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Written on Jan 21 for members.
Jack Be Nimble, Jack Be Quick
Jack Jump Over the Candlestick
In An
Inverted Risk/Reward Ratio our bottom line was:
We think 2008 will offer a buy and hold investors a similar inverted risk/reward
profile as the market returned in 2007. We see best case, average returns with
above average risk. Despite what many Wall Street analysts are forecasting
in higher P/E multiples, we are looking for multiples to contract as volatility
and risk premiums remain elevated throughout next year and beyond. That said,
for the disciplined and nimble trader this environment could be ideal.
Friday's close on SPX took put us down 10% for the year and 16% from the October
2007 top. The main culprit driving this volatility, the S&P financial sector,
has seen total market capitalization fall below $2t for the first time since
late 2003. In just 8 months the financials have lost nearly $1t in market cap,
a number that represents over 7% of entire US GDP. By any measure a 30% haircut
in the largest S&P sector represents a substantial correction, discounting
many worse case scenario estimates for losses attributed to the credit bubble
bursting. We think the credit melt down has further to go and thus financials
are not out of the woods. That said, clearly the market has discounted a substantial
amount of that risk.
At 1325 on SPX, we are essentially back at the same level traded in March
1999 when we were rallying out of the LTCM hole and just 12 months from the
2000 tech bubble high. The LTCM implosion was the last major credit event we
experienced which also saw LIBOR spreads blowing out to extreme levels. During
the LTCM debacle 3M LIBOR - 3M T-Bill spread shot from 75bps to 175bp but came
back down within months. With the LIBOR spread easing and the credit market
stabilizing, SPX bottomed in October 1998 near 925, representing a 22% pullback
from the July 1998 high of 1190. From that low, the SPX rallied 50% cresting
at 1420 in mid-1999, before pulling back 10% prior to the last run into the
2000 high rallying another 25% to 1552. Similarly, this year the same LIBOR
spread has narrowed 125bps from its peak of 225bps. We have also seen a credit
market correction in the SPX from the October 2007 top that equals the LTCM
correction in price at 1307. We aren't suggesting the declines are over or
that we are in store for a 50% rally, but the inter-bank market is normalizing
and the stock correction is near extreme levels and is starting to look cheap.

With the 10YR yield near its lows trading at 3.65% and equity yields near
their highs, the equity risk premium has spiked by 250bps since last year's
lows in July. Other spikes in risk premium corresponded with lows in 2007,
2005, 2004, 2003, 2002 (spiking 400bps!), 2001 and in 1998 during LTCM. Risk
premiums have been widening ever since last summer (the 10YR hit 5.25% and
the SPX hit the old 2000 high) when the credit markets seized up and of course
can continue to widen as witnessed in 2002. We believe with LIBOR spreads normalizing,
demonstrating some freeing up of risk capital, these discounts represent compelling
relative value for equity managers and could start to attract money back into
stocks.

The disciplined and nimble trader should realize that the same math that showed
an inverted risk/reward at the beginning of the year is now narrowed with the
subsequent decline. Whereas just weeks ago you were risking say 15% to make
7.5%, you are now risking 5% to make 17.5%. These risk/reward ratios aren't
written in any rule book, they are just estimates based on discount rates of
return and perceived downside risk. But it highlights the extreme volatility
we anticipated and reinforces the idea of staying in front of the crowd rather
than ride with them. If we were just short or just long at the end of the day
we will best case be breaking even. Traders, who don't marry positions and
stay unbiased, objectively letting the market provide discounted risk/reward
rather than pundits and analysts, will thrive in this volatile environment.
We aren't suggesting anyone without the balance sheet of the likes of BRK
(which is up 18% since the credit market seized up) step in front of the selling
to catch a falling knife. Nor are we suggesting prices are about to vault higher
like it's 1999. However the stock market is cheap on a number of metrics and
represents attractive relative value. Upon some stabilization in prices those
able to pull the trigger on the long side potentially could be well rewarded.
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