The Bear Market Deepens: What I'm Buying

 | Sep 26, 2022 00:29

h2 The Case For Concern

In less than 6 weeks, the S&P 500 has dropped nearly 15%, and just pulled off the lows we saw in mid-June. A feeling of panic has crept into financial markets around the world, and it’s getting harder to ignore the reasons for that panic.

I still believe the U.S. economy and market is in a relatively stable position. Spending remains high, jobs growth is likely to slow but was still strong in August, and there is less of a world ending feeling than there was in 2008 or in 2020.

That’s also a straw man. I started investing in 2011. From then through 2021, the market rallied from every dip. The market has meanwhile felt expensive since 2015. And the 2008 crisis remains unique in size and scope. Those all can teach one the wrong lessons.

It is possible for the current environment to be much less bad than 2008, less uncertain than the March 2020 bottom; and still be pretty bad and plenty uncertain.

The three things that make this period especially uncertain to me, and justify market skepticism are:

  1. Interest rates are higher than they’ve been since 2008, and inflation has yet to really come down, even with oil and gas prices dropping.
  2. 2020-2021 was an euphoric market environment. This is the S&P 500’s worst year through September in history, but falling to late 2020 prices is not so dramatic.
  3. The dollar’s strength. The speed of the dollar’s rise is already having effects in several major countries, and take another bite out of multinational corporate earnings.
h2 The Case For Buying/h2

For all that, I’ve been buying stocks. Not a lot, and I still have 30% of my portfolio in cash, about my usual level as stock values also drop. But for the right time frame and in the right stocks, I have felt it’s worth adding to positions.

How’s that square with the uncertainty? Uncertainty makes stocks cheaper. For good reason: added risk of systemic breakdown, and added risk of over-leveraged companies not making it in a recessionary or higher interest-rate environment. Many business models that have not been tested in such a tough climate will go bust.

Those are the risks. My buying is a bet that any systemic breakdown won’t be huge, and that I can avoid the business models that go bust from leverage or poor economics, while finding good businesses that have gotten more affordable. The risk of inaction is rising to the level of those other risks, in my view.

Here are four names I’ve added in my portfolio or portfolios I manage for family and friends in the past couple of weeks.

h2 Bear Market Buys/h2 h3 Juniper Networks/h3

Juniper Networks (NYSE:JNPR) was an original dot com boom and bust stock, and has really done not much for investors since. My friend and podcast co-host Akram’s Razor turned me onto the stock, and the thesis at this point is that it is at a point in the cycle where sales are going higher, not pulling back – the company has guided for 10% sales growth this year and mid-single digits growth in 2023. Demand has been too high for the company to service it, so a slowdown is almost welcome. The company’s debt is all fixed, mostly below 4%. They invested in working capital last quarter to help meet demand, so free cash flow is lower than normal, but they trade at about 18x enterprise value to EBDA – Capex, before this demand surge plays out.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now