by Lance Roberts, Clarity Financial
On Monday, the markets broke out, again, to all-time highs. This is not surprising and something that I noted over the weekend. To wit:Â
âStepping back from the sector-specific action, if you only looked at the S&P 500 to judge what was happening in the markets, you wouldnât suspect anything was wrong.â
âThe market breakout remains intact currently with support at 2400 holding firm. The bullish trend line, which also intersects at 2400 remains critically important as the secondary buy/sell signal remains in positive territory. The only negative currently, despite improvement, is the âweekly sell signal-1â remains triggered which keeps us on âalert.â (It is also worth noting both signals remain at VERY high levels which suggest current upside remains somewhat limited.)
You can understand why more and more commentary is beginning to succumb to the âsirenâs songâ of why âthis time is different.â Whether it is terrorist attacks, poor economic data, geopolitical tensions, or plunging oil prices, the market has continued its advance. It certainly seems to be âbulletproof.ââÂ
Last week, we added additional exposure for the second time since the âbreakoutâ occurred.
Not surprisingly, I have gotten many emails questioning the addition given the current extension, over valuation and excess bullishness in the market. I can certainly understand the confusion. Buying âbreakoutsâ is a function of participating in a momentum driven market and clearly âmomentumâ is in full swing currently. As I discussed with one of the firmâs clients on Friday, while the long-term return outlook is not favorable, in the short-term we have to invest in order to create returns when opportunities exist. In this regard, we buy âbreakoutsâ when they are confirmed, as the recent breakout has been, because ânew highs tend to lead to further new highs.âÂ
Despite, one news headline to the next, the market has continued to push higher and last weekâs test of âsupport,â set the market up for Mondayâs move to ânew highs.â While sustainability remains key, we remain invested currently with very tight stops, and some hedges, already in place.
But it is in that inherent breakout that we continue to see the rise of exuberance over the reality of fundamentals.
âThere is very little concern about the risk being taken on by investors currently without any regard for the underlying risk as they chase âyield and return.ââ
âThe forgotten piece of this âfairytaleâ is that RISK = How much you LOSE when you are wrong.Â
Currently, the risk/reward ratio is currently heavily skewed against investors in both the short, intermediate and long-term outlook.â
The Evaporation Of Risk
As stated, the word âRISKâ is not normally associated with positive outcomes.
I was visiting with a new client of the firm last week who had just transferred over from one of the âbig boxâ financial firms. Of course, as usual, she began to regurgitate the media-driven myths of how she was a âlong termâ investor, how she was diversified and that she was willing to ride out the âwigglesâ in the market.
It takes me only a couple of questions to quickly derail these myths.
- What did you do in 2001-2002 and/or 2008?
- How did you feel?
- Are you willing to do that again?
Since the âdot.comâ bust, when I began asking those questions, I have NEVER had anyone tell me:
- I sold near the top and bought near the bottom. (Sell High/Buy Low)
- It was a truly terrific experience watching half of my money disappear.Â
- Absolutely, just tell me when so I can get some popcorn.
In this particular case, she happened to be an avid âpoker playerâ and enjoyed going to Las Vegas for a âfew handsâ at the tables.
Poker is an extremely easy comparison to investing as the general rules of risk management apply to both. The conversation was quick.
âDo you go âall inâ on every hand your are dealt?âÂ
âOf course, notâ she responded.
âWhy not?â
âBecause I will lose all my money,â she said.
âYou say that with a lot of certainty. Why?â
âWell, I am not going to win every hand, so if I bet everything, I will certainly lose everythingâ she stated.
âCorrect. So why do you invest that way?â
ââŠâŠâŠâŠ.SilenceâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠ.â
The issue of ârisk,â as stated above, whether it is in the financial markets or a hand of poker is the same. Â It is simply how much money you lose when the âbetâ you made goes wrong.
In poker, most individuals can not calculate the odds of drawing a winning hand. However, while they may not know the odds of drawing a âfull houseâ in a 7-card poker hand is just 2.6%, they do know the odds of âwinningâ with such a hand are fairly high. Therefore, they are comfortable betting heavier on that particular hand.
But when it comes to investing, they are comfortable betting the retirement savings on a market which, at current valuation levels, has a long history of delivering less than optimistic results. I have shown you the following chart before, and statistically speaking the odds simply arenât in your favor.
Despite this simple reality, investors continue to chase stocks as if future returns over the next 10-years will be as profitable as the last 10-years. This most likely will not be the case.
Yet, the âevaporation of riskâ continues to accelerate as the market seemingly becomes ever more immune to âbad news,â or should I just say ânews.â
The S&P 500 P/E to VIX ratio is also elevated to levels that have normally warned that you are betting on a losing hand.
The issue of understanding risk/reward is the single most valuable aspect of managing a portfolio. Chasing performance in the short-term can seem to be a profitable venture, just as if hitting a âhot streakâ playing poker can seem to be a âno loseâ proposition.
But in the end, the âhouse always winsâ unless you play by the rules.
8-Rules Of Poker:
1) You need an edge
As Peter Lynch once stated:
âInvesting without research is like playing stud poker and never looking at the cards.â
There is a clear parallel between how successful poker players operate and those who are generally less sober, more emotional, and less expert. The financial markets are nothing more than a very large poker table where your job is to take advantage of those who allow emotions to drive their decisions and those who âbet recklesslyâ based on âhopeâ and âintuition.â
2) Develop an expertise in more than one area
The difference between winning occasionally and winning consistently in the financial markets is to be able to adapt to the changing market environments. There is no one investment style that is in favor every single year â which is why those that chase last years performing mutual funds are generally the least successful investors over a 10 and 20 year period.
As the great Wayne Gretzky once said:
âI skate where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.â
3) Figure out why people are betting against you.
âWe know nothing for certain.â We know what a companyâs business is today, maybe even what they are most likely to do in the coming months. We can determine whether the price of its stock is trending higher or lower. But in the grand scheme of things, we donât know much. In fact, we are closer to knowing nothing than to knowing everything, so letâs just round down and be done with it.
Managing a portfolio for âwhat we donât knowâ is the hardest part of investing. With stocks, we have to always remember that there is always someone on the other side of the trade. Every time some fund manager on television encourages you to âbuy,âsomeone else has to be willing to sell those shares to you. Why are they selling? What do they know that you donât?
3) Donât assume you are the smartest person at the table.Â
When an investment meets your objectives, be willing to take some profits. When it begins to break down, hedge the risk. When your reasons for buying have changed, be willing call it a day and walk away from the table.
4) It often pays to pass, and 5) Know when to quit and cash in your chips
Kenny Rogers summed this up best:
âIf youâre gonna play the game, boyâŠYou gotta learn to play it right â Youâve got to know when to hold âem. Know when to fold âem. Know when to walk away.  Know when to run. You never count your money when youâre sittinâ at the table. Thereâll be time enough for countinâ when the dealinâs done.â
This is the hardest thing for individuals to do. Your portfolio is your âhandâ and there are times that you have to get rid of bad cards (losing positions) and replace them with hopefully better ones. However, even that may not be enough. There are times that things are just working against you in general and it is time to walk away from the table.
All great investors develop a risk management philosophy (a sell discipline) and combining that with a set of tools to implement that strategy. This increases the odds of success by removing the emotional biases that interfere with investment decisions. Just as a professional poker player is disciplined with his craft, a disciplined strategy allows for the successful navigation of a fluid investment landscape. A disciplined strategy no only tells you when you to âmake a bet,â but also when to âwalk away.â
6) Know your strengths AND your weaknesses & 7) When you canât focus 100% on the task at hand â take a break.
Two-time World Series of Poker winner Doyle Brunson joked a bit about his book with which he had thrown around two alternative ideas for titles before going with âSuper/Systemâ. The first was âHow I made over $1,000,000 Playing Poker,â and the second equally accurate idea was, âHow I lost over $1,000,000 playing Golf.â
The larger point here is that invariably there will be things in life that you are good at, and there are things you are much better off paying someone else to do.
Many investors believe they can manage money effectively on their own â and they are likely right as long as they are in a cyclical bull market. Of course, this idea is equivalent to being the only person seated at a poker table and the dealer deals all the cards face up. You might still lose a hand every now and then, but most likely you are going to win.
8) Be patient
Patience is hard. Most investors want immediate gratification when they make an investment. However, real investments can take years to produce their real results, sometimes, even decades. More importantly, as with playing poker, you are not going to win every hand and there are going to be times that nothing seems to be âgoing your wayâ. But that is the nature of investing; no investment discipline works ALL of the time. However, it is sticking with your discipline and remaining patient, provided it is a sound discipline to start with, that will ultimately lead to long-term success.
Those are the rules. Play by them and you have a better chance of winning. Donât and you will likely lose more than you can currently imagine. As the old saying goes:
âIf you look around the poker table and canât spot the pigeon, itâs probably you.âÂ
Lance Roberts
Lance Roberts is a Chief Portfolio Strategist/Economist for Clarity Financial. He is also the host of âThe Lance Roberts Showâ and Chief Editor of the âReal Investment Adviceâ website and author of âReal Investment Dailyâ blog and âReal Investment Reportâ. Follow Lance on Facebook, Twitter and Linked-In
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