What we’re reading (1/31)
“U.S. Stocks End January On High Note But Still Chalk Up Worst Month Since March 2020” (Washington Post). “Wall Street loathes uncertainty, and the first month of 2022 was threat-studded and unpredictable as investors assessed what the Federal Reserve had in store for rate hikes and historically high inflation, the pandemic’s grip over the economy, a tangle of rising geopolitical tensions and a global supply chain in deep distress. Corporate earnings — including blowout performances from Apple and Microsoft — have thus far failed to impress. Wall Street’s fear gauge, the Cboe Volatility Index, is up 75 percent year-to-date.”
“What May Be In Store As The Fed Cuts Back On The Easy Money” (New York Times). “The amounts involved in the Fed’s quantitative easing have been staggering. Back in 2008, the Fed’s balance sheet had assets of $820 billion. They reached $4.5 trillion — yes, trillion — in 2015 and dropped only as low as $3.76 trillion in the summer of 2019. With the coronavirus financial crisis, they have ballooned again, to $8.9 trillion, and may swell a bit more before the spigot shuts. Assets held by the Fed are already more than 10 times their size in 2008, and bigger, as a proportion of gross domestic product, than at any time since World War II.”
“Viking Hedge Fund Blames 2021 Losses On ‘Underestimating’ Covid” (Bloomberg). “fter posting its worst ever performance last year, Viking Global Investors is trying to explain its losses -- and it’s pinning the blame on the Covid-19 pandemic. The firm’s hedge fund, which invested in 2021 laggards such as Peloton Interactive Inc., Coupa Software Inc. and Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp., fell 4.5% in the year because it “underestimated the ongoing impact of Covid,” founder Andreas Halvorsen wrote in a letter to investors dated Jan. 18.”
“Bill Ackman Scored On Pandemic Shutdown And Bounceback” (Wall Street Journal). “As the coronavirus emerged, Bill Ackman made billions betting that the market was misjudging the virus’s economic toll. Then he did it again a year later. In two complex debt investments—one presaging the economy’s swift shutdown and the other its fevered reopening—Mr. Ackman made nearly $4 billion in profit on an outlay of about $200 million, according to fund documents and people familiar with the matter. In short, he called the pandemic’s economic fallout coming and going.”
“Warren Buffett Is Having The Last Laugh” (CNN Business). “Banks, energy firms and other value stocks have rallied this year, which is great news for Buffett since the Oracle of Omaha's conglomerate invests in many of these companies. Value stocks typically have lower price-to-earnings ratios, and they're definitely not trendy.”