Celebrating Our 40th Anniversary
It is said that 70%-90% of new businesses fail within a decade. Imagine our pride that the little investment business founded by Ralph Seger and Maury Elvekrog on July 29, 1981 will soon celebrate its 40th anniversary!
Allow me to share a trip down memory lane, 40 years of history in a 10-minute read. After successful careers as a chemical engineer and industrial psychologist, respectively, Ralph Seger and Maury Elvekrog took their hobby of stock investing to the next level. Both began working for a local investment firm and quickly realized their investment philosophy and client focus were more aligned with each other than with their employer. Seger-Elvekrog Inc. soon followed.
Imagine the boldness to start a new investment business in 1981 in the midst of back-to-back recessions and bear markets! In retrospect, it was a wonderful time, as the United States was on the cusp of a long bull market lasting almost two decades with only brief interruptions.
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May Investment Comments
In the first quarter the S&P 500 returned more than 6%, a respectable start building on last year’s impressive gains. All eyes remain focused on the vaccine rollout and how quickly the economy can reopen more fully. Uncertainty persists regarding the course of the pandemic given the emergence of more contagious strains of the virus, but happily trends are in the right direction. The U.S. is on track to vaccinate three-fourths of the population by late June, though achieving that number requires overcoming vaccine hesitancy. However, much of the world is further behind, with emerging-market countries on pace to have closer to 30% of their population vaccinated by year end. Regardless, vaccine progress continues and should serve as a strong tailwind through 2021.
Helped by vaccines and trillions of dollars in government support, expectations for growth have been improving. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently bumped its forecast for world economic growth this year to 6% from prior estimates of 5.5%. This would represent the fastest expansion in at least four decades. Closer to home, the IMF estimates U.S. growth at 6.4%, fully recovering last year’s 3.5% contraction and then some. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal anticipate momentum will continue into 2022 but slow to just over 3% growth. This would mark the strongest two-year growth in the U.S. since 2005.
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Bubble Fatigue
“People say that life is short, but it isn’t short. It’s very long.”
-Frank Abagnale
The battle cry of the modern speculator is “YOLO” meaning You Only Live Once. It is a kind of greedy twist on the “Carpe Diem” motto that Robin Williams invoked to motivate lackadaisical adolescent boys in Dead Poets Society. YOLO is obsessed with money—grab it all now before you die. People don’t yell “YOLO” when they give money to a charity or finish a challenging book. They could, but they don’t. They yell YOLO when they sink their annual bonus into cryptocurrency, or maybe when their broker approves a margin loan application. This greed is combined with a sort of nihilism—who cares if things don’t turn out how you’re hoping? In their view, living is doing outrageous things for a slim chance at a miraculous payday. I wonder what everybody will be yelling when it stops working?
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April Investment Comments
Government intervention has made it more difficult to read and predict economic tea leaves. Record low interest rates not only allowed homeowners to refinance their mortgages, but companies also refinanced their debt and increased their borrowings. This extended into “junk bonds” where yields edged below 4% before rising recently. Such a rate used to be reserved for only the most creditworthy companies, which were recently able to borrow for less than 1% on a short-term basis and less than 2% on a long-term basis.
Statistics for unemployment, retail sales, and personal income must now be interpreted in the context of stimulus payments and COVID-related restrictions on businesses. Retail sales fell a stunning 3% in the month of February compared to January. However, January was up 7.6% from December on a seasonally-adjusted basis that takes into account normal patterns like holiday spending. Government statisticians struggled to keep up, as the January surge was originally reported as a 5.3% gain.
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March Investment Comments
It is quite clear that as COVID-19 goes, so goes economic activity, which leads political response and tests the remarkable ability of people to adapt.
The path of the virus over the past few months is evident when examining what is surprisingly fairly solid economic data. Fourth quarter GDP grew 4%, capping a year that saw GDP fall 3.5% as large sectors of the economy, particularly travel and hospitality, were off limits to consumers. After COVID-19 case counts declined during the summer, a resurgence of the virus in the late fall and through the holidays spurred the reimposition of stay-at-home orders and retail closures for restaurants, gyms, and other gathering places. With less opportunity to move about, consumers still boosted their spending a respectable 2.5%, but this was short of what economists expected during the critical holiday season.
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Stick to the Plan
2020 was a very strange year for markets. Over the past year we likely set a record for the use of the word “unprecedented” on earnings calls. I suppose a pandemic combined with meaningful amounts of global monetary and fiscal support will do that. Going into 2020 analysts expected 5% revenue growth and 9% EPS growth, leading to an approximate 5% increase in the S&P 500. This was not particularly noteworthy, as the default estimate for growth in the S&P every year is a mid- to high-single-digit percentage gain. Though the final numbers for 2020 have yet to be counted, expectations are for a 1% revenue decline accompanied by a 13% drop in EPS, well below initial expectations. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 advanced by a better-than-expected mid-teens percentage. This goes to show the extreme difficulty in making forecasts, yet Wall Street continues to try.
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February Investment Comments
In 2020 governments around the world responded to COVID-induced economic shock with fiscal rescue policies that injected trillions of dollars into their economies and added similar amounts to sovereign debts. The Department of the Treasury’s Data Lab (datalab.usaspending.gov) recently estimated the total bill for U.S. fiscal relief at $2.6 trillion of stimulus plus $900 billion of tax relief, for a total of $3.5 trillion. That total grows closer to $4 trillion including the stimulus that President Trump signed in December.
On January 5, a surprise result in the Georgia Senate runoff turned what initially looked like a mixed U.S. election result into a “blue wave.” With a willing Congress behind him, President-Elect Joe Biden has promised to make more fiscal stimulus his top priority, proposing a $3 trillion stimulus and infrastructure plan.
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Trends Accelerating the Appeal of Roth Savings
Happy New Year! If you are like me, I bet you are glad to wave the year 2020 goodbye as it has been one of the saddest and strangest of times for our country. If you have lost a loved one or friend to COVID-19, please accept my condolences. Let us all wish for a speedy rollout of vaccines that bring this pandemic to a swift close.
As for the economy and investing, COVID-19 caused both predictable and surprising impacts. On the predictable side entire sectors of our economy, particularly hospitality and travel, fell into deep recession and will likely not reach 2019’s level of activity for years. Social distancing accelerated trends that were already in evidence such as buying online, remote work, and entertainment on demand via streaming. Shutting down the economy to fight the virus led to recession and a bear-market drop that registered more than 40%, ending the longest bull-market in history at eleven years.
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January Investment Comments
As we wrap up 2020 it is worth highlighting what a roller coaster year it was for the market. Midway through December the S&P 500 has advanced more than 13%, a result that appeared highly unlikely during late March when shares fell sharply on COVID-19 fears. However, the market is forward-looking and global support in the form of fiscal and monetary stimulus has helped drive markets higher since the spring. Currently, the prospect of further stimulus combined with the fastest development of a vaccine ever recorded has boosted investor optimism and provided hope that a return to a more normal environment is on the horizon.
While several vaccines are on the way, the U.K. was the first country to authorize the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, starting distribution on December 8th. U.S. health regulators authorized use of the same drug on December 11th with the first vaccinations taking place December 14th. Initial supplies of the vaccine are limited, but production is expected to increase meaningfully over the next several weeks. Pfizer shipped out three million doses initially with an expectation of 25 million doses available in the U.S. by yearend. Health workers are first in line for vaccinations followed by other higher-risk populations. Americans are expected to broadly be able to get the vaccine by the end of March
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Year-end Checklist
2020 will be remembered as a year like no other. A year that started out with a global pandemic and ended with a presidential election. A year that saw the stock market contract to bear market levels from record highs, only to rebound and set new record highs. However, with all the unexpected changes around us, one important task remains constant, year-end financial planning. As always this will help you better organize your financial health and start off the New Year on the right foot. Here are some key topics to consider addressing.
Gifting strategies
Whether you give to a loved one or to a charitable organization that is close to your heart, ‘tis the season of giving gifts. If you choose to give a gift to an individual, keep in mind that gifts up to $15,000 per person are allowed under the annual gift tax exclusion. Consider gifting assets that have the greatest potential for appreciation in order to optimize the tax savings.
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December Investment Comments
The election season is almost over, with a few disputes remaining to be resolved along with several incomplete congressional elections. Control of the Senate is up in the air, with 50 Republicans and 48 Democrats seated and two runoff races in Georgia set for early January.
Voters opted for divided rule. Democrats picked up the White House and at least one Senate seat, and retained control over the House. Republicans added one governorship and several state legislatures, sharply narrowed Democrats’ majority in the House, and likely retained a slim majority in the Senate. Neither party has run the table; both parties will have to work together to accomplish anything. This setup increases the odds of cooperation, moderation, and stability, a rarity in these partisan times.
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Provident Technology
From time to time, I like to update clients as to what is happening behind the scenes here at Provident. We’ve made a number of technology changes over the past year or so, and you might find it interesting to learn how things gradually evolve here. We are not “early adopters” of technology. We tend to wait a bit and let others work out the kinks on brand new offerings.
The impetus for this piece is an important change to our client accounting system. After almost 22 years with PortfolioCenter, we are switching to Tamarac Reporting. PortfolioCenter was a reliable software package, but began to show its age in recent years as owner Charles Schwab Corp. seemed to stop investing in it.
About two years ago, Schwab sold the PortfolioCenter business to Envestnet/Tamarac, a publicly-traded software company focused on the investment industry. The buyer had been using PortfolioCenter as the backbone of its own online portfolio accounting software, and was the logical buyer when Schwab wanted to exit that business.
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November Investment Comments
We have a long way to go, but so far the post-COVID economy looks surprisingly robust. If colder weather does not bring a resurgence of the virus, then it feels safe to say that we are firmly on the road to economic recovery.
From peak to trough, U.S. GDP contracted by 10%, the third largest decline since at least 1910. The second-quarter average was -9%. More recently, September’s unemployment report published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics measured unemployment at 7.9%, down from a peak of 14.7% in April. This probably overstates the rebound slightly, as the labor force participation rate ticked down to 61.4% and is about 2% below its pre-pandemic levels. Some workers have stayed on the sidelines and aren’t counted as unemployed.
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Instrument Flying
To say this has been an interesting year for the market would be an understatement. After the swoon in March due to the pandemic, we recovered the entirety of the downturn and then some. There have been only a few market declines of similar magnitude over such a short timeframe, and the abruptness of the snapback has surprised many, especially given what are likely to be longer-lasting effects on the economy from COVID-19. To be certain, fiscal and monetary stimulus have played a significant role in supporting the economy and aiding the market’s recovery. Interest rates have declined, helping make the case for higher P/E multiples. Lower interest rates reduce the rate at which future cash flows are discounted, raising asset prices in general. However, while a portion of the recent rebound in stock prices looks to be justified, it has been accompanied by some harder-to-explain moves in certain individual stocks, and for that matter certain other assets.
Though more traditionally discussed in relation to bonds, the concept of “duration” similarly applies to stocks. Duration is a measure of the weighted average of when investors receive their cash flows. Though the risk profiles generally differ, stocks and bonds are fundamentally similar. Each produces a stream of cash flows; however, unlike bonds, which have contracted payments over preset intervals, the “payment” on stocks is less certain. Assets that are longer duration are more sensitive to movements in interest rates, deriving greater benefit from lower rates and alternatively selling off more when rates rise. Stocks generally have a longer duration than bonds, and among stocks durations will differ as a result of the anticipated cash flows.
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October Investment Comments
While the economy had a rough time in the first half of 2020, the recovery since stay-at-home orders began lifting has been much swifter than expected. GDP contracted at an annualized rate of 31.7% in the second quarter but since June has rebounded strongly. As of September 16th, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow third quarter GDP estimate calls for annualized growth of 31.7%. Continued recovery will depend on the rate of new COVID-19 cases that, for the most part, have continued to decline, encouraging states to loosen restrictions on service-based businesses such as restaurants and gyms.
Other economic indicators confirm the recovery while at the same time differentiating the impact of COVID-19. The August Institute for Supply Management index of manufacturing rose to 56 from 54.2 in July, extending its rebound since the 41.5 level of March (above 50 signifies growth, lower than 50 contraction). Commerce Department figures show that monthly spending on goods for July is 6.1% above February’s peak level while spending on services has fallen 9.3%. This dichotomy reflects pent-up demand for goods that would have been purchased during business lockdowns while also reflecting the inability and/or lack of desire of consumers to purchase services like air travel, restaurant meals and haircuts.
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Deflation and Modern Monetary Theory
As an investment advisor I worry about inflation a lot. Besides political revolution, no other force turns rich people into poor people as quickly and as surely as inflation. If your income is fixed by a pension or annuity formula which doesn’t escalate along with the cost of living, or if most of your money is tied up in long-term bonds with low yields, then your means will shrink at the pace of inflation. A few consecutive years of double-digit inflation can turn a comfortable retirement into a marginal one if your portfolio does not own enough real assets to defend against it.
Happily, inflation has been predictable and tame for almost 40 years. Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation has not advanced at a double-digit annual pace since 1981. It has not even been as high as 5% since 1990. Many analysts believe that the CPI’s methodology understates the “true” rate at which prices rise. I agree, but the magnitude of the understatement is probably no more than 1% per year. Buttering another 1% onto the price level annually certainly adds up over time, but it does not change the fact that we have recently enjoyed an era of extraordinarily stable fiat money.
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September Investment Comments
Uncertainty makes people uncomfortable, and there is plenty of uncertainty to go around. The virus continues to stubbornly stick around; we don’t know how widely it will spread if schools and colleges are opened to in-person learning; we don’t know if one or more vaccines will be effective; and then there is an election this fall in case you haven’t heard.
It is said, “The market runs from uncertainty.” Yet the S&P 500 and NASDAQ indexes just reached all-time records. The Dow Jones Industrials Average is about 5% below its all-time high while the Russell 2000 index of small stocks is 8% below its high. Stock indexes at all-time highs don’t sound like a market running from uncertainty!
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Overcoming a Job Loss
In these unprecedented times, nearly 40 million Americans have lost their jobs in a span of eight weeks. That is more job losses than the last recession saw over two years.
The loss of a job can be a nerve-racking experience, leaving a person with feelings of sadness, anger, and depression. Mourning a job loss is normal; for many it means the loss of their identity and lifestyle. Many professionals feel that other than the death of a close family member or going through a divorce, the loss of a job is probably the single most traumatic event of a lifetime.
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August Investment Comments
“If you see that kind of disconnect, it doesn’t go on indefinitely. Those normally will get reconciled, and this will too.”
These were the words of Federal Reserve Board Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan when interviewed by CNBC on July 13th. He was referring to the disconnect between the financial markets, with an upbeat view of the future, and the performance of the economy, which remains under stress. The question for investors, of course, is will the markets move towards the economy or the economy towards the markets?
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The Challenge of Predicting the Short Term
Large swings in the market this year have led to an increasing focus on near-term market calls. Correctly call the next meaningful move in the market and your fortune awaits! The S&P 500 reached an all-time high in February before falling over one-third in five short weeks on the back of fears about COVID-19. In response to support from the Federal Reserve and Congress, shares then rallied significantly, up over 40% from the lows and now just under 10% below the highs reached in February. The ecosystem that has been built up around the market has always encouraged activity, with everything from tailored ETFs to play specific themes to countdown clocks and recommended “halftime trades” on CNBC. This persists because many players depend on activity in order to make money. The appeal is obvious—the chance to get rich quick. After all, anybody who correctly called the gyrations in the first six months of 2020 would have pocketed years’ worth of gains.
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