Superbubble, Superbubble’s Final Act? Or Is This Time Different?

The most obvious indication that a decade of monetary interventions created a “superbubble” is in the deviation of the financial markets from corporate profitability. The eventual reversion in economic growth and, ultimately, corporate profitability leaves investors highly vulnerable to a much more significant decline as prices move to reflect economic realities.

Superbubble, Superbubble’s Final Act? Or Is This Time Different?

This Time Is Not Likely Different

The risk to investors is that this time is “not” different. As Jeremy Grantham notes:

“Economic data inevitably lags major turning points in the economy. To make matters worse, at the turn of events like 2000 and 2007, data series like corporate profits and employment can subsequently be massively revised downwards. It is during this lag that the bear market rally typically occurs.”

He is correct. The problem for investors is that it is often too late to make much of a difference when they realize that current expectations are too elevated. Historically, the outcomes of these misaligned expectations are brutal and financially devastating. As Jeremy further states:

“Why are the historic superbubbles always followed by major economic setbacks? Perhaps because they occurred after a very extended build-up of market and economic forces, with a major surge of optimism thrown in at the end. At the peak, the economy always looks near perfect: full employment, strong GDP, no inflation, record margins. This was the case in 1929, 1972, 1999, and in Japan (the most important non-U.S. superbubble). The ageing cycle and temporary near perfection of fundamentals leave economic and financial data with only one way to go.”

While many hoped the market lows for 2022 were set back in June, they weren’t, as new lows came last week. Those lows likely won’t be the last.

  • The Fed is aggressively tightening monetary policy to quell inflation.
  • At the same time, the Fed is reducing market liquidity by $95 billion per month.
  • High levels of inflation are quickly eroding Americans’ savings and spending ability.
  • Inflation will likely remain more “sticky,” eventually eroding corporate margins.
  • Inflation, and government policies, will act as a “tax” on consumers, further eroding spending capacity.
  • Forward earnings estimates remain overly optimistic, requiring lower asset prices to compensate.
  • Layoffs are increasing, hiring is slowing, and CEOs and consumers are bracing for a recession.

These are just a few of the issues currently, but the impact of these, and many other negative factors, continue to erode consumer and business confidence measures.

Given the current economic and financial backdrop, if the current bear market did indeed bottom in July, it would be the first time such occurred historically. Nonetheless, we should not dismiss the possibility entirely. Given the recent Government responses to downturns, another bailout will not be surprising.

However, those “bailouts” are not on the horizon currently and will likely come amidst a steeper decline in asset prices. Let me conclude with Jeremy’s final point:

“But these few epic events seem to act according to their own rules, in their own play, which has apparently just paused between the third and final act. If history repeats, the play will once again be a Tragedy. We must hope this time for a minor one.”

We can always hope.