Monday, January 31, 2022

Through The Cycle Investing

 

A discussion of The Hedged Economist’s approach to managing a portfolio through market cycles can be found that “Portfolio Performance Through The Cycle: A Retiree's Roth IRA” @ (https://seekingalpha.com/article/4482981-portfolio-performance-cycle-retirees-roth-ira). As the title implies, the article uses a Roth IRA to illustrate the approach.

As has been mentioned in previous postings, The Hedged Economist approach involves investing in companies, rather than trading stocks. Thus, the posting does not address trying to time the cycle. Rather, it discusses having a portfolio that invests in companies that respond differently to market and economic cycles.

 

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

The Implications of Inflation for Portfolio Management

 

If you would like to see The Hedge Economists view of the implications of the current inflation on portfolio management, they have just been posted on Seeking Alpha  @(https://seekingalpha.com). The posting focuses on implications for a traditional IRA.

The posting explains the philosophy and objectives behind the management of the traditional IRA. It then discusses the portfolio implications of the current inflation in general terms. It describes the types of companies that the Hedged Economist believes should be added to the portfolio. The actual portfolio is then used as an example of those types of adjustments. The rationale for adding and trimming positions is described in terms of the portfolio and its objectives. It concludes with a discussion of the implications of the current inflation for the future stock market and economic outlook.

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

What's Does Inflation Data Tell Us?

 Understanding inflation is important to interpreting labor market conditions.

It also affects one's perception of income trends and consumers’ well-being.

Inflation distorts the economy and masks economic incentives.

It makes market price signals unreliable.

It distorts investment decisions and creates risk.

Inflation isn't always measured year-over-year. Generally, one will hear the year-over-year increase and the monthly increase. One will also frequently hear a reference to the month-to-month change in the annualized monthly rate.

Regarding the impact of supply chains on inflation, it is important to remember that price is always the product of the interaction of supply and demand. Quite often those who blame supply for the current inflation are trying to deflect attention away from their own actions which create demand beyond the economy's capacity to deliver.

Some components of the inflation are highly volatile while others change more slowly and arguably more persistently. Further, inflation can be measured in a number of different ways. However, the CPI is a widely quoted and easily understood measure of inflation.

Those who would like to minimize the perception of the negative effects of inflation will often quote data that is not inflation adjusted. By doing so they can often make the disastrous results of policies look positive. In order to look through this political propaganda, it is often necessary to go to the source data.

To illustrate this twisting of the meaning of data consider the following:

“Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings have increased by 4.7 percent.”  

(Source: Employment Situation Summary, Bureau of Labor Statistics@ Employment Situation Summary - 2021 M13 Results (bls.gov)

 And from another report:

“The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) …. Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 7.0 percent….”

(Source: Consumer Price Index News Release, Bureau of Labor Statistics@ Consumer Price Index (CPI) News Release : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov)

 

Reporting these data separately makes it possible for the current administration to point to the 4.7% wage growth in dollar terms as if it were progress. However, when the two reports are considered, what is really being reported is an over 2% (4.7%-7.0%) fall in real wages over a period of 12 months. If one cares to look at the detail of the data, one also finds that the fall in real wages is even more severe for wage earners and clerical workers:

“The Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) increased 7.8 percent over the last 12 months….”

(Source: Consumer Price Index News Release, Bureau of Labor Statistics@ Consumer Price Index (CPI) News Release : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov)

That conclusion is based on data from one single agency, The Bureau of Labor Statistics. These two particular reports were chosen because they are considered timely and authoritative, and they are both from the same federal agency. However, they are not the only sources of data that confirm the trend of falling real wages.

For example, there is the Wage and Salary component of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) reports and the GDP Deflater. The Department of Labor also publishes the Employment Cost Index.  However, both of those sources and a number of other very comprehensive sources suffer from the amount of time taken to generate them and methodological quirks needed to accommodate their intended use.  Nevertheless, they make it clear that wages are not keeping up with inflation. A timelier source is the Current Population Survey. The Atlanta Fed uses it to construct a Wage Growth Index that is fairly timely. It too shows that wages are not keeping up with inflation.

So, for a very large portion of the population that works for a living, wages aren't keeping up with inflation. They aren't the only ones. Again, by quoting nominal information rather than inflation-adjusted information, retirees may be misled about Social Security. Social Security benefits are increasing 5.9% this year. That sounds good unless one considers that in the previous year the real value of Social Security benefits decreased by 7% based on the CPI. However, Social Security beneficiaries are not the typical consumer represented by the CPI. Medical costs and food represent a larger portion of their expenditures. The real value of their benefit is being negatively impacted by inflation despite the dollar increase in the benefits.

Seeing through the fiction that policies are benefiting people doesn't always necessitate the comparison of different reports. Take for example the Employment Report, the first one quoted above. Considerable effort is put into measuring labor market performance in all its dimensions because of its importance to the well-being of the population.

The Employment Report is based on two sources of data: the Employer Survey and the Household Survey.    That leaves plenty of room to spin the data. In some instances, it can make the headline numbers contradictory.

As discussed in the previous posting, The Employment Report Simplified, in last month's Employment Report job growth underestimated the strength of the labor market. This month the number of jobs added to payrolls is almost the same as the previous month, only about 200,000.  Yet, this month the entire report was as dismal as the disappointing headline jobs number would imply.

However, it was possible to focus on the unemployment rate as if it indicated strength. In order to do that misinterpretation of the unemployment rate, one had to ignore a few facts:

“The labor force participation rate was unchanged at 61.9 percent in December…. The employment-population ratio increased by only 0.2 percentage point to 59.5 percent in December….”

(Source: Employment Situation Summary, Bureau of Labor Statistics) Employment Situation Summary - 2021 M13 Results (bls.gov)

 It's one thing to have anemic job growth when the labor market is expanding because of increases in labor force participation by self-employment as happened last month. That's quite a different situation from anemic job growth when the labor market didn't grow, and labor force participation remained the same.

The administration chose to pretend that this month's employment report represented further progress rather than a slowdown in the economy's recovery. Further, it's a fiction for the administration to talk about creating new jobs when the number of people employed is still below the previous peak. It is not economic growth until the previous peak is exceeded. It's just a recovery and a recovery that is slowing down.

Further, the job growth number for last month was not revised up enough this month to reflect a healthy economy. There is a possibility that it will be revised up at some future date, but for now, the anemic recovery in employment seems to be real. Also, the December report seems to confirm that the strength of the Household Survey in the previous report largely reflected people being forced to become self-employed rather than being attracted to self-employment. In other words, the good news in the November report was that people were learning to hustle for a living rather than depending on policy to encourage employers to create good jobs.

One doesn't need the complication of the two different employment surveys in order to find opportunities to spin the data. The same was done with the CPI report. The headline number was clearly bad news. A 7% inflation rate is not good news under any circumstance. When one looks at the detail, it appears even worse than is implied by the headline number. For example, the report showed that:

“Increases in the indexes for shelter and for used cars and trucks were the largest contributors to the seasonally adjusted all items increase…. The food index also contributed….”

(Source: Consumer Price Index News Release, Bureau of Labor Statistics@ Consumer Price Index (CPI) News Release : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov)

The weighting of different items in the CPI  @ 2020.htm : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov), shows that that simple statement implies that the most important items in the cost-of-living were the ones that were escalating in price the most

In addition, the reported CPI understated the negative impact of inflation on many consumers. Specifically, consumers looking to buy a house know that the CPI index for shelter is grossly underestimating the inflation they are facing. The increase in the component for shelter would have been much larger if calculated using the methodology in place before 1982.  In 1982 the methodology was changed to stop using house prices to estimate homeowners’ housing costs. If you're looking to buy house, home prices would seem to be a more appropriate measure.

House prices were up 19% from those a year earlier, according to the most recent S& P Core Logic Case-Shiller Composite Index. The current CPI doesn't use that 19%. Instead, it uses an estimate of what homeowners would be willing to pay to rent their homes. That estimate was up only 3.8%. Adjusting the homeowners’ costs for actual prices would have added 3.5 percentage points to the reported 7% rise in the CPI.

Despite the obvious bad news in the CPI report, the administration chose to focus on slowdowns in the month-to-month rate of increase in the prices of highly volatile components like food and gasoline. However, gasoline and motor fuels have a weighting of only about 3 to 3 1/2% in the CPI calculation. Gas prices are highly visible but not necessarily important. They don't represent a large portion of consumers expenditures. Consequently, the slowdown in the month-to-month rate of increase in gas prices is not significant, but neither is the doubling of gasoline prices over the last year. However, calling attention to the slowdown in the monthly rate of increase only draws attention to the near doubling of gas prices under the current administration’s energy policies.

The significance of that policy failure highlighted by the CPI can be minimized by pretending that the report implied better future news. However, the details of the report don’t support the argument that the report indicates improvement in the inflation situation. The inflation situation may improve, but this month's report didn't show signs of it. A substantial portion of the inflation was due to major components of CPI and arguably components that are sticky as opposed to the volatile components. Further, when the rate of inflation goes from an annualized rate of 1.6% to an annualized rate of 7% during one year of an administration, it's hard to see how arguing improvement in a single month is positive. It is clear inflation will be at least 5% or 6% for the next year and perhaps longer.

The contortions the administration went through to try to make the current monthly Employment Report and Inflation Report sound positive only contributed to people's distrust of the government. They make it clear that the administration sees economic data as a tool to be used to further its economic agenda rather than as a tool to be used to formulate those policies. From a politician's perspective, advancing their agenda might be the appropriate use of the data because inflation actually short-circuits the ability to use much of the economic data in formulating better policies.

For example, retail sales are reported in dollar terms and are viewed as a current indicator of the economic health of consumers. However, when inflation is important, the retail sales data becomes difficult to interpret. Is there real growth represented or is it all just price increases? One cannot use the inflation data from the CPI to understand that issue. The weights in the CPI don't reflect current retail sales. In fact, the chain-weighted CPI is specifically designed to shift the weights to reflect changes in consumption patterns. So, retail sales data becomes useless as a timely quantitative measure of economic health of consumers.

There are alternatives from the National Income and Product Accounts. To adjust for inflation, one can use the consumer expenditures data after deflating it. However, what that gains in accuracy is achieved at a considerable cost in timeliness. Further, even when released, the data are subject to frequent revisions.

Any data on economic flows that are denominated in dollars becomes suspect. Can the dollar value of those flows be appropriately deflated? The CPI, the GDP Deflator, prices for particular commodities, and prices for selected goods all have to be brought to bear in order to determine whether a flow represents real change or just inflated prices.

The same applies data about stocks of goods and financial stocks. For example, there are classic accounting problems associated with valuing inventories. One cannot use the cost of acquiring an inventory as a reliable gauge for its value. That's always an ongoing problem in business, but inflation just aggravates it.

So, for example, the preliminary GDP report showed an increase in inventory investment. This could be interpreted as businesses are starting to stock up and moving away from just-in-time inventories. However, it could also just be that the value of their inventories increased due to inflation and that increase in value is what is being reported. Even switching to a measure of the flow of dollars into the acquisition of inventories doesn't eliminate the problem. The increase in the flow dollars in the acquisition of inventories may just reflect price increases.

The most basic data can be subverted by inflation. The basic distinction between consumption and savings can be clouded. While it was a short-term phenomenon, the fall in retail sales in December after a strong October and November is being blamed on advanced buying for Christmas. Fears of price increases and especially shortages, according to this narrative, pushed forward Christmas shopping.

Now that seems trivial, but rapid inflation can cause people to make purchases as a form of savings that normally would be considered consumption. We recently ran into that as people stocked up on certain commodities during the Covid outbreak. That stocking up was a minor phenomenon, but during the 70s it was not unusual for people to want to make purchases before prices increased.

The most extreme form of this occurred during the hyperinflation in Germany when people would leave work on payday in order to go spend the money as quickly as possible. In that instance, it may have been for consumption, but it is equally conceivable that it would simply be a way to invest the money that has a return that is greater than the zero interest rates currently available on savings.

So, with all the uncertainty the inflation interjects into the meaning of economic data, perhaps politicians who view it just as a propaganda opportunity are on to something. However, if that's the case, it calls into serious question why the population allows the government to spend as much as it does to generate the data.

Bad policy based on bad data is only one of the costs of inflation. Inflation undermines the basic purpose of prices. Prices are designed to reflect relative value. However, if all prices are being inflated, the issue becomes whether the change in price truly reflect an increase in value of the item being priced or just a decrease in the value of the money. Unfortunately, general price deflators fall short of being able to sort out relative prices. The basic design of inflation measures is to reflect overall prices, not changes in relative prices. So, inflation is like sand in the pricing mechanism of a functioning economy.

Perhaps the most serious negative impact of inflation is its impact on investments. The result of that impact is a marked negative effect on the productivity of the economy through the distortions that inflation introduces into investment decisions.

Inflation makes it hard to interpret investment data. Its impact on interpreting inventory data has already been discussed. But what was said about inventory flows being hard to interpret in an inflationary environment is equally true of flows into any other investment. For example, a forecast that the stock market will increase in the low single digits implies a negative real return if inflation is above that low single digit.

A comment about liquidity that could be invested in stocks has to be adjusted for the decline in the value of those liquid assets that might be invested. Further, if 7% more money is invested in the stock market at the end of the year than at the beginning, the real investment is the same if there has been 7% inflation.

Earnings forecasts have to be adjusted for inflation. To say earnings will grow at a certain rate has to be explained as either a dollar rate or a real rate. In a 7% inflation environment a 7% increase in profits is standing still in real terms.

Every financial professional is familiar with the concept of a hurdle rate. It's the rate of return on an investment that has to be exceeded in order for the investment to be justified. Companies usually measure it as their cost of capital. Investors measure it against their alternative uses of the money. In both cases, inflation can set a floor under the hurdle rate.

Consider for a moment the impact that statement implies for investing. Much of the literature on investing argues that an investment is justified if its risk-adjusted expected return exceeds the risk-free rate of return. Previous postings have argued that the risk-free rate of return is a potentially meaningless construct without a concrete definition. For example, when discussing solvent risk on April 1, 2010 in The Hedged Economist: Beware the risk-free return:

“The concept of a risk-free rate of return is like a cancer that has invaded modern financial economic theory. Usually, Treasuries Bills are used as a quantitative expression of the mythical risk-free rate of return. Every time “risk-free” appears in a formula or in print, stop! Ask: “What does the author really mean? Are they really saying anything? What concept really should be used? What assumptions have to be made in order for the formula or phrase to make sense?” All sorts of issues get brushed aside through the simple assumption that risk-free returns are an acceptable substitute for addressing some very volatile behaviors.”

Negative treasury rates should have convinced the academics who publish investment literature that the concept of a quantifiable risk-free return is highly suspect. Yet, the concept persists and influences the thinking of central bankers. Much of their thinking about the impact of interest rates on the economy hinges on treasuries being a primary competitive alternative investment. However, investing in treasuries has considerable risk, especially with zero interest rates. There is the risk that the actual value of the treasury will fall previous to maturity. But there is also the risk with inflation that the return at maturity will have been reduced in value. It's that risk that is being referenced when people referred to the inflationary expectations having an effect upon long-term interest rates.

Inflation and the risk of inflation are important components of the risk to treasuries. In an inflationary environment there are investments with a lower risk than treasuries. Basically, items that normally would be considered consumption and are durable or long-lasting have a risk-free return if their price increases along with inflation. The classic example is the overinvestment in farmland that occurs in many developing economies during periods of hyperinflation.

One doesn't need to go to that extreme for examples.  Inflation makes the purchase of commodities viable as a risk-free return or at least makes them competitive with productive investment. The purchase of another company with hard assets that won't decrease in value may be viewed as an alternative to increasing productive capacity. So might purchase of the company's own stock become appealing if it is expected to increase in value at least as fast as inflation. It is that cramping of productive investment that reduces growth during periods of inflation. It's why one can have stagflation or depressions during periods of inflation.

So, while inflation may in some cases be a symptom of an overheated economy, it can also be a depressive that ends the overheating. The risk of that happening is only increased by the confusion of the data that inflation causes.

During an expansion, nominal growth, that is growth in current dollar terms, can continue while inflation is exceeding the growth rate in current dollar terms. This period of real decline usually appears late in the cycle. From an investment perspective it's a phase where financial assets, like stocks, can decline even while the economy is growing. There is a good chance we will witness that in 2022 even though we are still early in the recovery phase of the cycle.