In a week when central bank actions have dominated the headlines, from the Federal Reserve’s decision to start tapering to the Bank of England blindsiding markets by standing pat, it’s worth taking a step back as to how much rates really matter.
Mitch Rubin, co-chief investment officer at RiverPark Capital and manager of both its long/short opportunity and large growth funds, chided the obsession with thinking about how isolated economic variables will impact markets. “Economists, pundits and market strategists always note that they are simply highlighting situations where — all else being equal — one action, such as higher rates, could have a significant negative impact on specific investments, such as higher multiple stocks and/or longer duration assets,” he said in the third-quarter investment letter. “Maybe so, but, we would observe that all else is literally NEVER equal.”
To prove his point, he looked back at the list of 21 largest companies by market cap in the S&P 500, Russell 1000 growth and Russell 1000 value indexes at the end of 2007. From there, he points out, these companies experienced a lot. “Over the next nearly 14 years through today, we had the Great Financial Crisis, both Democratic and Republican control over the White House and Congress, multiple geopolitical ‘crises’ and then the COVID pandemic,” he said.
But what really mattered in predicting returns is at what rate, and in what direction, did company earnings compound.
Two of the three best performing stocks were also the most expensive stocks back in 2007, he noted. “High PE + Strong Earnings can still result in best in class stock performance — even if the multiple contracts materially,” he said. Another interesting point was that JPMorgan Chase
JPM,
did well despite the industry it operated in getting crushed. “Management and specific company characteristics still matter just as much, if not more, to stock performance — yet they aren’t easily quantifiable in any visible statistics for which you can screen,” he said.
Occasionally, the market does offer up multiyear compounders at deeply discounted values — he cited Apple
AAPL,
and Blackstone Group
BX,
as examples. But he said the firm has had just as much success buying stocks considered expensive, as long as they grew their earnings at high rates for a long period of times. In a footnote, he also noted companies including Costco
COST,
Home Depot
HD,
and Chipotle
CMG,
that the firm owned but sold too early when it thought they got pricey.
The buzz
Economists expect a strong October payrolls report, with The Wall Street Journal-compiled consensus expecting a 450,000 gain in nonfarm payrolls and the unemployment rate easing a tick to 4.7%.
The White House is asking Democratic senators to meet with Fed Chair Jerome Powell, leading some to believe President Joe Biden will renominate him, according to Axios. Sen. Sherrod Brown said the White House may roll out four nominations to the Fed, including for the vice chair for bank supervision role.
Peloton Interactive
PTON,
skidded 30% after the exercise-bike maker forecast far-weaker holiday sales than analysts expected. Inventories rose 35% sequentially to $1.27 billion. RiverPark’s Rubin said Peloton was the top short in its long/short fund. He said the fund “may cover some” but there’s downside below $50 per share.
Airbnb
ABNB,
and Expedia
EXPE,
each benefited from an increase in travel, their latest results showed.
One RiverPark investment that’s had a rocky week is Zillow
Z,
“We are thrilled they are exiting the home buying business, and given the correction are buying more,” Rubin said in an email.
Emergent Biosciences
EBS,
tumbled, after the federal government canceled a contract, following the production of millions of contaminated Johnson & Johnson
JNJ,
vaccine doses.
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The markets
After a particularly strong day for tech stocks, and the 15th gain in 17 tries for the S&P 500
SPX,
U.S. stock futures
ES00,
NQ00,
edged higher.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury
TMUBMUSD10Y,
was 1.52%. The pound
GBPUSD,
was trading lower for a second day after the Bank of England’s surprise decision to keep rates unchanged.
Random reads
New York City’s mayor-elect says he will take his first three paychecks in bitcoin
BTCUSD,
— in what will be a challenge to the city’s payroll system.
Swedish pop supergroup ABBA has released its first album after 40 years.
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This post was originally published on Market Watch