Commentary on the economy, the markets, and business

Graham, Buffett and life in a bear market

I've got an article up on TIME.com about "secular bear markets" and Graham and Buffett and stuff. It will hold no surprises for those versed in value-investor lore. But, in a sad commentary on our times, I'm told that many readers of the Internets are not versed in value-investor lore.

The basic message is that while this is a dangerous time to buy stocks, it's a lot less dangerous than, say, two months ago. Which sounds a little like Pudd'nhead Wilson: “October. This is one of the peculiarly dangerous months to speculate in stocks in. The others are July, January, September, April, November, May, March, June, December, August, and February.”

If that doesn't buck you up, maybe try singing along with the Facepalm Song (via Sad Guys on Trading Floors):

  • Print
  • Comment
Comments (2)
Post a Comment »
  • 1

    When Meghan McArdle posted a reading list about the crisis, and everyone else was recommending books on the causes of the Depression, crashes, manias,recessions, I suggested this. I didn't get any response.

    What Would Graham Do?
    A positive investment analysis in the WSJ by Arnold Zweig:

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122368241652024977.html

    "Strikingly, today's conditions bear quite a close resemblance to what Graham described in the abyss of the Great Depression. Regardless of how much further it might (or might not) drop, the stock market now abounds with so many bargains it's hard to avoid stepping on them. Out of 9,194 stocks tracked by Standard & Poor's Compustat research service, 3,518 are now trading at less than eight times their earnings over the past year -- or at levels less than half the long-term average valuation of the stock market as a whole. Nearly one in 10, or 876 stocks, trade below the value of their per-share holdings of cash -- an even greater proportion than Graham found in 1932. Charles Schwab Corp., to name one example, holds $27.8 billion in cash and has a total stock-market value of $21 billion.

    Those numbers testify to the wholesale destruction of the stock market's faith in the future. And, as Graham wrote in 1932, "In all probability [the stock market] is wrong, as it always has been wrong in its major judgments of the future."

    In fact, the market is probably wrong again in its obsession over whether this decline will turn into a cataclysmic collapse. Eugene White, an economics professor at Rutgers University who is an expert on the crash of 1929 and its aftermath, thinks that the only real similarity between today's climate and the Great Depression is that, once again, "the market is moving on fear, not facts." As bumbling as its response so far may seem, the government's actions in 2008 are "way different" from the hands-off mentality of the Hoover administration and the rigid detachment of the Federal Reserve in 1929 through 1932. "Policymakers are making much wiser decisions," says Prof. White, "and we are moving in the right direction."

    Maybe people should read Benjamin Graham.

    Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat | October 11, 2008 3:34 PM

  • 2

    By the way, next time you decided to go black, please check with me first, and make sure I'm fine with that.

Add Your Comment:

You must be logged in to post a comment.
The Curious Capitalist Daily E-mail

Get e-mail updates from TIME's The Curious Capitalist in your inbox and never miss a day.

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
LORI HAAS, whose daughter was wounded in the 2007 Virginia Tech shootings, on a new report finding that officials warned their families more than an hour and a half before the rest of the campus and released locked-down students who were later killed