In this Stockhead series, investment manager James Whelan, managing director of Barclay Pearce Capital Asset Management, offers his insights on the key investment themes and trends in domestic and global markets. From macro musings to the metaverse and everything in between, Whelan offers his distilled thoughts on the hot topic of the day, week, month or year, from the point of view of a professional money manager.

 

Good morning and, just recapping a tad, what an eventful time of it we’ve had of late.

Nothing new in the news…

Apart from: Biden dropped out, Max can’t drive a Formula 1 car sensibly, Swans lost in a thriller, and the Tigers just don’t know how to win sometimes. Also, some computer stuff happened on Friday.

I remember reading a very concise tweet a while back that simply said: “I don’t want to live in interesting times any more” and I’m inclined to agree.

There are too many things going on again and it’s reminding me of 2016… hang on.

 

 

Ah yes of course it’s that feeling again of waking up to something insane in the US that will take attention away from what you were planning to do that day.

This is why I happily stepped back from active management and am now a spectator of the big swinging moves that need to be captured. These, I will document below.

We still have Trump as 100% the next elected president, provided he survives that long. Biden dropping out just evens the fight and means the Republicans don’t win 49/50 states.

 

Conspiracy

One for the tinfoil hat crew about the CrowdStrike failure: a near global collapse of IT systems occurred at dawn in the US on the Friday following a very suspicious assassination attempt on the Republican presidential candidate and favourite for the job?

That’s a theory that even has me taking pause imagining what America would look like today had that bullet not missed.

Long every gunmaker in the US provided markets were even open in this alternate reality.

Interesting times indeed… as covered in the new iteration of the Theory of Thing podcast along with plenty of other… things.

 

Simple Rules

In a rising-rate environment, own the banks/financials, in a lowering-rate environment, own gold.

And there it is. Biggest hedge fund bullish holdings since pre-Covid. Gold reaching all-time highs.

Chart via TradingView

Everyone knows I love a long-term chart, so here it is going back to the 1970s.

Playing golf a few years back in the comp with some of the older members at Northbridge, they all talk about their portfolios and knowing I’m involved in markets they asked me for my target on gold.

“$5,000”

“Ha, no seriously”

Me: stopping and looking them straight in the eye, “5,000 dollars. US. That’s my target.”

So, it’s on the way that in my lifetime I’ll be correct on that. Nothing wrong with a little gold exposure.

The rotation into small caps meanwhile really took off last week with the unwinding of short positions and general rotation out of the bigger end of the market.

We cover it in the podcast but the Russell 2000 really can be pushed around relatively easily and the weight of money moving really created the perfect storm for a 5 sigma event.

Rate cuts and confidence about the years ahead in leadership in the US are a good tailwind.

 

Big end still overvalued

Also (and you know that for the most part people should be invested, just sometimes you need to change your weights) I still think the big end of the market is overvalued and here it is evidenced by BofA.

Using long-term averages (which I love) the US market is expensive in 19 of 20 metrics, even the more dubious ones like valuing the market in gold and oil terms.

 

 

Here’s something a little simpler.

The forward 12-month P/E ratio of 21.2 is above the 5-year average (19.3) and above the 10-year average (17.9).

 

Small caps: Go hide thee within

So yes, find a way to hide in small caps, like the VanEck small caps ETF QSML, which offers 150 of the highest-quality small-cap stocks around the world (80% in the USA) and wait for the moment to properly get set in the ‘Magnificent 7’ to hold forever.

 

Small cap fund flow though… you have to be a part of this.

 

CrowdStruck

If you’re after a really simple explanation of how all computers were affected at once in certain sectors then others then this tweet sums it up nicely.

Everyone pretty much has to use the same thing.

 

Screenshot via X

 

May you live in interesting times.

Stay safe and all the best,

James

 

P.S. Nothing out of the 3rd Plenum last week. Quite a let down there. No trade for now.

 

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