
Where Is the Humility?
By Chris Puplava, December 9, 2009
Perhaps one of the greatest mistakes an investor can make is to remain entrenched in one’s thinking and subject themselves to “data mining” in which they only read and/or listen to news articles or data that supports their views. What is often in excess supply are opinions, and what always seems to be lacking is humility. Humility is perhaps one of the greatest assets an investor can have as you always have a sense of caution that you may be wrong and it allows you to step back and take an objective look at incoming data. These days it appears that the perma crowd (perma bulls AND perma bears) remain as embattled and entrenched as Republicans and Democrats. The question I have is, where is the middle ground? WHERE IS THE HUMILITY?
As famous investor John Templeton said, “Bull-markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.” The time to be a bear was in 2007 when market pundits envisioned nothing but blue skies ahead and when in early 2008 Fed Chairman Bernanke said the subprime fallout was “contained.” The time to have been a bull was late 2008 and early this year when we were in the pit of a crisis and it didn’t seem like things could get any worse. Back in 2007 I wrote several articles that went contrary to the consensus such as the following:
- Proceed With Caution (08/22/2007)
- Credit Erosion: The Worst Is Yet To Come (08/29/2007)
- Will Financials Be to This Bull Market and Economy What Tech Was to the Last? (09/05/2007)
Throughout 2008 I was incredibly bearish and suggested that the economy and stock market were heading further south, and the mantra I had was “sell strength.” However, things changed this year as the economy began to stabilize and the massive and unprecedented monetary stimulus by the Fed began to take effect. Even just after a few days of the market lows in March of this year I still felt that we were headed lower and I was absolutely dead wrong in my article, “Not out of the Woods Yet, Not By a Long Shot!” (03/11/09). However, at the end of the article I said that “A move by the S&P 500 above 800 would tend to invalidate the above analysis and I could be proven to be far too bearish.” I had to remain objective that I was far too bearish and followed famous economists John Maynard Keynes' example who gave the following response to criticism he received during the Great Depression for changing his mind on monetary policy when he said, “When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?”
All investors will be wrong at some point and the trick is to admit your error in judgment early rather than being a broken clock that is eventually right well down the road. Being wrong is human; being stubborn in the face of changing facts is foolishness. Another pearl of wisdom summing up this thought comes from famous investor Peter Bernstein who said the following after a long and successful investment career (emphasis added):
After 28 years at this post and 22 years before this in money management, I can sum up whatever wisdom I have accumulated this way: The trick is not to be the hottest stock-picker, the winning forecaster, or the developer of the neatest model; such victories are transient. The trick is to survive. Performing that trick requires a strong stomach for being wrong, because we are all going to be wrong more often than we expect. The future is not ours to know. But it helps to know that being wrong is inevitable and normal, not some terrible tragedy, not some awful failing in reasoning, not even bad luck in most instances. Being wrong comes with the franchise of an activity whose outcome depends on an unknown. Look around at the long-term survivors at this business and think of the much larger number of colorful characters who were once in the headlines, but who have since disappeared from the scene.
Remaining Objective
My fear at the present time is the polarization amongst the financial community in which both the perma bulls and the perma bears hold fast to their camps rather being an independent who will listen to both sides objectively. One of these camps will be painfully wrong heading into 2010 as the bears argue for fresh new lows in the market while the bulls argue for a 2-3 year cyclical rally in the stock market that carries us into 2011-2012. Perhaps the key for 2010 will be for investors to check their egos at the door and instead of “telling” the market what to do they should “listen” to what the market is telling them, being open to both the bullish and bearish viewpoints.
In the articles I write I always try to listen to what the economic and financial indicators are saying and then convey that message illustratively. In my article from last week I was taken to task by several readers for suggesting that the worst of the recession is behind us. However, taking an objective view of the economy I will go one step further and say the recession is over, though saying the recession is over and saying a robust recovery lies ahead are entirely two different stories.
Employment is one of the four primary indicators that the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER, the recession dating committee) uses in terms of dating recessions and expansions. Employment is key to economic activity as rising jobs leads to rising incomes and thus rising consumption and overall economic activity. As employment is a key indicator that NBER uses to date recessions I have developed two different employment recession indicators that suggest the recession is behind us and the NBER will likely declare the end of the recession sometime between May and August, with my personally leaning as either June or July of this year.
My first employment recession indicator has bottomed on the very month of the recession ends in four of the last six recessions, and it troughed in July of this year. The bottom in the indicator in this recession fell to the most negative value seen over the history of the indictor, though it has staged a dramatic reversal and is already in positive territory.
| Recession Ends | Employment Recession Indicator # 1 Bottom |
Leads (Months) |
Value |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nov-70 | Nov-70 |
0.0 |
-3.5 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mar-75 | Mar-75 |
0.0 |
-4.8 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Jul-80 | Jul-80 |
0.0 |
-4.1 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nov-82 | Apr-82 |
-7.0 |
-4.7 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mar-91 | Mar-91 |
0.0 |
-3.5 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nov-01 | Oct-01 |
-1.0 |
-3.9 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| N/A | Jul-09 |
N/A |
-6.3 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Average |
-1.3 |
-4.4
My second employment recession indicator often bottoms either one month before or after a recession ends, but has had several examples of bottoming 4-7 months ahead of a recession’s conclusion. Like the first indicator, the second employment recession indicator fell deep into negatively territory though it is on the verge of turning positive as the employment front has improved and is stabilizing. While the number of job losses is moderating, outright job gains will likely be anemic for some time given the excess supply of labor currently and the ability of companies to move employees from part-time to full-time employment rather than hire new workers.
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