OPINION: This time the crisis is different … but it’s not

AP photo/Michael Probst

AP photo/Michael Probst

Published Jun 13, 2022

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By Craig Pheiffer

Legendary investor Sir John Templeton famously suggested that the four most expensive words in the English language were “this time is different”. While the maxim has a uniform application, it was aimed at investors who thought that the behaviour or value of markets somehow changes after a dramatic market event or a new investment fad. In essence, Templeton was saying that the market has seen it all before. While a market development may seem new and unexplained, it’s probably the same or similar to something previously experienced.

Some might say of today’s markets that “this time is different”, because we haven’t experienced the confluence of this particular set of crises before. Still, the world has experienced many instances of wars, pandemics, energy shortages, inflation, rapidly tightening monetary policy, deglobalisation, trade wars and overzealous government regulation. Despite all this history, markets are broadly higher than they were 100 years ago, 50 years ago, 25 years ago and even 10 years ago.

The Covid-19 pandemic, which is still disrupting economies around the world, may be a newer and mutating virus, but the world and the markets have lived through pandemics before. The severity of each one has differed, but the Covid-19 pandemic follows the Asian Flu, the Aids pandemic, the Spanish Flu pandemic and the Hong Kong Flu pandemic (among others).

The current energy price surge has elements of both strong demand and weak supply, but many will recall the energy crises of the 1970s, with the first in 1973 driven by the oil embargo that followed the Yom Kippur war and the second in 1979 following the Iranian Revolution. The associated bear market in the US over 1973-1974 saw the S&P 500 Index lose 47% from its peak in 1973 to its trough at just below 65 index points in September 1974. Today the S&P 500 trades at about 4 000 points after its all-time high of 4 793 in the first week of 2022.

Rampant inflation is not a new phenomenon for markets or economies either. The current heady US inflation rate of over 8% is a function of both increased demand and global market shortages (energy shortages and various supply chain components). The US central bank has substantially underestimated the magnitude and duration of this inflation cycle and consequently must play catch up with monetary policy tightening. However, the record books show previous periods of rapid rate hikes and times of soaring inflation in the US (12.2% in November 1974 and 14.6% in March 1980).

We’ve witnessed several bouts of quantitative easing and subsequent tapering, but what may be different this time is quantitative tightening (reducing the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet). Despite the Federal Reserve’s knee-jerk reaction and current hawkish positioning, the fixed-interest and equity markets are digesting the next interest rate paradigm. Market volatility remains elevated as uncertainty prevails. While the Federal Reserve is poised to continue beating down inflation with its interest rate stick, the peak rate is likely to be within grasp over the next year.

The Covid-19 lockdown did accelerate the growth of many industries, and the “work from home” phenomenon boosted demand for hardware, software and cybersecurity for the home office. Home deliveries and online shopping accelerated as we hunkered down in the suburbs, and while that demand boosted corporate earnings, it also boosted market expectations and valuations. The easy monetary policy around the world and the associated flood of liquidity also helped drive up stock market valuations. With monetary policy being tightened and liquidity withdrawn, stocks are derating and could derate further as earnings growth slows. But that is the cycle of markets, and the purge often follows the binge.

Bubbles, crashes and market cycles

The Dotcom bubble bursting in 2000 saw the market lose 28% in three months, but it had fully recovered a year later. The Enron accounting scandal knocked the market by 37% in 2002/3 but, a year later, it had recovered around 90% of those losses. The Global Financial Crisis saw the market value almost halve in six months, and the recovery did take a good three and a half years as the world worked through the implications of the sub-prime crisis and the collapse of Lehman Brothers. More recently, the Covid-19 lockdown sliced 35% off the JSE in the space of a month in 2020. It took 521 days to regain those losses, but the market then went on to record record highs. History is filled with other significant market crash stories, which include Black Monday in 1987 (when the Dow fell 22.6% in a day) and the Wall Street crash of 1929 (the original Black Monday and Black Tuesday).

In short, markets have endured numerous crises, and stock market indices have ebbed and flowed through economic and interest rate cycles. Market volatility has also risen and fallen over time as uncertainty has waxed and waned. That’s the nature of the equity market. Despite all the noise, equity markets have been shown to reward the patient investor that stays the course. We can try to put a different spin on the crises impacting the market right now, but in essence, this time is not different. One can never be sure of the timing, but the market will digest the current weakness/bear market/pullback/correction, or whatever name you’d like to assign to it.

Warren Buffett told us to be greedy when others are fearful, but John Templeton summed it up best: “Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on scepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria. The time of maximum pessimism is the best time to buy, and the time of maximum optimism is the best time to sell.”

We may not yet be at the point of maximum pessimism, but the message is clear: investors should hold their nerve, retain their investments in quality shares and supplement their portfolios with any special opportunities that only weak markets can present.

Craig Pheiffer is chief investment strategist at Sasfin Wealth.

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