VSG Portfolio: January's Performance

 | Feb 04, 2016 03:47AM ET

January has come and gone this year and the investors have been left behind in a sea of red.

For believers in January Effect, this can be foreboding. They say that the month of January is a barometer for how the stock market will perform through the year. This is not really true, but as an investor you do wonder what may be coming.

There are a few main areas of concern for the investors:

1. Volatility: It is becoming very clear that investors are leaving certain names and asset types in droves. Junk bonds have been decimated, so have been the stocks of energy and commodities companies. Biotech, most tech stocks, financials, you name it, have all suffered. When this happens in smaller stocks that do not have enough liquidity in the market, the prices can reach ridiculous levels. Heck, superb buying opportunities are opening up even in preferred stock which tend to be less risky than common. Important to have cash on hand to take advantage of these.

2. China: They think China is slowing down. It is NOT slowing down. So the growth is no longer going to be 7.5% but rather 6%. But it is still growth. The China problem is mostly an inventory problem. China overbought a lot of raw material and commodities based on their earlier growth estimates. Now that the growth is slowing, things have piled up. So China doesn’t need to buy a lot of the stuff they need until the excess inventory of what they already have is used up. Eventually supply and demand balance, this has always been true and will always be true (unless there are irrational actors on the stage, which there can’t be in the long run).

3. Commodities: See China above for the demand side of the equation. On the supply side, you might have noticed the big 3 VALE (N:VALE), Rio Tinto (L:RIO) and BHP Billiton (L:BLT) raise production in the face of declining prices and a supply glut. There is a very good strategic reason for this. This kills off less cost efficient competitors faster and will make the recovery in the commodities cycle come faster than it normally would if left unattended. The big 3 will then be even bigger 3 as they would have grown their market share. But yeah, investors look at the short term impact on these companies and punish their stock. Long term investors should welcome the widespread short-termism in the market as that is what makes these once in a lifetime valuations possible.

4. Global Trade: This is a big elephant in the room. The Baltic Dry Index is at 30+ year low and as a leading indicator of the health of the global trade (and therefore the global economy), it will make anyone nervous. Already esteemed publications such as Zero Hedge are raising alarms that there is no ship moving in the waters and international commerce has come to a standstill (which is completely false – they should redact that story for lack of research). But it is true that things are not very good.

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A similar scenario is playing out in Shipping as in the Commodities. Financially stronger companies that can afford to keep ordering new vessels amidst an industrywide multi year glut of ships that has pressured the charter rates downwards to record lows. Ultimately the weak will be removed and the strong will become stronger. We just find who the strong ones are and wait patiently, perhaps add to our positions when the rest of the market panics (which they do often).

5. Interest Rates: The Street has forgotten what an interest rate hike looks like and how to handle it. It has been so long since the previous series of rate hikes that most of the bankers today on the street were probably still working on their MBAs the last time rates were hiked.

6. Possibility of a Recession: There might be a stock market crash or there might not be one. This has been raised quite frequently recently. Partly due to the distress in the bond market, which can dry up business funding and available credit. There was too much money in the system and that is now being taken away. I think the markets might take some time to adjust, but they will eventually adjust. As a value investor, I would rather focus on individual businesses rather then the entire market.