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I'm worried because I'm running out of things to worry about: trader

By David Nelson, CFA

“Markets climb a wall of worry.” It’s a phrase used to describe market rallies in the face of rising investor concern.

Wall Street and the media have hundreds of these phrases that try to squeeze complex interrelationships into a few words, asking the near-impossible of investors. Make a binary decision based on imperfect information. But that is, in fact, what we do. We gather and process as much information as we can — but in the end, risk can only be reduced, not eliminated.

Source: Flickr.com; wall of worry

The market rally post-election caught many off guard, forcing investors to chase a train that may have already left the station. To be fair, some sectors were already improving, such as the financials (XLF) (now up 22% post-election). JPMorgan’s CEO, Jamie Dimon, had long since put in the bottom — not just for JPMorgan (JPM) — but the broader market (SPY) as well. On the day in question, February 11, 2016, Mr. Dimon went into the open market buying 500,000 shares of his company stock, giving investors confidence to do the same.

Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg

After the election, the potential for an infrastructure spend, tax reform, repatriation and of course a rollback of regulatory overreach drove markets perhaps beyond what current multiples support. However, markets are a discounting mechanism with the look forward a lot more important than what’s seen in the rear view mirror.

I was getting worried…

You can imagine my concern, watching my personal wall of worry collapse, as earnings came in higher than expected and indicators like the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index hit the highest levels in years.

Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg

However, just seven weeks into the New Year, it’s become clear that the wall isn’t coming down anytime soon. The political drama in Washington could delay or even eliminate announced policy initiatives, pushing investors into a wait-and-see mindset. That, in turn, could create an air of uncertainty for markets. No, I’m not going to say it. That’s too easy.

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Goldman’s David Kostin goes right to the heart of it in last week’s research piece, pointing out that analysts, given the rising uncertainty, have been reluctant to include in their estimates the potential earnings boost we get from administration proposals.

Wall Street reaction will likely include non-committal phrases like “we expect market volatility to rise.” To the uninitiated, that’s code for: “we have no idea what’s going to happen next.”

Janet Yellen’s Federal Reserve

How the Fed reacts to events unfolding in Washington will take center stage as we approach the next meeting. On Wednesday’s edition of ‘Clear Cut’ on i24News, I told anchor Michelle Makori I thought the recent data supported another Fed rate move in March.

I’m now convinced they’ll wait until they see the whites of the eyes of inflation or until the market forces them to make a move. Like yours truly, they have their wall of worry as well.

  • At the time of this article some funds managed by David Nelson were long JPM and SPY.

David Nelson, CFA
Chief Strategist

Belpointe
125 Greenwich Ave, Greenwich CT 06830
david.nelson@belpointe.com | www.belpointe.com

Office: (203) 340-1335 | Cell: (917) 881-3179 | Fax: (203) 909-6331

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Please contact your Belpointe investment advisor representative if there are any changes in your financial situation or investment objectives.

Investment Advice is offered through Belpointe Asset Management, LLC. Past performance is no guarantee of future returns. Insurance products are offered through Belpointe Insurance, LLC and Belpointe Specialty Insurance, LLC. It is important to read our email disclosures available at this link: http://belpointe.com/disclosures.