We have happened upon that time in the investment cycle when investors vastly
eschew active management of their assets in favor of a more passive management
style. In fact, I read recently 461 Hedge Funds, a hallmark of active investment
management, shut their doors in the first half of this year alone. If liquidations
continue at that rate, they'll outpace the 1,023-closure record from 2009.
All signs now indicate that active management has fallen out of vogue.
And why wouldn't it? Index funds have done very well these past few years;
whereas active managers have underperformed the major averages. The problem
is when everyone piles into or out of the same investment philosophy, it usually
signals it's time to change course. Therefore, I predict the tides will soon
change and active management will make a huge comeback.
Passive investing, such as Index mutual funds, is an easily understood investing
style that allows you to access broad segments of the market. Indexing has
been called investing on autopilot. This is a strategy that tends to work well,
until it doesn't. Take the mid to late 90's, when it appeared the stock market
would always go up. Everyone from your hairdresser to the cab driver was a
stock genius. New websites such as the Motley Fool preached that you didn't
need an investment advisor--just buy a broad basket of stocks (especially in
the technology sector) and you would get rich. And, if got out before March
10, 2000, you were all set.
However, if you failed to get out then, we all know what happened--your portfolio
quickly crashed and caused the loss of $5 trillion in the market value of companies
from March 2000 to October 2002. During this time, only managers who offered
a long/short and dynamic asset allocation strategy produced positive returns.
Another feature of the passive investment approach argues that you don't have
to actively manage your investments as long as you stay diversified. This is
referred to as the Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). MPT is a mathematical formulation
that creates diversification in
investing, with the aim of selecting an assortment of investment assets that
have a collectively lower risk than any individual asset. This is possible,
so the theory goes, because different types of assets often change in value
in opposite ways. For example, the stock
market often moves in the different direction from yields in the bond
market. Therefore, a pool of both types of assets can nearly always (in
theory) offer lower overall risk than holding just one asset class exclusively.
But this doesn't always work. Consider the 1970's, a time when stock prices
fell, while bond yields soared. Investors who remember the protracted bear
market of 1970-1982, know that during this time both stocks and bond prices
went down in tandem.
During the 1960's, investors were persuaded to enter into a basket of large-cap
stocks called the Nifty Fifty. If they were diversified, as the MPT suggested,
they would have also been in bonds yielding around 4%-5%. The Nifty Fifty coupled
with your 4%-5% bond would have worked pretty well during this time period,
until it didn't. Holding this diversified portfolio would have left you in
a house of pain during the mid and late 1970's, as the S&P 500 dropped
around 50% and the Ten-year Treasury note went from 4%, to over 15% by 1981.
The stagflation in the 1970's caused both stocks and bonds to fall in tandem.
So where are we now? I have stated for a while that it is my belief the United
States -- along with the rest of the developed world--are facing an entirely
new paradigm. Namely, that such onerous and record debt levels have now reached
a point where government revenue will become woefully insufficient once interest
rates normalize. Therefore, the developed world must choose the manner in which
they will default on the debt. Central banks will be forced to either monetize
mountains of debt, or allow a deflationary depression to wipe out the economy.
With bond yields already at historic lows, brought about artificially by massive
central bank manipulation of bond prices, the next time a recession occurs
it is much more likely we will have a debt crisis due to a lack of revenue
available to service government debt.
The European bond crisis was all about such a fiscal disaster, not the prevailing
rate of inflation at that time. Investors did not flock into the "safety" of
bonds during their financial crisis of 2008. Instead, the Greek 10-year Note,
which averaged around 5% just prior to the crisis, soared to near 40% by March
2012. However, the rate of inflation averaged just 1.5% during that same time
frame. Bond yields soared because owners of sovereign debt became assured that
Greece would either have to pay investors back in worthless currency or renege
on the principal and interest of its debt. As it turns out, Greece used both
methods of default.
A true fiscal crisis always leads to sovereign default -- either through inflation,
a debt restructuring or both. Another recession similar to the Debt Crisis
of 2008 will most likely bring down both stock and bond prices. Only this collapse
in bond prices may not be caused by inflation right away, but instead will
be the result of a severe revenue dearth due to a collapsing economy. A diversified
portfolio of Index and bond funds will not provide much security in this case.
The easy monetary policies of global central banks have not only brought about
serial asset bubbles, but these market manipulators have also created a new
bubble...one where most investors have been lulled to sleep with a false feeling
of comfort. What they believe to be a diversified portfolio may instead prove
to be a group of highly-correlated asset classes.
These investors are also convinced that they have become buy and hold geniuses,
duped by central banks into believing the passive management style of investing
can never fail. But if stock and bond prices plunge together in the next recession,
investors will then flock back into the active management style of investing,
as they realize the need to have a manager that can not only move between asset
classes (including precious metals), but also has the flexibility to profit
from a decline in the market.