Aussie Equities Vs Sydney Housing: Who’s The Marginal Buyer?

 | Apr 21, 2017 14:54

Originally published by Cuffelinks

Working as a stockbroker during the .com boom, I overheard an interesting conversation.

In early 2000, the technology sector was white hot. Hundreds of small mining stocks were ditching their mineral prospects and re-inventing themselves as Silicon Valley look-alikes. The move had been underway in the US for about four years and Australia was late to the party, but CEOs were working hard to make up for lost time.

One of the best examples of how crazy things had become was Davnet (ASX:DVT). In July 1998, Davnet was trading at 1.2 cents per share. Post a tech deal and some ‘enthusiastic’ projections, Davnet reached 28.5 cents by mid-1999, and then an astonishing $2.30 by the end of the calendar year. The price pushed even higher and peaked at $6 on the 28 March 2000, turning over an astonishing $29 million on the day.

What does that have to do with the conversation I overheard? Well, in March 2000, I was sitting on the trading desk when the phone next to me rang. It was a client calling one of the older advisers. The client was doing her weekly ironing while watching a stock report on television. She phoned to demand that the adviser sell her bank and BHP Billiton Ltd (AX:BHP) shares and put it all into the latest tech hopeful. There was no discussion to be had, no advice sought. She had watched tech stocks go up for too long, and now she simply had to act.

h2 How to anticipate a bubble burst/h2

When the ‘old hand’ hung up the phone, he stood up, walked across to the office bell, and rang it, declaring the top of the market for tech stocks. His prediction was surprisingly accurate. Within three weeks the market peaked and the stocks turned.

What that seasoned veteran realised — and what I learned from that conversation — was that assets that are clearly overvalued can become even more expensive provided there is someone left to buy them, that is, a marginal buyer. The point at which everyone who is capable of buying has bought means there are no more buyers and the bubble will burst. In the case of the tech boom, stocks had been hugely overvalued since the beginning, but it wasn’t until the buyers were exhausted that we saw the eventual peak.

We can spend an enormous amount of time and energy working out what something is worth to the fourth decimal point and, of course, understanding the fundamental or intrinsic value of an asset is paramount to successful investing. However, fundamental valuations fail to assist in understanding the investor mindset. If something is cheap but there is no marginal buyer, then guess what — it remains cheap. Let me repeat that: if something is cheap but there is no marginal buyer, it remains cheap. Similarly, if something is fully, or overvalued, but a large proportion of the likely demographic has yet to purchase, then the pool of marginal buyers is substantial and the price may well rise considerably further.

h2 Examining the demand profile/h2
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Let’s now apply this thinking firstly to Australian listed equities and then secondly to the Sydney property market. For the purposes of this discussion, let’s remain in the helicopter (high level) and put valuations aside, focussing on the demand profile.

In the case of Australian equities, a number of things stand out. Firstly, anecdotally there remains a high level of caution even to the point of scepticism. Cash levels remain elevated. Stock weightings remain below historic norms. In short, the asset class looks to be under-owned.

Secondly, and even more importantly from a demand perspective, the 34-year bull market in bonds looks to be over. For 30+ years, bond yields have headed south, driving bond prices higher. This is now reversing. Bond prices are declining as the yield curve grinds higher. As we have seen with renowned bond investor Bill Gross, we have reached the inflection point and the risks are now materially higher.