless rise. The "greater
fool" theory plays out—the idea
that no matter how prices go, there will always be a market of buyers willing
to pay more.
4. Profit-Taking. Believing the bubble is about to burst, the smart money starts selling positions and taking profits. But estimating the exact time when a bubble is due to collapse can be a difficult exercise.
5. Panic. It only takes a
relatively minor event to prick a bubble, but once it is pricked, the bubble
cannot b reinflated. In the panic stage, asset prices reverse course and descend
as rapidly as they had ascended. Investors and speculators, faced with margin calls and
plunging values of their holdings, now want to liquidate at any price. As
supply overwhelms demand, asset prices slide sharply. Think the early days of
COVID or the 2008-09 global financial crisis.
Most think we’re
somewhere between Euphoria and Profit-Taking. But, as economist John Maynard
Keynes famously said: "the
markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent."
What’s your take? I’d like
to hear from you.
Conclusion
As billionaire value investor, Seth Klarman
likes to say: “At the root of all financial bubbles is a good idea carried
to excess.” Or as Warren Buffett always says: “Be fearful when people
are greedy and be greedy when people are fearful.” I’m not sure whether we’re
in a bubble or not, but like most things in life, the truth usually lies
somewhere between the extremes.
#economicbubble,
#irrationalexuberance, #investing, #diversification
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