Evan L. Jones

Active Investing in the Age of Disruption


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rates to be rising they flee the markets and growth slows even further forcing global banks to reconsider any rate raises. This is a rate environment that was never anticipated, especially with US unemployment levels below 4% and the US stock market reaching all-time highs (3,100+ on the S&P 500 in November 2019). There is no historic data on this level of central bank intervention, so derivative effects are not known in the intermediate or long term. Despite (or because of) this, equity and bond markets remain unperturbed, demonstrating the lowest volatility levels in history. The 2010s will be remembered for central bank intervention driving the lowest rates in history and the equity markets demonstrating the lowest levels of volatility.

      [On 0% interest rates] I can't figure out how it's going to end. I just know it's going to end badly.

       —Stanley Druckenmiller, investor

       Can central banks unwind their asset purchases over the next decade?

      [In July 2014] I hope we can all agree that once-in-a-century emergency measures are no longer necessary five years into an economic recovery.

       —Stanley Druckenmiller, investor

      If the central banks can simply maintain assets at $15 trillion, potentially the developed world economies can grow (and inflate) into a scenario where $15 trillion does not look that extreme. It is a delicately balanced scale. Investors have remained confident and taken on more risk, and to date the US Federal Reserve has maintained continual support of the markets.

Graph depicts a curve for US Federal Funds rate from the year one thousand nine hundred and ninety-eight to November two thousand and nineteen. Graph depicts the federal Reserve assets and the S and P five hundred Index from the year two thousand and one to November two thousand and nineteen.

      [In January 2015] Earnings don't move the overall market, it's the Federal Reserve Board… Focus on the central banks and focus on the movement of liquidity… It's liquidity that moves markets.

       —Stanley Druckenmiller, investor

      Diligently studying a company's operations to understand future growth does not add the same value to future equity performance when a central bank dictates the markets and low rates make all stocks go up due to higher valuation multiples. An additional driver of valuation multiples today is technological disruption. Certain sectors of the S&P 500 have been decimated by actual or perceived future disruption and are trading at historically low multiples balancing the historically high multiples of other rate-sensitive sectors. Retailers' valuations have been destroyed by Amazon's success, energy producers have been destroyed by supply gluts created by fracking disruption, and health care services trade at all-time lows due to regulation concerns and technology company threats to the established industry leaders. This confluence of cheap, easy money and disruption is the challenge pressuring active managers. If we focus on S&P 500 sectors that are rate sensitive and have not seen large-scale technological disruption, we can see the massive effect on valuations from low rates.

      When capital is in oversupply, investors compete for deals by accepting low returns and a slender margin for error.

       —Howard Marks, investor