Year 2009 has ended; modern society did not end, capitalism is still standing – at least nominally – and the banking system is still nowhere near a true resolution of its role and responsibilities after “the beginning of the end” started over a year ago.
2009 was a strange year; dubbed “the Great Recession” this economic period which has followed the excesses of the past decade resulted in a magma of monetary and fiscal interventionism, superficial stabilization of the financial system, historically large unemployment and more confusion on the future of our economic model.
Capitalism survived but only nominally as central bank intervention – albeit mostly unavoidable – corrupted the true price discovery process of most asset classes. The law of unintended consequences is already at work and those who actively engage in financial activities – whether virtually by trading or on the ground by building businesses – have already felt the winds of change. Markets do not move as they used to and micro and macro economic dynamics do not interact as business schools have taught us for decades. Political divining is now more important than ever as an element of decision-making and so is subtle understanding of monetary policy. If the last 25 years were the poster child of aggressive entrepreneurship, the next 25 – or at least the next 10 – will probably require superior coziness with government and its modus operandi.
But what does all this mean for the future of investing? How should we position ourselves and where should our chips land? I believe that the fluidity of the situation requires flexibility, diversification of asset classes and strategies and much work toward aligning your interests with governments. More specifically, I believe, asset class timing must be part of the process and alpha driven strategies should be the core of every portfolio. 2010 may bring about the kind of environment where investors should be prepared for constant cross-currents and no defined trends. Equities may still do fine as a result of liquidity pressures and by benefiting form potential pockets of re-surging globalization but I see their action collared. If in the nineties we learned to trade the “Greenspan put,” this new dawn may bring about the “Bernanke collar.” Unless global GDP growth wildly exceeds the expected 4% rate, it is difficult to imagine significant multiple expansion therefore capping more price upside. On the other hand, stocks are not as expensive as they have been for most of the last 15 years and they should benefit, in case of sudden economic dislocation, by the generosity of global central banks which understand very well the role of confidence in perpetuating the system. Volatility is hovering around its 15 year moving average (as measured by the VIX) indicating neither panic nor complacency within an historical perspective. Diversified high yield portfolios still seem to make sense in a world where yields are very compressed; MLPs and fixed income closed end funds still bring value to the table but timing and risk control are still forefront issues. The spread of MLPs as an asset class versus the 10 year Treasuries has now fallen below 400 basis points and also on a case by case basis and on quarterly schedule, spreads are at low levels indicating short-term caution. The key term is short-term; on that level most studies I have been looking at are flashing caution for equities in general: corporate insiders sales, smart/dumb money spreads, stock/bond ratios, options indicators. Mid January could present us with a tradable correction. A more pronounced two way trading than the V shaped momentum driven environment typical of 2009,would play well for alpha strategies and would allow for options strategies like ours to outperform the benchmarks.
The elephant in the room could be the US Dollar. The greenback has showed an inverse correlation with equities for much of this decade as part of the liquidity/leverage boom bust cycle. The degree of bearishness on the USD reached significant levels in the last quarter of the year and eventually resulted in a strong rebound; at this point a lot of USD bearishness has been corrected and the outlook for next year depends on many variables. The bearish argument resides on the idea of massive FED money printing and large fiscal deficits; while I cannot argue against this idea, I would caution on the timing of it. As of now the FED has not actually printed much money and most of its intervention was either done thru electronic adjustments and stabilization types of credit facilities; most of the liquidity injected is just sitting on banks balance sheets and it is very short term in nature. Should that liquidity be channeled into the real economy and multiplied by our fractional system then the inflation worry would grossly materialize. This scenario may be one to two years away and it is subject to many variables. In this case, the USD would suffer and equities could increase in nominal values. On the other hand, I think a more likely scenario in the intermediate term is a continuation of the deleveraging of private sector balance sheets; this would entail a stronger USD and possibly sagging equities. I feel a stronger Dollar is in the cards also because of its relative position versus the Euro; while we have significant issues to work thru in our effort to stabilize our economic cycle, I believe Euroland has higher sovereign risk (Spain, Greece, Italy, Baltic States) and more structural and political restrictions to maneuver.
What the USD may do in the next twelve months has repercussions on commodities as well. If the USD gets stronger, there would be less pressure on commodities (priced in Dollars globally) to re-adjust upward. However, if all global currencies accelerate the new trend of competitive devaluation, then commodities and gold especially will continue to benefit from investment flows. Political divining and close monetary policy scrutiny will be paramount in dealing with this unfolding issue.
In conclusion, I would like to take a moment to thank all of our clients that believed in our strategies, risk management and unbiased analysis. At Cervino Capital Management LLC we strive every day (and almost every night considering our different shifts) to be the best money managers and we relentlessly push the boundaries of our talent in the never ending quest for alpha.
To clients, industry colleagues, and friends:
13 years ago

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