Wolf
Richter www.testosteronepit.com www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
By now, every tidbit about this wondrous bull
market gets benchmarked against the dotcom bubble. It’s different
this time, we’re ceaselessly told, even on NPR. For one, the “Tech
Bubble,” as it’s officially called now, is not tied to the larger
stock market this time. So its implosion will be contained. I
remember hearing the same in 1999.
And “Tech” is a rubbery term, these days.
It covers online retailers, anything in the social media space where
the business model, if there’s one at all, is based on collecting
and monetizing personal data; it covers automakers, such as Tesla
which struggles to build a couple of thousand cars a month,
chipmakers that have their microchips manufactured at some fab in
China, or biotechs with big dreams and no drugs. The bigger the
losses, the more upward momentum these stocks have. Or had. Because
now they’re getting crushed.
The
debacle has become part of the public debate even on NPR, which is a
terrible sign. And KQED, one of our radio stations in San Francisco –
a city that had been particularly impacted by the implosion of the
dotcom bubble and isn’t naive about it – aired a one-hour
show Friday
morning, titled, “Are we in another Tech Bubble?” The discussion
between the host and the guests didn’t leave much room for the
title’s question mark.
The
same day, we had the first hints of catharsis, albeit premature and
incomplete. “I remember back in 2000 how I just watched my assets
shrink on a daily basis, stuck in disbelief as an unrelenting market
did permanent damage to me,” wrote
The Fly,
a sharp-eyed stock market blogger. This isn’t some young
googly-eyed trader who hasn’t seen anything but the supernatural
five-year bull market that might have culminated last year with a 30%
gain, and a lot more for the highfliers. The Fly has been through
this before: “It would take me more than 3 years to rebuild my
business and I never forgot those lessons, until about 8 weeks ago.”
That’s what a supernatural bull market does
to us, even after we’ve learned the lessons the hard way. It
persuades us that the gains are our doing, that we’re smart and
unbeatable, and that we know what it takes to ride this thing to the
very end and then get out just in time. But before we get there, we
get whacked.
“I
sold almost everything today and now sit with 90% cash,” The Fly
lamented. “My year-to-date losses were stopped out at about -32%,
that’s another -13% for this week alone.” Then the same thoughts
that everyone has afterwards:
“It’s obvious that I should have sold long ago.”
If you’re down 32%, you’ve got to make 47%
just to get back to where you were, not counting tax consequences,
fees, anguish, a shortened life expectancy, and gray hair. While 47%
may be easy when nearly everything is soaring, in the current
environment it’s devilishly hard and requires boatloads of luck.
The
Fly posted some of the biggest
losers that
once had been among “2013?s favorite stocks.” Biotech company
Exelixis tops the list, down 61% from its 52-week high. It’s also
down 93% from its all-time high shortly after its IPO in early 2000.
In second place on the list: another Biotech outfit, Halozyme, down
60% from its all-time high in early January. It’s back where it was
in mid-2013. Imperva, a Big Data security products maker, crashed 64%
from its peak last year. And so on.
This
sort of wholesale destruction makes the biggies look practically
tame: Twitter is downonly 44%
from its high late last year, Amazon 26% from earlier this year.
Amazon has the dubious distinction of having been an early warning
signal during the blowup of the dotcom bubble. It started crashing in
early December 1999 and was down 40% six weeks later. The bubble
officially burst in early March 2000, after which Amazon continued to
eviscerate traders and investors alike. Unlike many of its brethren,
however, it survived and a decade later made new highs.
Internet-radio miracle Pandora has plunged 42%
in six weeks, taking it back to where it had been in September. This
is the nature of momentum stocks that get unhinged from reality and
soar without even the sky being the limit. When the hot air hisses
out of them, they plunge at three or five times the speed. Escalator
up, elevator down.
The crashing highflyers have taken countless
momentum traders down with them. Yet the S&P 500 remains just a
couple of good days away from setting another high. And mind-numbing
bullishness still rules the day.
But
risks are piling up even for staid dividend-paying stocks and for
normally conservative bonds. And households are on the hook. They’re
holding 34.9% of their financial assets in these kinds of risky
investments, the most since the third quarter of 2000, “near the
height of the tech bubble,” wrote Russ Koesterich on mega-asset
manager BlackRock’s
blog;
and “just shy” of the record 38.4% set in the first quarter of
2000, at the cusp of the market implosion. He too couldn’t help but
benchmarking the current bubble against the bubble of yore.
He fingered the Fed as the culprit. Its
interest-rate repression has induced investors to embark on a frantic
search for yield, and so they dove into dividend paying stocks and
corporate bonds. By now, 50% of all bonds held by households are
corporates – “an all-time high.”
Even the Fed started to fret about the
“excessive risk-taking” that its policies engendered, and it
worried about their “costs” – fears that it shared in the
minutes of its December meeting. These “costs” have already
whacked savers and retirees and folks who don’t want to gamble away
their life savings in a market gone crazy. But now other groups have
elbowed their way to the front of that line: momentum traders. And
rather than losing a little money in insidiously regular intervals,
like savers, they’re losing a lot of money very quickly. Behind
them are other groups that are waiting nervously, or blissfully as
the case may be, to get eviscerated next.
Rumor
had it that banks weren’t lending, and that this was the reason the
recovery has been so crummy and job creation so lackadaisical. There
was no demand for loans, and banks were too tight with their lending
standards, or so the story went. Read…. This
Chart Is A True Picture of The Bank Credit Bubble In America, Now
Bigger Than The Last One (Which Blew Up)
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