Everything Is Moving Faster

Up the escalator, out the window.

If it feels like the market is moving faster than ever, it is!

Information moves faster, but so do companies.

AI was a pipedream five years ago, and now it’s driving trillions of dollars in value.

If you’re looking for the next hot thing, faster markets can be a great thing. But as a long-term investor, it can bring confusion to decision-making.

In these digital pages, I try to explain how I’m investing with a long-term focus using strategy and financial results, but sometimes that doesn’t translate to the performance I aim for because hype and short-term dynamics win the day.

Today, I want to show how the speed of the market has changed over the past century and why keeping our heads is more important than ever.

Weekly Update

A great example of the speed of the market is the moves this year. There was the SaaS-pocalypse, Iran war fear, and then the AI bottleneck trade all in six months.

In the end, markets are up, but it’s not clear what’s sustainable with AI now dominating indexes across the board.

In the Asymmetric Portfolio, I lost value early this year as non-AI stocks dropped, but buying growth at a value has led to solid performance over the past few months. And the portfolio has still outperformed the market long-term, despite volatility.

Earnings season will be key for the portfolio, so we’ll see how results look starting in a couple of weeks.

In Case You Missed It

  • Pricing Power vs Extortion Pricing: Memory prices have exploded, but is that a good thing? I discuss the difference between customers choosing to pay higher prices for products and being forced to pay more.

  • Zeta’s Superpower: I covered why the uncertainty of marketing spending is a power for Zeta’s business.

Light content week last week, but I’m working on a spotlight article that will be out before the July buys on July 1. Stay tuned for that…

Everything Happens Faster

Yes, the market is moving faster than ever, but putting numbers behind it is a little wild.

Market crashes used to be measured in decades, not months. I’ll show charts for all of these time periods below, but look at the reduction in time from peak to bottom and peak to full recovery over the past century.

Peak to Bottom

Peak to Full Recovery

Great Depression

34 months

303 months

1966-1982

104 months

202 months

.com Bubble

30 months

S&P 500: 85 months

Nasdaq: 184 months

Great Financial Crisis

16 months

S&P 500: 64 months

Nasdaq: 38 months

COVID

1 month

4 months

Post-COVID Bubble

10 months

25 months

The Great Depression is probably the best-known bubble, but did you know the Dow Jones Industrial Average (the key index of the time) took nearly 30 years to recover to the highs hit in the late 1920s? Even the crash took nearly three years to go from peak to bottom.

Post-WWII, the U.S. economy went on a great bull run (because the U.S. wasn’t destroyed in the war) that peaked in 1962. But then the market went nowhere for two decades!

Can you imagine a stock market that went sideways for decades?

The 1980s and 1990s were great, but that ended with the .com bubble bursting in 2000. And that crash lasted almost three years from peak to bottom.

But this is where things really started to change. It would take less than half the time to recover from the .dom bubble than it did from the Great Depression, and that compression continued less than a decade later with the Great Financial Crisis.

If you were of working age during this time, it seemed like the global economy would collapse on itself. Bills went through Congress over the weekend, the Fed took extraordinary action, and even with all of the destruction, it would take only three years for the Nasdaq 100 to fully recover and a little over five years for the S&P 500 to recover.

The crashes in COVID (a blip) and the post-COVID drop in 2022 were even faster.

What can we learn from this?

While there were bubbles and crashes in the past, they’re happening even faster now. FOMO is very real, and chasing momentum can end in disaster.

Moderna, Bath & Bodyworks, and Devon Energy were three of the best-performing stocks in 2021, but have lost money since.

Remember when Plug Power was going to push the world to “green hydrogen”?

We could talk about the boom and bust of crypto, SPACs, and more.

Over time, the surest way to make money and build wealth is to buy great companies and hold them long-term. Just buying and holding great companies like Apple, Netflix, Microsoft, and Booking.com was a recipe for success.

And buying while valuations are low puts the odds even more in our favor.

I’ll buy some more great companies at reasonable prices next month. They won’t make big headlines, and that’s OK. Over the next decade, I think they’ll do well as the market booms and busts around us.

I have a hard time seeing value clearly at the top or when FOMO is highest, so I over-index on staying away…for better or worse.

I’m much better at buying at the bottom and holding on for dear life long-term.

I think that’s a winning strategy no matter how fast the market moves.

Disclaimer: Asymmetric Investing provides analysis and research but DOES NOT provide individual financial advice. Travis Hoium may have a position in some of the stocks mentioned. All content is for informational purposes only. Asymmetric Investing is not a registered investment, legal, or tax advisor, or a broker/dealer. Trading any asset involves risk and could result in significant capital losses. Please, do your own research before acquiring stocks.

Reply

Avatar

or to participate

More From Capital