Required Reading For Investors

Authored by James Rickards via DailyReckoning.com,

What’s the best way to survive a financial crisis with your wealth intact? The answer may surprise you.

Many investors would say, “Sell everything, and wait until it’s over!” That’s almost never good advice.

In the first place, some assets perform well in crises, and you should hold onto those. Secondly, how do you know a crisis has actually started?

What seems like a crisis may just be a short-term bump in the road. And finally, how do you know when it’s over? There were numerous 20% stock rallies during the Great Depression even as stocks were grinding lower over a three-year crash.

I’ll tackle these specifics below, but I should point to an important aspect first: In any financial or market condition there are winners and losers. Diversification and timing are the keys to emerging as a winner.

Great Depression Made Fortunes

There are many famous examples of winning trades in recessions. Here are two of my favorites:

In the late 1920s, Joseph P. Kennedy (father of President John F. Kennedy), Big Mike Meehan and others formed stock manipulation rings. (This was before the passage of modern securities laws in 1933 and 1934 and before the creation of the SEC.)

They’d conspire to bid up the price of certain stocks, a process called a “ramp.” This would catch the attention of retail buyers who would pile in and drive the price to ridiculous valuations. The insiders would then dump their stock at a huge profit and the stock would crash, leaving the retail suckers with the losses.

Kennedy put some icing on the cake by correctly seeing that the stock market was in a bubble by 1929. He shorted stocks ahead of the crash and made another fortune when the crash came in October 1929.

That 1929 crash was just the beginning. Stocks didn’t hit bottom until July 1932 at which point they’d fallen over 80% from the 1929 highs. Kennedy lived through the Great Depression as one of the richest men in America and the Kennedy family fortune continues to this day.

Hyperinflation Can Be Great — if You Own Assets

The exact techniques Kennedy used are illegal today, but the economic dynamic continues in the form of stock market bubbles. Jeff Bezos is now dumping his Amazon stock as fast as possible. That’s not illegal, but maybe there’s a message there for everyday investors.

My other favorite example is Hugo Stinnes. He was a wealthy industrialist during the Weimar Republic in Germany in the early 1920s. He correctly saw that their currency, the Reichsmark, was vulnerable to hyperinflation.

He borrowed huge amounts in Reichsmarks, and purchased hard assets including coal, gold, cargo vessels and railroads.

When hyperinflation hit in 1922–1923, his hard assets reached astronomical values and his debts shrank to zero because they were denominated in Reichsmarks that ended up being swept down the sewers as litter.

Hugo Stinnes came through the Weimar hyperinflation as the richest man in Germany while most others were wiped out.

Timing Is Everything

The point of these stories and many others like it is you can make huge investment gains in recessions if you see the recession coming and make the right moves at the right time.

And not every stock falls in a recession or even a market crash. During the Great Depression, the best performing stock on the New York Stock Exchange was Homestake Mining. Even as stocks were falling 80%.

Homestake rallied because it was one of the largest gold mines in the world. The dollar price of gold rose 75% in 1933–1934 when Franklin Delano Roosevelt devalued the dollar from $20.67 per ounce of gold to $35.00 per ounce. Homestake produced gold and its stock price rose accordingly.

“Timing is everything” may be a cliche, but it’s true. Your approach to recession-related investing has to take into account the timing of the recession before, during and after.

This points to the key to recession-related investing. There are three distinct stages, and each stage has different profit dynamics. Stage 1 is the time period before the recession begins. This is your last chance to leave the theater before the fire starts.

Making Money in a Recession (One Stage at a Time)

During this stage, you should reduce equity exposure (while stocks are still near highs), increase your cash allocation (to weather the storm and reduce volatility) and increase your exposures to U.S. Treasury notes (that will rally in deflation without credit risk) and gold (your hedge against inflationary government remedies).

Setting up these trades is easy, but forecasting a recession is challenging. There are many reliable technical indicators that I cover including inverted yield curves, negative swap spreads, collateral shortages, tightening of credit standards by banks and reduced commercial lending.

These indicators are not typically covered by business media who tend to focus more on the unemployment rate (which is a lagging indicator) and the Federal Reserve, who are always the last to know.

It’s also frustrating to position yourself for a recession while the stock market is still rising and your friends and neighbors are bragging about their big gains. They won’t be bragging when the crash comes.

It’s precisely at this stage where patience is a virtue.

Stage 2

Stage 2 is when the recession has actually hit and you’re in the thick of it. If you made the right moves at Stage 1, then you’ll be doing fine. Your Treasury bonds will be rallying, your cash will be your dry powder for new investing at the lows and your reduced stock portfolio will not be wiping out your entire portfolio.

This is where careful stock picking comes in.

It’s entirely possible to make money in the stock market while the market as a whole is crashing. Holding index funds won’t help you, but active investing will. The key is to choose sectors that will do well even in a recessionary environment. I include defense stocks in this category.

The U.S. has depleted its arsenals by sending weapons to the losing effort in Ukraine. Those arsenals will have to be replenished with new purchases of artillery shells, armored vehicles, anti-missile batteries, cruise missiles and more.

In addition, new weapons systems including drones and AI-assisted robots will be in demand. The major players in the military-industrial complex as well as some new players with the latest technology will do well.

Other sectors that can perform well even in a recession are the oil and natural gas industry, the agricultural sector and mining.

Stage 3

This brings us to Stage 3 of the recession, which is the bottom just as stocks are about to begin a new bull market. This is where you can use your cash reserves to pick up bargains in beaten-down sectors such as Big Tech, consumer durables, consumer electronics, travel and entertainment, financials, fashion, luxury goods and sports.

This is also a good time to lighten up on your U.S. Treasury securities, since interest rates tend to rise in a growing economy and that will cause losses in bond prices.

For consumers with jobs and cash, recessions can actually be good times because prices are lower (or at least not rising as much), more goods are available and there tends to be more capacity at travel destinations, restaurants, performing arts venues and other attractions.

Of course, the opposite is true. For those who lose jobs or deplete savings, a recession represents hard times where many luxury or discretionary purchases and activities fall by the wayside.

The bottom line is there are opportunities to make money in recessions, but one must distinguish among the three stages and pursue different strategies in each stage.

Stage 1 is dominated by cash and Treasuries and dodging the recession bullet. Stage 2 is dominated by selective stock picking that spots the sectors that perform well in hard times. Stage 3 is bottom-fishing in stocks more broadly to prepare for the next rally. Gold has a role in all three stages.

The key is to stay diversified and be nimble!

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12 Comments
James
James
March 27, 2024 7:56 pm

I will not try and keep me wealth by investing in weapons systems/ai drones ect.

Tools of personal freedom are fine by me,just not looking to fuck up the world with skynet to keep me wealth,my wealth would then be worth nothing as would me soul,to each their own.

comment image

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
  James
March 27, 2024 8:26 pm

I try not to invest in any of the commie companies. Especially Google.

SmallerGovNow
SmallerGovNow
March 27, 2024 9:42 pm

Blah, blah, blah. What are you selling this time Mr. Rickards? Chip

Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay
  SmallerGovNow
March 27, 2024 9:54 pm

$100/wk invested in S&P500 (SPY) starting Jan 2000 is worth $494971 today. Time in market beats timing the market. Don’t try to pick stocks, less than 30% of pickers beat S&P annually much worse over long term.

m
m
  Arizona Bay
March 28, 2024 2:52 am

You should apply for a job with Rickards, you got the marketing bullshit down pat!

($100/wk is already $124800 paid in over 24 years. So you “quadrupled” your money, now discount for real inflation and you’re maybe 80% up [at a moment of all-time high SPY!], so 80% divided by 24 years isn’t really a mentionworthy return on investment)

Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay
  m
March 28, 2024 8:38 am

Haha, money in the mattress is not very useful.

The time weighted return is 7% and the money weighted return is 11%. Inflation adjusted dollars put the return at $600k and change but I don’t know anyone that adjusts their input for inflation.

Or, you could buy gold. Same calculation for GLD but starting in 2005 when that tracker was created would be $163k.

$100/wk in S&P buys a pretty nice house at retirement and that isn’t a weekly number that will break most people.

m
m
  Arizona Bay
March 28, 2024 9:57 am

Pimp those Index Funds!

Especially when those Index Funds are magnitudes larger than the stock caps constituting the index (as the last good ZH article I remember shockingly unveiled, about 7 years ago IIRC).
‘Wag the dog’ comes to mind – or ‘house of cards.’

Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay
  m
March 28, 2024 3:14 pm

I will. I don’t invest more than I could bear to lose and it has put 2 through college debt free so far. Do you have a better way to make real money with spare change or do you just shake your fist at the sky?

m
m
  Arizona Bay
March 28, 2024 4:48 pm

I bought a ton of self-selected stocks in autumn/winter 2008. Slowly sold them over the years after.
I would have bought a bunch in March 2020, if I hadn’t already decided at the time to leave the US asap.

Outside of those big dips, I only stacked phyzz and held cash while still in the US.
Now I have moved all my money into RUB (as I emigrated to Russia), and soon will put some of my cash into 3 mo term deposits earning ~15% interest p.a. – not too shabby for 8-10% real inflation here. At some point I will also invest into Russian stocks, but hadn’t found the time to inform myself enough on those yet.

m
m
March 28, 2024 2:37 am

What a bunch of half-assed bullshit advice.
First he talks about people surviving hyperinflation of something close to i, then he gives 3 steps in a recession. 🤦‍♂️

What he left out completely, is you always need to stay partially liquid, i.e. have something that can be (or quickly be turned into) something that is usable to pay off debts, fees etc.

What good is having lots of property, when for example the government can raise property taxes insanely -in the early stages of a hyperinflationary implosion- and squeeze you out of your ownership?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  m
March 28, 2024 3:36 am

yeah rickards is one ugly bald bullshitter

OK
OK
March 28, 2024 9:52 am

There were numerous 20% stock rallies during the Great Depression even as stocks were grinding lower over a three-year crash.

Well, these ghouls are still around, it seems. Wringing every last drop out of your pension fund.