By Deron McCoy, CFA®, CFP®, CAIA®, AIF®
Chief Investment Officer
The Ever-Changing Investment Landscape
If you’ve been following us for a while, you’ll recall a quote from Sir Isaac Newton (or perhaps Alexander Hamilton) which we occasionally refer to: “Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.” While it may seem like a bit of a disconnect to apply the laws of physics to finance, there’s clear evidence that the investment landscapes of one era often have echo effects that impact the next. Look no further than recent events:
- The landscape of the pandemic in 2020 saw the U.S. throwing massive amounts of stimulus money at the problem – on a scale that had no historic precedent;
- This in turn beget the frothy ‘over-caffeinated’ investment environment of 2021;
- Which in turn led to the 2022 landscape – with 40+ year highs in inflation causing tighter monetary policy via one of the fastest hiking cycle in modern history;
- All of which equated to the largest rise in 10-year Treasury Bond yields since before Alexander Hamilton was issuing those same Treasuries in 1788!; and
- That rapid rise in interest rates steadily pushed bond prices lower – which now brings us to 2023…three bank failures in one week including the second and third largest FDIC-covered bank failures in U.S. history.
Wait, are you saying that the global pandemic caused a bank failure in Silicon Valley?
Well yeah, kind of. When the pandemic hit, Washington DC (both Congress and The Federal Reserve) flooded the system with liquidity (cash). Economists don’t like the term cash and instead prefer to use the more sophisticated term known as ‘M2 Money Supply.’ In the adjacent chart, you can clearly see the sharp spike upwards during 2020. And while this stimulus of cash certainly helped a great many individuals and companies make it through the lockdown, it also had repercussions (as it always does).
All that stimulus money had to be placed somewhere. And the most natural landing spot was the banking system itself – as witnessed by the flood of deposits flowing into FDIC-insured banks.
When banks take in deposits, they typically loan the money right back out. Essentially, that’s the banking business model—borrow short (via nearly free deposits) and lend long at significantly higher interest rates. But according to the FDIC and Eddie Duzlak, CIO of Virtuent, “Typically, deposits and loans have historically tracked each other quite closely. The lines in the chart below are almost indistinguishable through 2008, after which they diverge. At the risk of oversimplifying, loan demand in the U.S. weakened after the 2008 crisis, and banks increased securities portfolios as a result. This growth in securities portfolios saw another acceleration in 2020 and 2021, as deposit growth spiked.” The statement ‘growth in securities portfolios’ is important as it immediately preceded the inflationary period of 2022.
To combat the inflation problem, the Fed tightened monetary policy through a rapid series of short-term interest rate hikes (450 basis points in less than a year). And as interest rates rose, bond prices declined. Who wants to buy an older bond paying 1% when you could get a new one paying 4%? Any potential buyer certainly wouldn’t pay you par for the bond – they’d only purchase it at a steep discount. Thus bond prices went south as yields went north.
This has resulted in banks carrying unrealized losses on the massive ‘securities portfolio’ that they had just purchased a few years prior. And again, according to Mr. Duzlak, “these unrealized losses are unprecedented in a historical context, driven by 1) the increased share that securities portfolios make up as a percent of banks’ assets and 2) the rise in interest rates being so rapid relative to history in response to U.S. inflation.”
Which all leads us to 2023. With short-term interest rates poised to reach 5%, depositors suddenly realized that they could get higher yields elsewhere and started moving money en masse away from low interest bearing checking and savings accounts – completely reversing the huge growth in deposits from a year ago; leaving banks scrambling to unwind all of those previous purchases and turning unrealized losses into realized losses.
Silicon Valley Bank was one of the first bank failures due to their unique situation (close ties to Private Equity, their founders, and large amounts of uninsured deposits) which only served to exacerbate the problem. But the underlying problem remains relevant for all banks. According to Mr. Duzlak, “it would be shocking if we are not talking about loan-level delinquencies, charge-offs and credit losses later this year. This is the slower-moving risk in banks that has been dormant for many years now thanks in part to easy monetary policy, and it seems to be awakening due to the knock-on effects of higher interest rates and the draining of liquidity from the financial system.”
Because of these banking woes, many are now fearful of a material economic slowdown that may push interest rates back down as investors clamor for the safety of bonds (as of this writing, the two-year Treasury Bond yield has already dropped a full percentage point). Given these potential headwinds, we have been advocating that investors reposition portfolios accordingly.
We are honored that you entrust us with your hard-earned cash. And rest assured that our custodians (unlike your banks) are indeed paying you a fair amount on all that cash. To restate our January commentary, we continue to be on recession watch and shall adjust appropriately if these problems in the banking sector begin to bleed into the greater economy – all while keeping an eye towards 2024 and the next change in the investment landscape.
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