Editor's note: Sitting in a room with investors can tell you things the numbers can't. Our publisher's Director of Research Matt Weinschenk learned this lesson at the kickoff of the financial crisis. Today, we're sharing that story, updated from his 2018 Stansberry Digest essay. Read on for what he found out about calling the bottom – or the top... How I Learned Lehman Was Drowning Before Almost Anyone Else By Matt Weinschenk, director of research, Stansberry Research I was one of the first people to know that Lehman Brothers would go bust... But I didn't figure it out for myself. I was just a 25-year-old kid sitting in the right place at the right time (the 2007 Value Investing Congress in New York City, to be exact). I was in the room when then-regarded short-seller David Einhorn walked the audience through his thesis for why the investment bank would go bust... Einhorn didn't hook the audience with a gripping story. He just talked numbers. The shocks had already started to show in the banking system... Lehman looked like it had one of the worst loan portfolios of the banks, but it hadn't written off any losses yet. Something didn't add up. Einhorn knew an earthquake was coming. It was November 2007, and the financial crisis was looming over Wall Street and all of America. But the market hadn't crashed yet. And I was about to learn the biggest lesson of my investment career... Recommended Links: | CRITICAL BRIEFING FOR ALL READERS This is the most important investment recommendation you will see from Stansberry Research all year. It's a proven way to invest and tune out all the bad news... WITHOUT having to worry about whether you're in the right stocks... whether you have too much in the wrong stocks... or whether the Fed's next move will send your accounts lower. Details here. | |
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| As investment conferences go, the Value Investing Congress represented the best of the best at that time. Every speaker managed billions of dollars. Even in the crowd, you could find yourself sitting next to hedge-fund royalty. However, what I learned had nothing to do with what the speakers said on stage, the investment ideas they presented, the charts they shared, or the balance sheets they studied. It had a lot more to do with the mood in the room... Between every session, folks would get on their Blackberries to check in on the stock market. Whoever got an update would yell it out in the hallway. Several speakers made good cases to buy stocks. After all, these were value investors. And you had to have guts and buy when "there is blood in the streets." They didn't know it, but the streets were about to get a lot bloodier. See for yourself: During the conference, we were right here in the market... We were on the precipice of the greatest financial crisis in 60 years. Everyone was worried... But we had no idea how far the market would fall. The S&P 500 Index was about 6% off its peak. The financial sector had already fallen about 20%. I take a data-focused approach to investing... Rather than drawing lines on charts like some of my colleagues who specialize in technical trading, I focus on economics and fundamental data. But at that conference, I learned that numbers will never tell you everything you need to know. The market has a certain feel to it. You can only pick it up by talking to investors, hearing hedge-fund managers speak off-the-cuff, and listening to candid conversations that aren't supposed to leave the room. In November 2007, an uncomfortable, grim humor filled the air. The people in the room stood to lose billions in investor money, and many would lose their jobs. Even so, they weren't panicked. They joked and laughed. They assumed the other guys' portfolios would fall apart, but not theirs. When a presenter pitched a long stock idea, he'd finish up with a winking disclaimer like, "That is, if you're brave enough to buy any stocks right now." Other speakers made similar jokes: "This is a buy... if there even is a financial sector tomorrow." The crowd reacted with nervous laughter. What I realized later was that when the bottom is truly in, nobody is cracking jokes... It's pure fear. Had the speakers sensed that, they could have avoided some disastrous calls. I remember hearing a presentation from Tom Brown, who runs a website called Bankstocks.com and a hedge fund focused on bank stocks. He basically threw up his hands and admitted it's hard to figure it all out when everything keeps moving so fast. I do remember one bold claim he made, though... I think we're really close to, if not at, the bottom for the financial-services industry. There are many opportunities in the most battered sectors. That same day, news service Reuters reported his fund was down 50% for the year... Yet, the S&P Financial Index would go on to fall another 80% from there. Portfolio manager Richard Pzena of Pzena Investment Management gave a talk claiming that Freddie Mac was the cheapest stock he had ever seen. After that, shares of Freddie went from $35 to around $1, and nearly brought down his investment firm in the process. Today, everybody wants to be the person who calls the top. That can be just as hard as calling the bottom... And no single chart or number-driven solution is the silver bullet. But the reverse of what you see at the bottom – pure fear – is pure euphoria. And we're simply not seeing that euphoria yet. That means the market can still climb the "wall of worry" higher. As the old saying goes, the most dangerous words in investing are "this time it's different"... That's catchy. But in one sense, every time is different. We've never had fast-growing technology companies, an 11-year bull market with ultra-low interest rates, a pandemic-induced market crash – followed by a roaring recovery and unemployment below 4% – all in rapid succession. Of course it's different. What has never changed are investors' mindsets. They are always driven by the same fear and greed... They are likely to let their emotions lead them into doing the exact wrong thing at the exact wrong time. And eventually, they will bid the market up to unsustainable levels before the whole thing comes crashing back down like a house of cards. As journalist Edwin Lefèvre wrote about trader Jesse Livermore in his classic 1923 biography, Reminiscences of a Stock Operator... There is nothing new in Wall Street. There can't be because speculation is as old as the hills. Whatever happens in the stock market today has happened before and will happen again. That will never change. So, look at as many charts as you want... But make sure you're listening to what investors are saying, too. Good investing, Matt Weinschenk Editor's note: Our start-of-the-year kickoff event is designed to give you a clear roadmap for the year ahead. This year was no exception... Steve, Matt, and Dr. David Eifrig sat down to share what to make of the chaotic stock market right now – and to reveal the ONLY place they all believe you should put your money in 2022. It has outperformed the S&P 500 for five years running... Learn more here while you can. Further Reading Trying to predict what will happen next in the markets is only a risky gamble with your portfolio. But today, one indicator is giving us a signal about what to expect and how to prepare... Get the full story here: What the 'Bear Flattener' Tells Us Today. "Wall Street has long been criticized as a scheme for turning ordinary people's money into investment bankers' wealth," Matt writes. These days, folks are betting and losing vast amounts of money without any help from Wall Street. But there is a better way... Read more here. | INSIDE TODAY'S DailyWealth Premium Four little words can make or break your portfolio... If you stay alert and tuned-in, you can almost always profit in the markets. And Ben Morris's strategies can help you keep your wits in one of the most dangerous ideas in investing... Click here to get immediate access. Market Notes WHEN THIS COMPANY IS THRIVING, IT MEANS FOLKS ARE SPENDING Today's chart paints a bullish picture of the economy... Longtime readers know that we often use certain sectors as real-world economic bellwethers. For example, when construction materials are in high demand, it means cities and corporations can afford new buildings. And when shipping companies are hitting new highs, that tells us folks are buying things... ZIM Integrated Shipping Services (ZIM) is a $10 billion global shipping company. Its fleet of 100 vessels transports food, medicine, water, and electrical appliances to the U.S., Africa, Europe, and Asia. As folks around the world have been flush with cash and eager to spend it, ZIM has had a steady stream of business... even after nearly tripling its average shipping rates since this time last year. This demand sent ZIM's quarterly revenue to $3.1 billion, up 210% year over year. ZIM shares are rocketing higher. They're up more than 350% since the company's initial public offering in January 2021... And they recently hit a new all-time high. When shipping companies like this are performing well, it tells us consumers are spending freely... Tell us what you think of this content We value our subscribers’ feedback. To help us improve your experience, we’d like to ask you a couple brief questions. |