Today is the day where the “Oh my God, I sold everything a week ago because I was going to get a better price in the month of May when this Coronavirus thing was going to end” crowd realizes that they are done and now have to get that cash back to work, except it is difficult to do anything other than hit asks.
The supply (forced liquidation selling, panic selling) goes away. This results in prices going up since there is still an avalanche of demand. There will also be volatility – except this time on the upside.
Psychologically there is the anchoring effect – people see things that have traded at 10%, 20% below current prices and think if they just wait it will get back there – after all, more and more people are diagnosed with this Coronavirus thing, more people are going to die of it, more people going to ICUs, and all of the carnage in the media, the shut-downs, the horror stories of people that can’t do this or that, etc., etc.
This is wrong thinking. In the lens of the financial markets, it doesn’t matter. In the lens of the financial markets, they will be asking themselves how much companies will make in 2021 and beyond, even though fiscal 2020 will be a disaster.
If you were lucky enough to buy on March 23rd, today (the S&P 500 is at 2530 as I write this) you probably will have made about a fifth to a quarter of the gains that await you over the next three to six months.
However, you won’t get much size in a massive up day like this (unless if you are talking about extremely small quantities relative to company size). There will be a day or two where the news headline will be sour, pronouncements of things never ending, but those will be the days to get proper liquidity. There will also be liquidity provided by supply from people that have gotten hacked to death and want to lower their risk exposure on the up days to limit their losses.
Also, the true liquidity is in the index futures, so if you lack specific names, it’s better than nothing.
My opinion on the actual matter on the ground is relatively meaningless, but I suspect the ‘inflection point’ of cases is turning, so that future growth percentages will taper from this point forward. I also suspect that the true mortality rate will be under a percentage point.
Lots of learning over the last few weeks but I think my biggest was understanding the dangers of leverage.
Reminds me of Buffett sharing the wit and wisdom from Vice Chairman Charlie Munger. “My partner Charlie says there is only three ways a smart person can go broke: liquor, ladies and leverage,” he said. “Now the truth is — the first two he just added because they started with L — it’s leverage.”