I Hate to Sell Shares of Companies I Love

But then, that’s redundant, isn’t it? If I didn’t love the companies, I had no business owning their shares in the first place.

When investors freaked out about the coronavirus pandemic in late February, I advised CNBC viewers to view it as a rare opportunity to buy Robinson Crusoe stocks slowly and carefully, at deep discounts.

CNBC Squawk on the Street, 2/25/20

There aren’t many Robinson Crusoe companies but they are easy to spot–branded products, big gross margins, little need for capital, huge free cash flow margins, a government monopoly (we call it Intellectual Property) and little or no debt. Companies like Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and Alibaba. In March, I wrote about just how hard it is to buy stock when prices are collapsing and every bone in your body screams “sell!” The only way I know how to help my brain beat my limbic system is to buy a little bit every day in amounts so small they don’t matter. Over several weeks they add up.

For the past few weeks I have had exactly the opposite problem. The Fed turned on the firehose, the government sent everyone checks, and stock prices have been driven up to ridiculous valuations. (Disposable income was actually a lot higher in the second quarter than it was in the months before COVID-19, as you can see in the chart below.) The stay-at-home amateurs (Robin Hood) have fallen in love with the stock market. Coronavirus numbers are rising again, and unemployment benefits are just about to run out. This is a time to sell stocks, not buy them.

But how do you sell down your position in the best companies in the world when prices are still rising? Slowly, in small amounts, every day. I sold a few shares yesterday. I sold a few today. I will sell a few again tomorrow.

But what if I’m wrong and prices keep rising? Then I will look like an idiot. But at least I won’t be a broke idiot.

JR

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Network Theory, Complex Systems, Avalanches, Pandemics and Financial Crises: Scientific Papers You Can Read to Understand All of Them.

Summary: In my previous articles, I have stressed that sudden, violent, temporary events like earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, avalanches, pandemics, and financial crises are all examples of phase transitions experienced by complex systems in far-from-equilibrium situations. They are completely different animals from the slow, gradual adjustment back to equilibrium assumed by essentially all macroeconomic models, including the ones used by the economists at the Fed and other central banks. There is no way to use those models to understand either the pandemic or the resulting financial collapse, and no analytical framework for understanding when the economy will return to “normal.” This post is to give you a guide to the scientific literature behind the new ideas so you can better understand today’s crisis and when it will end.

In my last post, I linked the reader to an academic research paper I recently published in the Journal of Economics and Finance that describes the theoretical foundations of the far-from-equilibrium phase transitions we call pandemics and financial crises. You can download the paper, Economics as Energy Framework: Complexity, Turbulence, Financial Crises and Protectionism, here.

Several people have written saying they would like to dig into the scientific papers behind the ideas. In this post, I give you a link to the syllabus for the course I teach to the Economics and Finance PhD students  at Claremont Graduate University. You can access and download the syllabus by clicking on this link, or by clicking on the graphic below.

I designed the course for third year PhD students who have already learned the standard models well enough to know that they don’t work well in the real world. The problem with standard theories–from general equilibrium macroeconomics to so-called modern portfolio theory–is they are based upon the silly idea that markets are in equilibrium at all times. If they were, of course, nothing would happen–physicists refer to thermal equilibrium as heat death. That, of course, would result in a tragedy of epic proportions–there would be no need for economists to exist at all.

All of the interesting things in the world happen away from equilibrium where there are incentives (temperature, pressure, price, wage, or return differentials) big enough to make something happen. In fact, the really interesting changes (avalanches, tsunamis, earthquakes, hurricanes, wars, revolutions, collapsing ecosystems, and financial crises) only happen when systems find themselves in far from equilibrium states. I designed the course to help students change their thinking to accommodate the sudden, violent change that we experience in real life.

I won’t try to explain the course here but it may be worth a quick look at a few of the ideas. The real prize, though, is the list of some 1200 scientific papers in the references section on pages 8-28. they are the papers that I plowed through over 25 years in developing the ideas I describe in the article and that are the foundation for what I think of as Weather Map Investing.

If you just want a taste of the ideas, I would suggest that you start by reading just a few of the classic papers, in the following order:

  • First, read Friedrich von Hayek’s classic 1939 and 1945 papers on knowledge and economics where he describes how a market economy solves the division of knowledge problem by building an extraordinarily efficient communication network that transmits a signal called price to deliver information on relative scarcity to those people, and only those people, who need it to make decisions. In my opinion these are the two most important papers ever written in economics.
  • Second, read Irving Fisher’s 1933 The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions. This tiny (25 pages plus charts and footnotes) is Fisher’s extraordinary 49-step dynamic description of what happens when a market economy collapses into depression. I consider this the second most important paper in economics (counting von Hayek’s papers as one) because it presages so many later developments, including behavioral economics and finance, self-generating systems, poised systems, the critical point, and the importance of distance from equilibrium. Of note: Fisher was the star student of Josiah Gibbs, America’s greatest thermodynamicist.
  • Third, read Per Bak’s little book How Nature Works, where he explains the results of 5000 papers in physics studying the mathematics of the cascading system failures we call avalanches. He explains criticality, poised systems, and punctuated equilibria. His conclusion “Almost all changes are small; almost all change is big” is hugely important for investors to understand. For painful example, more workers have lost their jobs in the last three weeks than all of the jobs created since the bottom of the 2008 subprime debt crisis.
  • Prigogine’s 1996 book The End of Certainty describing the new area of science called “far-from-equilibrium physics” for which he won the 1977 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. (The first half of the book is easily readable by people without propellers on their heads. For the rest–good luck). He describes how and why far-from-equilibrium systems behave in ways that are qualitatively different than systems at or near equilibrium. And he explains why it is a mistake to bet that correlations can be stable indicators of anything.
  • Finally, Melanie Mitchell’s wonderful textbook Complexity introduces beginners to the subject now known as complex adaptive systems that uses all of the above ideas to study how the real world works. she gives a good description of network theory, explains the cascading network failures we call financial crises, and guides you to research on what makes some networks fragile and some robust.

I hope that you enjoy grazing through the references. If you  are especially curious about any of them write a comment and I will do my best to explain them in a later post. If I can’t do it, I will ask one of my dissertation students to tackle it for you. Hope you enjoy.

JR

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