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January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
Hussman Funds

Home

Market Comment Archive

Investment Research & Insight Archive









January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.
Hussman Funds - Weekly Market Comment: January 18, 2005 - Market Action as Information
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January 18, 2005

Market Action as Information

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.

One of the central notions of the efficient markets hypothesis is that prices reflect all available information about future fundamentals, whether held publicly or privately, so outperforming the market is impossible. I take the EMH seriously, though as you might expect, not literally. Aside from the fact that the EMH makes implausible assumptions about the rationality of market participants (which can be disabused by watching a few interviews with Wall Street analysts), the EMH has several far less recognized implications, including that trading volume is exactly zero and that all traders agree. Even a slight relaxation of assumptions such as perfect rationality and purely speculative trading motives results in a market that looks much more like what we observe - one in which traders disagree, trading volume is non-zero, and where prices fluctuate in a potentially wide but stable neighborhood around fair valuation.

If you accept that broader view of market efficiency as a "stable neighborhood," it follows that the market doesn't simply trade at "fair value" at all times. Rather, it trades in a neighborhood around it, the width of that neighborhood being determined by the extent to which the basic assumptions of the EMH are violated (which was patently true at the 2000 peak, even to a blind monkey). "Stable" in this context means that there is a tendency, however weak, to converge toward efficiency, even though new events constantly whack the market toward or away from that efficient point. So while there may be very little tendency to "revert to the mean" in the short run (which is why valuation is not a reliable tool for predicting market direction), valuations remain a very good indication of long-term investment returns. In that kind of market, there are still profit opportunities available, but only by making trades that consistently provide the market with scarce, useful services (such as information, liquidity, and risk-bearing). Unfortunately, actually providing those services can be very uncomfortable from time to time.

In general, comfort is an expensive thing to purchase in the financial markets. Still, investors do it all the time. They seek comfort by liquidating stocks - even deeply undervalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of weakness. They seek comfort by chasing stocks - even wildly overvalued ones - after the market has experienced a long period of strength. It is very uncomfortable to actually provide other investors the comfort they seek, by standing there bidding for stock in frightening, undervalued markets, and by selling into exuberant, overvalued markets. But it's that very willingness - to trade in a way that provides scarce, useful resources to others - that is the foundation of long-term gains.

Market action as information

Price movements have at least two components. One is tied to fundamental values, and the other is tied to investors' willingness to accept market risk at any given time. The problem is that we don't get to directly observe which one is making stock prices move.

For instance, a decline in price may by a signal that future fundamentals are likely to be poor, and the fundamental value of the stock has declined. On the other hand, it might be that the stock price has declined even though the outlook for future fundamentals hasn't changed, in which case the stock is now a better value. How can you tell which is happening?

As always, context matters. Stock prices can never be analyzed properly without additional information to place their movements in context. For instance, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market is also plunging, and all the other stocks in that industry are plunging, then we take the decline as a signal about what they share in common: overall economic conditions may be deteriorating, or investors may be broadly concerned about risk (those two possibilities could be further distinguished with additional information about the economy, valuations, credit spreads, and so forth). On the other hand, if the price of a particular stock is plunging, but the overall market and other stocks in the industry are holding up well, we take the decline as a negative signal about that specific company's prospects, or at least investor attitudes toward that specific company, and immediately look for information related to products, management and other factors idiosyncratic to that particular stock.

With the broad market, it is equally important to examine not only valuations but also market action. On the valuation front, knowing that the price/peak earnings multiple of the S&P 500 is 20.5 is already enough to anticipate that long-term returns (over the coming 7-10 years or more) are likely to be unsatisfactory. It is important to recognize that P/E multiples aren't just arbitrary objects, but are instead complex little mathematical beasts that have a long-term rate of return built into them, just as bond prices have a long-term yield to maturity built into them (for more on this, see Natural Consequences). This knowledge of valuations is a major advantage to investors who take the information seriously, because it provides an enormous amount of context in which to interpret shorter-term market action. As Charles Dow wrote a century ago, in one of the single most important observations in stock market history, "To know values is to comprehend the meaning of movements in the market."

Now, we already know that long-term returns have not historically been penalized by avoiding market risk at high valuations. Still, there's a lot of "tracking risk" to that valuation-only approach, and it turns out that investors would have historically done better by considering the risk preferences of investors as well, which I do by analyzing market action.

Though the recent selloff in the major indices is certainly what one might have expected from an overvalued, overbullish, overbought market, it does not follow that stock prices are inherently poised to fall apart. Again, valuation has everything to do with long-term returns, but precious little to do with short-term ones. As long as investors have a robust willingness to accept risk, there can be very little pressure on the market to decline toward more historically normal valuations. So in addition to valuations, we have to consider the quality of market action. The greatest plunges in market history have always emerged from overvalued markets in which investors have recently become skittish toward risk, as evidenced by market action.

So far, strongly negative evidence from market action hasn't emerged. That's not to say we can rule out a further decline, or an abrupt shift in risk aversion ahead, but for now, our investment discipline prevents us from taking a fully hedged position against market fluctuations.

Frankly, I've been impressed by two things in recent weeks. One is the failure of credit spreads to widen (the difference between risky corporate bond yields and default-free Treasury yields), and the other is the failure of new 52-week lows on individual stocks to expand above the number of new highs. Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transportation Average has already broken its December low, so a like breakdown from the Dow Industrials (below 10,440.58 on a closing basis) would be a negative from the standpoint of Dow Theory. So far, however, even that sort of event is not in place.

Now, I certainly believe that credit spreads are overly narrow, and that this will end badly, and I am equally convinced that recent bullish extremes will ultimately give way to considerable pain for investors. Valuations are already extreme enough to warrant holding a very defensive put option position against our stock holdings. But that doesn't mean that a fully hedged investment position (a full offsetting short sale in the major indices against our stock holdings) is warranted - yet.

The bottom line is simple. So far, the recent market decline tells us that an overvalued, overbought, overbullish market has corrected. This is not enough information content, because the market has failed to produce the sort of wide internal divergences that have historically been the hallmark of extreme market risk. Again, we can't rule out further market weakness, and defending our stock holdings with put option coverage is essential, but we still don't have enough evidence to warrant a fully hedged position.

I expect that we will derive an enormous amount of information as we observe how the market responds to the current, oversold condition of stocks. Given that the bulk of our put option coverage is roughly at-the-money, I would expect the Strategic Growth Fund to participate modestly in any early weakness from here, but that the put coverage will substantially mute the impact of any sustained decline.

It will be very important to see whether new divergences develop on any market advance that might occur. In any event, the behavior of market internals in the weeks ahead will matter far, far more than the behavior of the major indices. For now, we're well defended against any serious market weakness that might emerge, but particularly with the market now reasonably oversold, the continued modestly favorable Market Climate demands at least some benefit of the doubt.

Market Climate

As of last week, the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unusually unfavorable valuations but still moderately favorable market action. Given the strangely low level of implied volatility in the options market, I purchased a small but important call option position in the Strategic Growth Fund during the selloff last week, leaving full put option coverage in place.

Though our actual position looks slightly complex, you can effectively think of the Fund in one of two ways: fully hedged, plus about 1.2% of assets in call options, or alternatively, hedged with put options only. Either way, the difference between our current position and a completely hedged position amounts to about 1.2% of assets in call option premium. Accordingly, a market plunge deep enough to take those call options completely to zero would result in Fund performance as much as 1.2% lower than it would be if the Fund were currently fully hedged. Frankly, that would have to be a wicked decline, but it's not out of the question, and I view the potential drag on performance in that event as acceptable, since the Fund would be otherwise defended against the impact of market fluctuations.

Alternatively, I would expect a substantial market advance to have a positive impact on the Fund here. Of course, any difference in performance between the specific stocks held by the Fund and the overall market will also affect Fund returns. Overall, given the prevailing Market Climate, I believe that our current investment position strikes a good balance between risk management and expected return from a Market Climate that, for now, remains constructive.

In bonds, the Market Climate remains unfavorable overall, characterized by both modestly unfavorable valuations and modestly unfavorable market action. The Strategic Total Return Fund continues to have a very limited duration of about 2 years (meaning that a 100 basis point move in bond yields would be expected to affect the Fund by about 2% on account of bond price fluctuations). It is important to recognize that higher short-term interest rates are already exerting an upward impact on monetary velocity, which I have discussed in detail before. That predictable velocity push is partly behind the rising inflation figures. Indeed, CPI inflation has advanced toward 4%. Regardless of oil price fluctuations, it's unlikely that price pressures will subside so long as rising short-term interest rates continue to drive velocity up. So barring some sort of credit/financial scare that kicks up demand for currency (i.e. a drop in velocity due to portfolio demand), inflation will probably continue to surprise on the upside in the months ahead.

---

The foregoing comments represent the general investment analysis and economic views of the Advisor, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse.

Prospectuses for the Hussman Strategic Growth Fund, the Hussman Strategic Total Return Fund, the Hussman Strategic International Fund, and the Hussman Strategic Dividend Value Fund, as well as Fund reports and other information, are available by clicking "The Funds" menu button from any page of this website.

Estimates of prospective return and risk for equities, bonds, and other financial markets are forward-looking statements based the analysis and reasonable beliefs of Hussman Strategic Advisors. They are not a guarantee of future performance, and are not indicative of the prospective returns of any of the Hussman Funds. Actual returns may differ substantially from the estimates provided. Estimates of prospective long-term returns for the S&P 500 reflect our standard valuation methodology, focusing on the relationship between current market prices and earnings, dividends and other fundamentals, adjusted for variability over the economic cycle (see for example Investment, Speculation, Valuation, and Tinker Bell, The Likely Range of Market Returns in the Coming Decade and Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings ).


For more information about investing in the Hussman Funds, please call us at
1-800-HUSSMAN (1-800-487-7626)
513-326-3551 outside the United States

Site and site contents © copyright Hussman Funds. Brief quotations including attribution and a direct link to this site (www.hussmanfunds.com) are authorized. All other rights reserved and actively enforced. Extensive or unattributed reproduction of text or research findings are violations of copyright law.

Site design by 1WebsiteDesigners.