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Graham Macdonald MBMG International Ltd. Nominated for the Lorenzo Natali Prize |
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What to do?
Many people were more than a tad surprised when Alan
Greenspan, economist and former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, stated
recently that share prices were “relatively low”. This is especially so given
that the S&P 500 index has produced returns of around 160% since the bad old
days of early 2009.
It must be admitted though this was from an incredibly low starting point. It is
also interesting to note that Greenspan’s comments are actually supported by the
Fed model, a valuation method that this great institution developed during his
time as chairman.
What this model does is to basically compare earnings estimates to treasury
yields and, working on this basis, the potential return from equities is still
favourable compared to bonds. “Equity premiums are still at a very high level,
and that means that the momentum of the market is still ultimately up,”
Greenspan said.
The present rally is very much driven by the wall of money hitting markets fresh
off the QE presses which are run by the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of
Japan as well as a host of other countries. Even though things might look like
they are a bit bubbly at the moment, there seems to be no good reason to fight
against the momentum that is currently happening. In fact, riding the tide does
not only seem to be less risky than perceived, but actually the right thing to
do as things stand at the moment. The only thing to remember is to remain very
liquid so that when things start on the downward trend you can get out quickly.
It sometimes is very hard, when managing money based on fundamental factors, to
distinguish between how logic dictates how markets should behave and how they
are likely to behave. Thus, at present, it does not really matter whether you
believe the right thing is being done by printing more money or not, as the fact
is it is happening anyway.
The wise course of action, at the moment, is to focus on which areas within
liquidity driven risk asset markets to be exposed to, as the divergence in
returns up to now, combined with differing factors driving specific markets, has
left massive disparities between valuation levels.
The chart on this page compares a few indices in Dollars over various periods
and shows that the S&P is one of very few markets that have actually reached new
highs and erased the losses that resulted from the Global Financial Crisis.
Even though the allocation decision remains the largest driver of returns, the
potential for alpha generation (especially in Global Equity Funds) is currently
massive in my opinion - this is not the time to be hugging benchmarks.
This is not to say that whatever underperformed will necessarily outperform
going forward; it only aims to illustrate how dispersed returns can be over
specific periods of time when comparing apples with apples (i.e. all in same
currency) and even though correlations between different equity markets are
perceived to be high, the direction might be the same whilst the quantum of
gains and losses are not related. Basically, equities are not a bad thing to be
in at the moment but, as stated above, remain liquid.
The above data and research was compiled from sources
believed to be reliable. However, neither MBMG International Ltd nor its
officers can accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the
above article nor bear any responsibility for any losses achieved as a
result of any actions taken or not taken as a consequence of reading the
above article. For more information please contact Graham Macdonald on
[email protected] |
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