The First Casualty of a Bear Market
Post on: 6 Сентябрь, 2015 No Comment
Posted December 17, 2014 by Joshua M Brown
Nick Murray says The ability to distinguish between volatility and loss is the first casualty of a bear market.
I turned to one of my favorite passages of his masterpiece Simple Wealth, Inevitable Wealth this morning as turmoil from overseas and the commodity markets made its way through the headlines. Nick relays a great anecdote about how much money one investor personally lost during the last Russian Ruble crisis in the summer of 1998
$6,200,000,000
Yes, thats right, its six billion two hundred million dollars. A very large sum of money, wouldnt you say? Now what, you ask, does it represent?
It is roughly how much Warren Buffetts personal shareholdings in his Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. declined in value between July 17 and August 31, 1998. And now for the six billion dollar question. During those forty-five days, how much money did Warren Buffett lose in the stock market?
The answer is, of course, that he didnt lose anything. Why? Thats simple: he didnt sell.
In July and August of 1998, I was doing time at a brokerage firm on Long Island as a summer intern. The brokers were panicking and the partners began yelling at them to get off margin and help maintain order in the Asia Pacific technology stocks in which the firm made markets. It wasnt working, from what I could surmise. The simultaneous meltdown of several Far East currencies and then the toppling of the Ruble proved too much for US markets and eventually the contagion found its way here.
People forget that, in the midst of the massive late 1990s bull market, we had this two-month bear market episode in which the S&P 500 dropped by a quick 25 percent. The giant Nobel laureate-run hedge fund, Long Term Capital, imploded as a result and Greenspan was forced to slash rates overnight while the New York Fed arranged a Wall Street-subsidized bailout. Things got back to normal by the end of the fall, but, for a minute there, the panic was palpable and it eventually slammed everyone.
I bring this up because there are some parallels between then and now (along with some highly notable differences, as always). The drama surrounding the Russian economy, currency and stock market along with the dual crash in crude oil has shaken confidence around the world. Volatility has spread throughout the US stock and bond markets in recent days. History tells us it can get significantly worse really quickly before the storm passes a la the currency crises of the summer of 1998. At the end of the day, we just dont know.
Warren Buffett didnt change his plans or blast a great big hole in his portfolio that summer. He did not turn temporary declines into permanent losses. Instead, he stuck to his investment strategy while so many others lost their grip.
Buffett didnt have any information about the future then just as we dont today. But what he did have, according to Murray and all of his biographers, was an incredibly even-keeled temperament. It is Buffetts temperament and not his analytical skill that allows him to ride out episodes like this. But more than that, it is Buffetts ability to distinguish between volatility and risk .
One of the things that probably helps him do that is his own experience with difficult markets. Murray points out us that Buffett had been through the crash of October 1987 and had only lost $347,000,000 that day. He didnt sell during that crash either. This is the precise reason why, 11 years later, Buffett was even in a position to have a temporary drawdown of $6.2 billion.
The smile never left his face, and its easy to see why. Berkshire Hathaway closed on October 19, 1987 at $3,170 a share. On August 31st, 1998, it closed at $60,500. And just the other day, I saw it at $150,000.
In case youre keeping score, Berkshires A shares go for $218,000 as I write. Buffetts biggest risk would have been allowing the momentary madness of a market panic to divert him from the bigger picture.
Source:
Simple Wealth, Inevitable Wealth (NickMurray.com)
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