Howard Marks: ‘I Don’t Believe We’re In A Bubble, I Don’t Think We’re Going To Have A Crash’

One of the points we made continuously in Q4 (and we were especially keen on emphasizing it in December) was that investors had fallen victim to a (largely false) narrative about the Fed and the economy.

Subsequently, market participants lost track of their own role in shaping that narrative, setting the stage for a self-fulfilling prophecy to take hold.

Numerous analysts weighed in on this phenomenon. For instance:

  • Around the the time the 2s5s and 3s5s inverted, Nomura’s Charlie McElligott warned we were “reverse engineering a growth slowdown”.
  • Marko Kolanovic famously decried the role played by social media and negative news amplification channels (e.g., blogs and other portals) in the feedback loop between systematic flows, volatility and liquidity. “If we add to this an increased number of algorithms that trade based on posts and headlines, the impact on price action and investor psychology can be significant”, he cautioned.
  • Deutsche Bank’s Aleksandar Kocic talked of a “financial parallax“, “cognitive instability” and “recession as subverted perspective

Fast forward to February and a new narrative has taken root. Or at least it seems that way. Now, the reinstatement of the Fed put is seen as sufficient to offset gridlock inside the Beltway and the explicit discussion of runoff (contained in the “special statement” that accompanied the January Fed decision) helped short circuit one the main drivers of the sour sentiment feedback loop: QT-phobia.

Through it at, not a lot has actually changed. Here’s what we said over the weekend in “Back To The Drawing Board“:

With December in the books as the worst close to a year for US stocks since the Great Depression and January now representing the best start to a year in decades, markets have a kind of “back to the drawing board” feel to them.

December’s bearish hysteria has been (largely) offset by a Fed-induced risk surge, and now here we are once again trying to figure out what the rational response is to ongoing signs of slowing global growth, gridlock in DC and a still simmering trade dispute between the world’s two largest economies.

This is the context for a new Goldman interview with Howard Marks, courtesy of the latest edition of the bank’s “Top Of Mind” series, out Monday evening.

As a reminder, these are basically expansive takes on whatever the market topic du jour happens to be. They combine interviews with Goldman’s own employees and also with outside sources in an effort to provide a balanced and comprehensive assessment on whatever seems to be the most important question on market participants’ minds (hence “Top of Mind”). The bank’s Allison Nathan conducts the interviews and generally collates all the information.

The newest installment is called “Where Are We In The Cycle?”. Here’s Nathan with the introduction:

Risk assets have recovered a large share of last year’s losses, but sentiment still seems less ebullient than one year ago, and investors remain nervous about slowing growth. Against this backdrop, how to interpret recent price action—and whether it signals a turning point for markets—is Top of Mind. We sit down with long-time investor Howard Marks, who believes that last year’s repricing reflected a correction of excessive exuberance rather than a material change in the fundamental backdrop.

Goldman also chats with their own Charlie Himmelberg and Peter Oppenheimer – both of whom produce some of the bank’s more popular research – but Marks is clearly the headliner. Below, find some selected highlights from Nathan’s interview with Howard.

Via Goldman

Allison Nathan: What do you make of the recent market volatility?

Howard Marks: To me, it just confirms that markets are psychologically volatile. On October 3, everything was fine; on October 4, the equity market began one of the biggest declines ever seen over such a short period of time, leading to the worst December since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Fundamentally, of course nothing had changed overnight, and not much has changed even over the prior few months; mostly it’s just that the market swung from looking at things optimistically to looking at them pessimistically. The truth is, most things can be viewed either positively or negatively, and the bias of onlookers influences which perception prevails at any point in time. All that said, I have argued since roughly mid-2017 that markets were excessively optimistic. And excessive optimism, faith in the future, and greed leave the market vulnerable to this type of sentiment-driven correction. So this episode just illustrates how much market violence emotion can wreak, especially from a place of too much exuberance.

Allison Nathan: But couldn’t at least some of last year’s optimism have been fairly attributed to strong US economic growth?

Howard Marks: What matters most to markets is not a good quarter or a good year, but what the future looks like. Case in point, last year we had some of the fastest US economic growth since the GFC, but some of the worst market performance. In my view, the economic strength post the US tax bill was like a shot of adrenaline in the economy; far from creating a stable platform for more rapid growth, I thought it would give us a couple of good quarters before either receding or necessitating more restrictive actions from the Fed to avoid excessive inflation. But people reacted very positively to it, and—most importantly—they extrapolated into the future the strong growth we were experiencing. I was getting email from people saying, “Look at Australia—they haven’t had a recession in 26 years. Maybe the US won’t have a recession for 26 years.” That kind of Pollyannaish thinking told me there was too much hot air in the balloon. When assets begin pricing in the notion of permanent prosperity, it usually turns out to be an illusion.

Allison Nathan: Does this kind of behavior suggest to you that we are nearing the end of the economic expansion?

Howard Marks: I’m not an economist, and I don’t believe in forecasting; as investors we never know what’s going to happen, like I said, but we can know something about the odds. We’re in the second half of the 10th year of an economic recovery, and US economic recoveries have never lasted more than 10 years.

[…]

Allison Nathan: What does this mean for markets?

Howard Marks: Two questions I’m often asked are: “Are we in a bubble?” and “Are we going to have another crash?” This is understandable because those who came into the market as much as 25 years ago have seen two bubbles and two crashes. But markets aren’t always about extreme ups and downs; there are bull markets and bear markets, rises and corrections. With that in mind, I don’t believe that we’re in a bubble, and I don’t think we’re going to have a crash. Stock P/E ratios are pretty much in line with the postwar average. Banks are not highly levered. Most investing hasn’t taken place in vehicles as highly levered as the mortgage and loan vehicles of 2006-07. And I don’t see an analog for subprime mortgages today. So in many ways, the current environment is less precarious than 11 or 12 years ago. But for an investor, I think the next five years simply aren’t going to be as good as the last ten.

Allison Nathan: What late-cycle excesses worry you the most?

Howard Marks: I worry about the amount of debt in the system and about companies’ exposure to rising interest rates.

[…]

Allison Nathan: Are credit markets the most likely cause of the next downturn?

Howard Marks: “Cause” is a funny word. Yes, I would guess that the next big problem in the economy will emanate from the credit markets. But will that start the next recession? Not necessarily. The problem might start because of a trade war or for some other reason.

[…]

Allison Nathan: So how should investors be positioned today?

Howard Marks: To me, the key question is whether this a time for aggressiveness or a time for caution. I believe it’s a time for caution. Warren Buffett said it best: “The less prudence with which others conduct their affairs, the greater the prudence with which we should conduct our own affairs.”

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3 thoughts on “Howard Marks: ‘I Don’t Believe We’re In A Bubble, I Don’t Think We’re Going To Have A Crash’

  1. “Stock P/E ratios are pretty much in line with the postwar average.”

    Um, okay. So my question would be, which war is he talking about? The 2003 Iraq War?

  2. QUOTE H: “…over the weekend in “Back To The Drawing Board“

    which reminds me that I failed to remember to send you a note — my favorite part of that drawing depicted in your header on that article — really loved that drawing and I recall the hand drawn at the upper portion was using a mechanical pencil, a high tech looking model — and the hand in the lower portion was using a nub of a wooden pencil that appeared to have been sharpened with a whittling knife. I believe I would like a copy of that drawing – can you tell me where you found it or anything to help me find the drawing? 🤓

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