1 00:00:03,480 --> 00:00:07,280 Speaker 1: This is Bloomberg surveillance. We don't feel that we're necessarily 2 00:00:07,360 --> 00:00:11,319 Speaker 1: on the cusp of a recession. Business is okay and 3 00:00:11,400 --> 00:00:14,239 Speaker 1: pretty good in some places. Because the FETs kept raped 4 00:00:14,320 --> 00:00:17,759 Speaker 1: down here at zero for so long, it's distorting how 5 00:00:17,880 --> 00:00:21,200 Speaker 1: people finance themselves. What happens in the market is it 6 00:00:21,360 --> 00:00:24,439 Speaker 1: only looks at the positives, and it interprets everything positively 7 00:00:24,600 --> 00:00:26,640 Speaker 1: as long as it can, and then it gives up 8 00:00:26,640 --> 00:00:30,040 Speaker 1: the ghost and it flips one eighty. Bloomberg Surveillance your 9 00:00:30,120 --> 00:00:33,720 Speaker 1: link to the world of economics, finance, and investment. On 10 00:00:33,840 --> 00:00:36,840 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Radio. Good Morning everyone, Michael McKee and Tom Keene 11 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:41,959 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Surveillance worldwide, indeed nationwide on Bloomberg twelve, Boston, Bloomberg 12 00:00:41,960 --> 00:00:44,400 Speaker 1: eleven three oh New York, home of the New York Mets, 13 00:00:45,320 --> 00:00:50,760 Speaker 1: Bloomberg FM, Washington and Baltimore, Good Morning, Baltimore. Orioles ascended 14 00:00:50,840 --> 00:00:54,840 Speaker 1: that according to minty vesuji Ace Orioles viewpoint here at 15 00:00:54,840 --> 00:00:58,200 Speaker 1: Bloomberg and of course Bloomberg nine sixty the Bay Area 16 00:00:58,400 --> 00:01:00,720 Speaker 1: as well, San France, I had no what the giants 17 00:01:00,760 --> 00:01:03,560 Speaker 1: are doing. I've got to get giants have won the 18 00:01:03,560 --> 00:01:07,680 Speaker 1: World Series the last three even years. So there is 19 00:01:07,720 --> 00:01:11,160 Speaker 1: some thought that just that coincidence alone, aside from the 20 00:01:11,160 --> 00:01:14,520 Speaker 1: fact that they have players, might might push them forward. 21 00:01:14,520 --> 00:01:17,520 Speaker 1: We're gonna talk to the Clayton Kershaw of Equity Investments. 22 00:01:17,520 --> 00:01:22,360 Speaker 1: Douglas Cast to join us here momentarily. Bloomberg Surveillance. Much 23 00:01:22,360 --> 00:01:25,960 Speaker 1: of my con RESUDC accounting tax advisory. To minimize risk 24 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:29,399 Speaker 1: and capture value in private equity, you need cone residuct 25 00:01:29,560 --> 00:01:33,640 Speaker 1: or forward thinking creates results. Find out how a cone 26 00:01:33,680 --> 00:01:36,840 Speaker 1: residuc dot com O h n R E C N 27 00:01:36,880 --> 00:01:40,520 Speaker 1: I c K. It's gorgeous February morning. The sun is up, 28 00:01:40,520 --> 00:01:43,200 Speaker 1: it's staying up longer. It's a good time to speak 29 00:01:43,240 --> 00:01:47,080 Speaker 1: to Douglas Cast of Seebers. Doug, good morning, Pictures and 30 00:01:47,200 --> 00:01:50,440 Speaker 1: catches last week. I know it's like a good thing 31 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:54,960 Speaker 1: in in America. UM let's frame Doug right now within 32 00:01:55,040 --> 00:01:58,600 Speaker 1: pictures and Catchers. Obviously l A is spending more money 33 00:01:58,640 --> 00:02:02,280 Speaker 1: than anyone. That's the one way that in baseball. Where's 34 00:02:02,320 --> 00:02:05,240 Speaker 1: the one way that you are a feared of right now? 35 00:02:05,280 --> 00:02:11,359 Speaker 1: In the equity markets, I would um, I think we're 36 00:02:11,360 --> 00:02:14,840 Speaker 1: in a in a in a very difficult and confusing period. 37 00:02:15,080 --> 00:02:17,080 Speaker 1: Um I mentioned to you in a memo to you 38 00:02:17,160 --> 00:02:21,000 Speaker 1: and Lee the producer, that UM, I was at a 39 00:02:21,080 --> 00:02:23,880 Speaker 1: James Tell a concert of all places at Donald Trump's 40 00:02:23,919 --> 00:02:27,280 Speaker 1: Morrow Largo House in Palm Beach on Saturday night, and 41 00:02:27,320 --> 00:02:31,080 Speaker 1: he was he was singing Fire and Rain and invoked 42 00:02:31,160 --> 00:02:36,280 Speaker 1: to me the obviously the Robert Frost poem Fire and Rain, 43 00:02:36,560 --> 00:02:40,520 Speaker 1: which discusses the familiar question about the fate of the 44 00:02:40,560 --> 00:02:43,560 Speaker 1: world whether it's more likely to be destroyed by fire ice. 45 00:02:44,040 --> 00:02:46,240 Speaker 1: But I got back to a famous memo that our 46 00:02:46,320 --> 00:02:49,040 Speaker 1: mutual friend Barton, the late Barton Biggs Road of Coal 47 00:02:49,120 --> 00:02:54,480 Speaker 1: fire in I think it's time to fear the ice. Well, 48 00:02:54,560 --> 00:02:57,919 Speaker 1: we are in a period of substandard economic and tempted 49 00:02:58,000 --> 00:03:01,799 Speaker 1: profit growth, and that's our destiny. Sum. We have am 50 00:03:02,360 --> 00:03:06,320 Speaker 1: and a broken market mechanism which is dominated by leverage 51 00:03:06,400 --> 00:03:11,760 Speaker 1: ets and by these machines and algos who are agnostic 52 00:03:11,840 --> 00:03:15,760 Speaker 1: to balance sheets, private market value and income statements. So 53 00:03:15,800 --> 00:03:17,840 Speaker 1: we get this market would note what I call no 54 00:03:18,000 --> 00:03:22,360 Speaker 1: memory from day to day. Um, These investment strategies of 55 00:03:22,440 --> 00:03:26,680 Speaker 1: mass destruction tend to exaggerate short term market moves like 56 00:03:26,800 --> 00:03:30,359 Speaker 1: we've experienced in January to the downside, upside and now 57 00:03:30,400 --> 00:03:33,560 Speaker 1: today to the upside. So I'm I'm basically fearful that 58 00:03:33,680 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 1: we're in um um. You know, we have this upward 59 00:03:38,160 --> 00:03:42,880 Speaker 1: reevaluation of multiples between O nine and to fifteen, and 60 00:03:42,920 --> 00:03:45,720 Speaker 1: I think that the recent rerating of stocks lower theems 61 00:03:45,760 --> 00:03:48,720 Speaker 1: to reflect the recognition that profits too, will be lower 62 00:03:48,720 --> 00:03:52,360 Speaker 1: for longer. The critics Doug will say, you go short, 63 00:03:52,440 --> 00:03:54,400 Speaker 1: you go along, you move in and out. Tell us 64 00:03:54,440 --> 00:03:59,119 Speaker 1: where you are right now and what it would suffice 65 00:03:59,360 --> 00:04:01,520 Speaker 1: the frank if that's the last line of the Robert 66 00:04:01,520 --> 00:04:06,080 Speaker 1: Frost poem, and what would suffice to bring you forward 67 00:04:06,120 --> 00:04:10,200 Speaker 1: to a new direction? Um. I would be more optimistic 68 00:04:10,320 --> 00:04:14,680 Speaker 1: if I had a sense that the secular deterioration and 69 00:04:14,720 --> 00:04:22,400 Speaker 1: growth prospects um um uh morphed into a more rapid 70 00:04:22,480 --> 00:04:28,480 Speaker 1: period of economic growth at our dependency upon monetary policy 71 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:33,240 Speaker 1: makers are central bankers to stimulate self sustaining growth and 72 00:04:33,440 --> 00:04:39,239 Speaker 1: escape philosophy velocity UH were successful, and I just don't 73 00:04:39,279 --> 00:04:42,480 Speaker 1: see it. So I am modestly bullish near term, but 74 00:04:42,600 --> 00:04:45,880 Speaker 1: embarish into media term. I expect the SMP to decline 75 00:04:46,320 --> 00:04:49,800 Speaker 1: to a low double digit percentage this year. I'm currently 76 00:04:49,880 --> 00:04:53,599 Speaker 1: to answer your question positioned only slightly net short, preferring 77 00:04:53,640 --> 00:04:58,320 Speaker 1: to see a more rapid build up an optimistic investor 78 00:04:58,400 --> 00:05:02,320 Speaker 1: sentiment before expanding my short exposure. It's interesting to note 79 00:05:02,400 --> 00:05:06,120 Speaker 1: that a bunch of the investor surveys came out and 80 00:05:06,200 --> 00:05:10,159 Speaker 1: market bain bowls remain at very low levels. The consensus 81 00:05:10,200 --> 00:05:19,320 Speaker 1: and um of of bears actually rose last week, which 82 00:05:19,320 --> 00:05:23,520 Speaker 1: is bullish for the market. As a contrarian, would it 83 00:05:23,520 --> 00:05:26,279 Speaker 1: be I think everybody can agree we're not going to 84 00:05:26,360 --> 00:05:29,559 Speaker 1: see the fiscal policy action that the world is calling for. 85 00:05:29,960 --> 00:05:32,400 Speaker 1: So would it be better if central banks just sort 86 00:05:32,400 --> 00:05:34,640 Speaker 1: of shut up and got the heck out of the way, 87 00:05:34,920 --> 00:05:37,320 Speaker 1: Because yeah, I think, I think, Mike, it would have 88 00:05:37,360 --> 00:05:39,360 Speaker 1: been much better if we did this a year ago 89 00:05:39,640 --> 00:05:41,760 Speaker 1: at first of all, if they stopped easing a year 90 00:05:41,800 --> 00:05:46,960 Speaker 1: ago and um and basically let the let the market 91 00:05:47,000 --> 00:05:52,080 Speaker 1: have have natural price discovery as opposed to this artificiality 92 00:05:52,200 --> 00:05:58,160 Speaker 1: and you know machines that are um um um and 93 00:05:58,320 --> 00:06:03,760 Speaker 1: algorithms which are moved by the next announcement with regard 94 00:06:03,839 --> 00:06:06,919 Speaker 1: to drag or the intention to stay lower for longer. 95 00:06:06,960 --> 00:06:10,120 Speaker 1: It's just not a natural sequence of events. And I 96 00:06:10,160 --> 00:06:13,039 Speaker 1: think that this whole thing has led up that I 97 00:06:13,080 --> 00:06:17,360 Speaker 1: think the recent market weakness reflects the loss of confidence 98 00:06:17,360 --> 00:06:21,480 Speaker 1: in all central bankers and concerns that monetary policy in 99 00:06:21,520 --> 00:06:24,960 Speaker 1: the US has lost its effectiveness and or has pulled 100 00:06:25,080 --> 00:06:28,960 Speaker 1: forward corporate sales and profits of economic activity. I call 101 00:06:29,080 --> 00:06:33,000 Speaker 1: this the AHA moment. It's it's not a market friendly 102 00:06:33,120 --> 00:06:37,080 Speaker 1: moment for valuations. How do you filter out the noise? Then, 103 00:06:38,680 --> 00:06:41,200 Speaker 1: um As Richard Bernstein, you wrote a great book called 104 00:06:41,279 --> 00:06:46,880 Speaker 1: Navigating the Noise, which which I really recommend. It's tough. 105 00:06:46,960 --> 00:06:49,960 Speaker 1: I just think it's where it's really tough, Mike and Thomas. 106 00:06:50,080 --> 00:06:53,320 Speaker 1: For the buying whole crowd. It's easy for the traders 107 00:06:53,800 --> 00:06:56,920 Speaker 1: if you approach the market in a kind of emotional 108 00:06:57,040 --> 00:07:02,320 Speaker 1: list way, buying the stream dips, selling or shorting the 109 00:07:02,400 --> 00:07:05,080 Speaker 1: extreme bouts of your four and we've seen four or 110 00:07:05,120 --> 00:07:09,400 Speaker 1: five of those of consequence in the year. So I 111 00:07:09,720 --> 00:07:12,920 Speaker 1: think the odds of a recession on mounting. But I 112 00:07:12,960 --> 00:07:15,200 Speaker 1: want to add an important point I think that was 113 00:07:15,240 --> 00:07:19,640 Speaker 1: made on Bloomberg on Surveillance last week. It's important to 114 00:07:19,680 --> 00:07:22,240 Speaker 1: note that a precondition for a bear market is not 115 00:07:22,320 --> 00:07:26,400 Speaker 1: necessarily a recession. Bear markets can occur even if the 116 00:07:26,480 --> 00:07:29,360 Speaker 1: US fails to fall into recession. It happened in nineteen 117 00:07:29,480 --> 00:07:35,000 Speaker 1: sixty two, sixty six, and eighty seven and eight. I 118 00:07:35,080 --> 00:07:37,040 Speaker 1: used to work with a guy when I was at Putnam. 119 00:07:37,040 --> 00:07:41,360 Speaker 1: When I graduated Wharton called Wally Deemer, who was a fantastic, 120 00:07:41,400 --> 00:07:45,120 Speaker 1: a legendary technical analyst, and he once said, you don't 121 00:07:45,120 --> 00:07:50,240 Speaker 1: buy GDP futures, you buy SMP futures. Yeah. That's extremely well, 122 00:07:50,280 --> 00:07:53,800 Speaker 1: said Doug. I I saw the Martian Uh the other day. 123 00:07:54,040 --> 00:07:57,920 Speaker 1: It really, really really thought was an excellent effort. And 124 00:07:58,280 --> 00:08:00,000 Speaker 1: as Matt Damon says in the middle of the movie, 125 00:08:00,080 --> 00:08:03,920 Speaker 1: let's science this. You are known for being an adult 126 00:08:04,080 --> 00:08:09,120 Speaker 1: about sciencing your belief what's Doug casts science right now. 127 00:08:10,400 --> 00:08:14,960 Speaker 1: But my thocts is to be is to be UM basically, 128 00:08:15,200 --> 00:08:22,600 Speaker 1: to reduce gross exposure in an uncertain, volatile, and unpredictable period. 129 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:25,880 Speaker 1: There are times to play and there's times, as Warren 130 00:08:25,920 --> 00:08:28,320 Speaker 1: Buffett says to you know, to have your hands on 131 00:08:28,640 --> 00:08:34,400 Speaker 1: you know, UM quietly. So hard hard. It's hard because 132 00:08:34,400 --> 00:08:39,120 Speaker 1: of the aforementioned discussion of these um um weapons of 133 00:08:39,840 --> 00:08:46,280 Speaker 1: financial market destruction, the leverage ETFs and UM, the quant strategies, 134 00:08:46,679 --> 00:08:51,120 Speaker 1: gamma hedging, risk parity trading, that that worship at the 135 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:56,240 Speaker 1: altar of price momentum. They they sent they tend to 136 00:08:56,360 --> 00:09:01,800 Speaker 1: exaggerate your term market confused investors, They send false market messages, 137 00:09:02,480 --> 00:09:05,520 Speaker 1: and importantly, they blemished the value of stock charts and 138 00:09:05,559 --> 00:09:08,640 Speaker 1: technical analysis. Okay, I'll go with all that you now, 139 00:09:08,800 --> 00:09:11,160 Speaker 1: but what I want to know for traders, and this 140 00:09:11,200 --> 00:09:13,000 Speaker 1: is not what we do in surveillance a lot we 141 00:09:13,040 --> 00:09:15,760 Speaker 1: do more long term investment. But Mr Cass, what I 142 00:09:15,800 --> 00:09:18,520 Speaker 1: want to know is in the middle of reminiscence of 143 00:09:18,520 --> 00:09:20,920 Speaker 1: a stock operator, like you know, you're the only ones 144 00:09:20,960 --> 00:09:22,760 Speaker 1: still alive. It was there when the book is written. 145 00:09:23,120 --> 00:09:24,920 Speaker 1: But there's a point where the guy just says, I'm 146 00:09:24,920 --> 00:09:28,480 Speaker 1: going to Florida. Where I'm in Florida, I know, but 147 00:09:28,640 --> 00:09:33,520 Speaker 1: pulling pulling away from the market actively. Yeah, but there's 148 00:09:33,520 --> 00:09:37,199 Speaker 1: a point I'm trying to capture alpha by exploiting, as 149 00:09:37,200 --> 00:09:41,880 Speaker 1: they said, in an unemotional way, the gyrations of the market, 150 00:09:42,120 --> 00:09:46,360 Speaker 1: which are random and unpredictable. Are you clearly people aren't 151 00:09:46,400 --> 00:09:48,880 Speaker 1: fastible enough and they should just sit on their hands. 152 00:09:49,240 --> 00:09:51,839 Speaker 1: Are you at a point where it's so uncertain or 153 00:09:51,920 --> 00:09:54,960 Speaker 1: convoluted to the upsilon so high that you just say 154 00:09:55,040 --> 00:09:57,560 Speaker 1: I can't do this and you sit off to the 155 00:09:57,600 --> 00:10:01,040 Speaker 1: sidelines for a while. I think that's the best strategy 156 00:10:01,280 --> 00:10:08,040 Speaker 1: for the average investors. Boring, it's boring. You have a 157 00:10:08,040 --> 00:10:12,720 Speaker 1: lot of you'll have a lot of silence on market. No, No, 158 00:10:12,800 --> 00:10:14,400 Speaker 1: we don't want that. We don't want that, but I 159 00:10:14,440 --> 00:10:16,480 Speaker 1: think it's important advice. We're gonna come back with Doug 160 00:10:16,520 --> 00:10:21,560 Speaker 1: cass on all the rage right now, financial engineering, which 161 00:10:21,600 --> 00:10:23,959 Speaker 1: is out there, use of cash and you know, someone 162 00:10:24,000 --> 00:10:26,000 Speaker 1: what the actives are doing here recently. But I really 163 00:10:26,000 --> 00:10:29,880 Speaker 1: want to talk to him about financial engineering America Belli says, 164 00:10:29,880 --> 00:10:31,920 Speaker 1: give me back the money, thank you. A lot of 165 00:10:31,960 --> 00:10:34,760 Speaker 1: other people say there should be this moral high ground 166 00:10:34,760 --> 00:10:40,439 Speaker 1: of using it for other sources like investment, maybe actually 167 00:10:40,440 --> 00:10:44,000 Speaker 1: creates jobs as well. We'll return with Doug cass of 168 00:10:44,080 --> 00:10:47,960 Speaker 1: Sea Breeze investment, Futures up twenty two, jol futures up. 169 00:10:52,840 --> 00:10:54,800 Speaker 1: All right, let's check in with John Tucker and get 170 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:57,440 Speaker 1: the latest world in national news. Well, Michael and Tom. 171 00:10:57,520 --> 00:11:01,760 Speaker 1: With Jeff Bush's departure from the presidential race, Saturday, fundraisers 172 00:11:01,880 --> 00:11:05,040 Speaker 1: are facing the question pick another side or retreat. Most 173 00:11:05,120 --> 00:11:07,680 Speaker 1: most loyalist content at Sunday said they were preparing to 174 00:11:07,720 --> 00:11:12,760 Speaker 1: support Marco Rubio or no one in particular. Apple CEO 175 00:11:12,880 --> 00:11:15,200 Speaker 1: Tim Cook has jumped back into the prey over FBI 176 00:11:15,280 --> 00:11:18,520 Speaker 1: demands at the company help hack a locked IPO used 177 00:11:18,520 --> 00:11:21,319 Speaker 1: by the shooter, you know, San Bernardino attack. In an 178 00:11:21,320 --> 00:11:24,439 Speaker 1: early morning email to employees, Cook says the government should 179 00:11:24,480 --> 00:11:27,480 Speaker 1: withdraw its demanded. The emerging legal fight is sparked a 180 00:11:27,559 --> 00:11:32,479 Speaker 1: debate on government power, privacy, digital rights, public safety and security. 181 00:11:32,920 --> 00:11:35,360 Speaker 1: An epic chair and draped in black, is greeting Supreme 182 00:11:35,400 --> 00:11:37,800 Speaker 1: Court justices meeting today for the first time since the 183 00:11:37,840 --> 00:11:41,080 Speaker 1: death of Justice and Sinan Scalia. The remaining a justice 184 00:11:41,160 --> 00:11:43,880 Speaker 1: is resumed work today. Scalia's chair will remain as a 185 00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:47,679 Speaker 1: tribute until next month. Global News twenty four hours a day, 186 00:11:47,679 --> 00:11:50,520 Speaker 1: powered by a twenty jouralists more than one fifty news 187 00:11:50,520 --> 00:11:54,240 Speaker 1: bureaus around the world. I'm John, Tucker, Michael and Tomas John. 188 00:11:54,360 --> 00:11:57,960 Speaker 1: Thanks so much coming up on use of cash, Doug 189 00:11:58,080 --> 00:12:02,760 Speaker 1: Cass really looking forward to that next Bloomberg's surveillance. Good morning. 190 00:12:06,440 --> 00:12:08,920 Speaker 1: The news update was brought to you by Fairla Dickson University. 191 00:12:09,000 --> 00:12:11,680 Speaker 1: Boost your career by getting CFP certified and FDU named 192 00:12:11,679 --> 00:12:14,360 Speaker 1: one of the great schools for financial planning. Classes begin 193 00:12:14,440 --> 00:12:16,839 Speaker 1: February twenty third and twenty fourth visit FDU dot e 194 00:12:16,880 --> 00:12:18,040 Speaker 1: d U slash f P