Mid-Year 2022 Letter

The first six months of 2022 saw the S&P 500 decline 23.6% from its all-time high at 4,796.56 to a closing low (so far) of 3,666.77 on June 16. The Index finished its worst first half since 1970 at 3,785.38.

More noteworthy even than the extent of the decline was its gathering violence: in mid-June, the market ran off a streak of five out of seven trading days on which 90% of S&P 500 component stocks closed lower. This is one-sided negativity on a historic scale.

Let's stop right there. Because regardless of any and all other points I wish to make in this report to you, the most urgent should already be clear.

Simply stated, the best way to completely destroy any chance for lifetime investment success has historically been to sell one's quality equity portfolios into a bear market.

But to sell when investor sentiment is sufficiently negative to drive 90% of S&P stocks lower on five out of seven trading days—to sell, that is, when everyone else is selling—must strike us as the height of long-term folly.

With that clearly on the record, let me attempt to make some kind of sense out of what's going on here. (I may have made some or all of these points to you earlier. If I have, please bear with me: they seem more than worth repeating.)

To do so, I need to take you back to the bottom of the Great Panic on March 9, 2009. From that panic-driven trough, the S&P 500 (with dividends reinvested) compounded at 17.6% annually for the next twelve years, through the end of 2021. At its peak this past January 3, the Index was up seven times from its low. This was one of the greatest runs in the whole history of American equities.

Moreover, the Index's compound return over the last three of those years—2019 through 2021, encompassing the worst of the coronavirus plague—shot up to 24% annually.

But when inflation soared late last year, it became evident that equities' jaw-dropping advance over those three years had been fueled to some important extent by an excess of fiscal (printing money) and monetary (low interest rates) stimulus, mounted to offset the economic devastation of the pandemic. In one sentence: the Federal Reserve created far too much money, and then left it sloshing around out there far too long.

And since inflation, as Milton Friedman taught us, is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon (too much money chasing too few goods), we investors now find ourselves having to give back some of the extraordinary 2009–2021 market gains, as the Fed moves belatedly to sop up that excess liquidity by raising interest rates and shrinking its balance sheet.

Yes, the war in Eastern Europe and supply chain woes of various kinds have exacerbated inflation, but in my judgment they're irritants: monetary policy (low interest rates) - seasoned as well with a bit too much fiscal stimulus (printing money) got us into this mess, and monetary policy (raising interest rates) must now get us out. The fear, of course, is that Fed will overtighten, putting the economy into recession.

My position in all my discussions with you has been, and continues to be: so be it. If an economic slowdown/recession over a few calendar quarters is what it takes to stamp out inflation, it would be by far the lesser of the two evils. I believe inflation is a cancer, and it must/will be destroyed. I also believe, in the long run, inflation will come back down.  Whether it is no longer printing additional money, raising interest rates, or less folks willing to pay for higher priced goods/services, I do believe the cure for high prices is high prices.

With regard to our investment strategy, nothing has changed, because nothing ever changes. That is: we are long-term, goal-focused, plan-driven equity investors. Our belief is to own diversified portfolios of strong companies; I believe these companies have demonstrated the ability to increase earnings (and in most cases dividends) over time, thus potentially supporting increases in their value.

We act continuously on our investment plan; we do not react to current events, no matter how distressing they may be. After 30 months of chaos—the pandemic in its several variants, the election that would not end, roaring inflation (most painfully in stupefying gas price increases), the supply chain mess, war in Europe and so on—we're all understandably exhausted. That's when the impulse to capitulate—to get to the illusory “safety” of cash—becomes strongest. So that's when the impulse must be resisted most strongly. And that's my job.

The essential truths of market declines are 1) It can always fall further in the near term 2) Not having or not adhering to a plan can increase the chances of financial failure 3) Most importantly, the lower prices go in the near term, the greater the future returns become.

I believe this too shall pass. I'm here to talk all this through with you at any time. Thank you for being my clients. It is a privilege to serve you.


Sincerely,

Brian A. Magnan, CFP®, AIF®
Director



The views expressed by Brian Magnan are his own and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of Well Fargo Advisors or its affiliates.

Sources for S&P 500 prices: Standard & Poor's, as reported by Yahoo Finance. Compound growth rates: Standard & Poor's, DQYDJ S&P 500 return calculator, Ibbotson 2022 Yearbook.