William Smead
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Investment Officer



Dear Clients and Prospective Clients:

Investors are divorcing their stocks. Here is the list of reasons they seek to dissolve their relationship with America’s best companies.

  1. We are in a deep recession which could last one to two years. Most knowledgeable economists believe that since last December that our economic slowdown has had the characteristics of a recession. If it is deep (a 3 to 4% decline in economic activity) it will last another year. The stock market discounts the future 9 to 12 months out and has historically bottomed in the middle of a recession. In a deep recession, 97% of all the economic activity that went on the previous year happens. Would you divorce your spouse if he/she loved you 3% less for one year and then his/her love started growing almost uninterrupted in future years?
  2. The Treasury Rescue Plan is not working. Most of the plan has not even begun to operate. No commercial paper loans, preferred stock investments in banks or auction buys of out-of-favor mortgage-backed securities have been purchased. Would you divorce your spouse just as you entered marriage counseling?
  3. Hedge funds and wealthy executives owning stock on margin are being forced to sell. Do you divorce your spouse because the neighbors got a divorce or because a relative decides to call it quits? Hedge funds used huge leverage to create a fantasy that they deserved the assets of the wealthy. They are selling what they can (blue-chip stocks) to meet margin calls from the banks. Many executives have used borrowed money to expand their ownership of their own company or make additional outside investments and as shares have dropped, they are forced to sell. As the public sees the huge declines in the market and the temporary/violent declines in their 401k’s or personally owned mutual funds, they are redeeming their shares. This forces a portfolio manager who prefers to buy his/her favorite stocks to sell the very companies that they prefer to buy. We buy stocks with cash and therefore don’t run into these margin call pitfalls. MAJOR MARKET BOTTOMS COME WHEN THE SELLERS ARE INDIVIDUALS OR INSTITUTIONS WHICH PREFER TO BE BUYING, BUT ARE FORCED TO SELL AND ULTIMATELY THERE ENDS UP BEING NOBODY LEFT TO SELL!
  4. We are never going to buy things or pay for services from each other any more. If that is true you don’t need a big cash position from divorcing your stocks, you need a big gun and ammunition position. In the “Great Depression”, quality blue-chip stocks did as good a job of maintaining your purchasing power from beginning to end as most any other place folks kept money. So divorce didn’t even make sense in 1930 or 1931 when investors had already been abused as much as we have been in the last 12 months.

Despite what we might have to go through in the next few weeks and months, we would like to marry as many of our favorite companies and hold onto the ones we have. We believe this might be the best entry point into the U.S. Stock Market in 50 years.

 

Warmest regards,

William Smead

We Advise Investors

Sign up to get our advice sent straight to your inbox.

Recent Missives

A “Casino” Stock Market

There is a big difference between betting on something and investing in meritorious companies with long holding periods. Although we are no longer shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett shared some wisdom with...

⟶ Keep Reading

Barron’s: Bill Smead on GameStop’s bid for the eBay

GameStop Is Chasing a Meme-Stock Sequel. Nobody Is Buying It This Time. By Martin Baccardax For more information go to www.barrons.com. Stocks mentioned: EBAY The information contained in this article […]

⟶ Keep Reading

Fox Business: Bill Smead on Stocks vs GDP

  Stocks vs GDP: Why this level has Wall Street watching closely   Hosted by Cheryl Casone For more information go to Stocks vs GDP: Why this level has Wall […]

⟶ Keep Reading

Bloomberg: Bill Smead on GameStop’s Bid to Take Over eBay

EBay Investor Skeptical That GameStop Can Make Good on Acquisition Offer By Spencer Soper For more information go to www.bloomberg.com. Stocks mentioned: EBAY The information contained in this article represents […]

⟶ Keep Reading

Marketwatch.com: Bill Smead on Market Mania and GameStop’s Bid on eBay

GameStop launches a $56 billion bid for eBay — but the math isn’t working out. By Christine Ji Stocks mentioned: EBAY For more information go to www.marketwatch.com. The information contained […]

⟶ Keep Reading

Reuters: Bill Smead on Cutting Medicare Advantage Benefits

  Medicare Advantage health plans may cut extra benefits in 2027 By Amina Niasse For more information go to reuters.com. The information contained in this tv appearance represents SCM’s opinions, […]

⟶ Keep Reading

We Advise Investors

Sign up to get our advice sent straight to your inbox.

US INVESTORS

Individual Investors

OR

Financial Advisors, Family Offices,
and Institutional Investors

OR

NON-US INVESTORS

Individual Investors

OR

Financial Advisors, Family Offices,
and Institutional Investors

OR

Scroll to Top