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News & Insights

 
The Freshman Fifty Thousand

“When I was 17 I went to get a Limp Bizkit tattoo and when they wouldn’t let me because I didn’t have a guardian’s approval, I cried and punched a lamp post. 3 months later I was allowed to take on $119,000 in loans to go to art school.”

@BillDixonish

A recent study estimates that the average listed cost, including tuition and living expenses, for private universities at $54,840 per year.[1] Facing numbers so huge, it absolutely falls on applicants and their parents to become educated consumers. Beware, because colleges love money, the stakes are high, and the rules of the game are just as peculiar and special as the college experience itself. 

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February Investment Comments

Last year the market rebounded from what was a challenging 2022. Investor sentiment going into 2023 was decidedly negative, as the Federal Reserve’s aggressive rate hiking campaign to quell inflation led market participants to broadly anticipate a recession that still has not arrived. Instead, the economy proved more resilient than many expected while the Federal Reserve’s campaign against inflation showed progress. Falling inflation coupled with the anticipation of easier Fed policy has raised investors’ spirits heading into 2024. The possibility of inflation returning to more normal levels while the economy remains healthy has increased hopes for a “soft landing,” something that historically has been difficult to achieve. 

Recent data on inflation has been encouraging, trending toward the Federal Reserve’s customary 2% target. The consumer price index for December showed headline inflation increased 3.4% on an annual basis, an acceleration from 3.1% growth the prior month. That is the wrong direction, but in more encouraging news, the core consumer price index, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, fell to a 3.9% annual increase in December, a modest tick lower from 4.0% growth in November. The Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the core PCE price index, rose 3.2% in November versus the prior year, down from 3.4% in October. Notably, the November PCE inflation data took the core six-month annualized rate of inflation down to 1.9%. 

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It's That Time Again: New Year's Resolutions

I like this time of year. While I’m not a fan of the start of winter in Michigan, I do enjoy celebrating Thanksgiving and Christmas. Plus, it gives me some time to reflect on the year that was and think about ways I can make 2024 better.

 The past three years have been unique, to say the least. 2023 felt much better as the COVID pandemic turned into an endemic, the phase where we learn to live with this virus and resume normal living. I’m hopeful that 2024 will continue to put COVID in the rear-view mirror.

Like most years, I make my New Year’s resolutions during December, jotting down thoughts as I go through the holidays with the idea that I’ll pick two or three to work on, the more realistic the better. Here are some ideas from my checklist that you might put on yours as you think about your New Year’s resolutions, both in your life and of the financial variety.

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January Investment Comments

Markets have rallied since late October on the increasing belief the Federal Reserve has completed its rate hiking campaign intended to quell inflation. The Fed last raised rates in July to a range of 5.25%-5.50%, reaching 22-year highs. As inflation comes down investors are looking ahead to multiple rate cuts in 2024 with markets pricing in the likelihood of the first rate cut coming in March and five more rate reductions later in the year. Propelled by this belief, the S&P 500 has advanced more than 14% since just before Halloween, achieving new highs for the year and the highest levels since late 2021. The yield on the 10-year Treasury has also retreated from approximately 5% in late October to under 4%, helping support equities and other risk assets. As one sign of the risk-on environment, bitcoin is up more than 20% since late October.

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Pitfalls of Annuities

Buyer beware!  Annuity salespeople are out in droves. They are conscious that volatility in the stock market over the last couple of years has made some investors approaching retirement reluctant to stomach the ups and downs of their investment portfolios. The allure of a lifetime stream of income to combat investment uncertainties is very tempting, but it comes at a steep price.

As some wise person once said, “Annuities are sold, not bought.” The insurance salesperson or financial advisor will earn a lucrative commission for selling you this product. If you get past the salesperson’s self-interest before buying an annuity, you first need to realize what it is. An annuity is a complicated insurance product. Therefore, the buyer must be familiar with the contract to avoid any potentially unpleasant future surprises.

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December Investment Comments

Since late October, the stock market has rallied off multi-month lows and is now back near its 2023 highs, giving something extra for investors to cheer about as we head into this holiday season. Third quarter earnings are largely in the books, with Q3 2023 marking the first quarter of year-over-year earnings growth since Q3 2022 according to Earnings Insight by FactSet’s John Butters. The recent rally has returned S&P 500 valuations to approximately their five-year average of 18. That feels a little rich considering what has happened to interest rates over the last five years.

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Re-introducing the Provident Team

We have a great team here at Provident, and I’m proud of the work each of them does. Our clients see the trades we make in their portfolios, and they read Investment Comments, Viewpoint, and quarterly letters authored by our portfolio managers. But there is a broader team behind the scenes. I’d like to share a bit about each of them so clients can see how our company functions.

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November Investment Comments

Investors in long-term bonds feel like they are repeating a bad song while investors in stocks are likely not doing as well as the media headlines assume.

In 2022, the Federal Reserve began its campaign to tame inflation by increasing the Federal Funds rate from zero to 4.25% by year end. The 10-year Treasury followed, ending at a yield of 3.88%, up from about 1.5% at the start of the year. Because the price of a bond moves opposite to yields, this dramatic increase in rates led to double-digit losses for bond investors.

After a bit of a reprieve in 2023, bond investors are feeling the pain again. The 10-year Treasury yield fell to 3.25% in April but has since steadily increased to about 4.8%, as the Fed has further increased the Federal Funds rate to 5.25%. With inflation still above the Fed’s 2% target and economic growth strong, it isn’t likely that bond investors will escape another year of losses.

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Earnings and the Market

I recall a television advertisement years ago featuring legendary investor Peter Lynch. Lynch helped popularize the “growth at a reasonable price” (GARP) strategy that Provident largely follows today, registering a sterling track record as the manager of the Magellan Fund at Fidelity between 1977-1990. This advertisement probably aired toward the end of his tenure with the Magellan Fund. In it he emphasized the link between earnings growth and market performance, saying something along the lines of “earnings drive the market.” As an impressionable youth with an interest in the investment business, this message stuck with me. It is something I think most investors generally understand, but the breakdown in short-term correlation between earnings growth and market performance sometimes obscures the tie between the two.

For example, look at what has happened in markets over the past year and a half. In 2022, earnings for the S&P 500 grew 5%, while the market fell 18%. The story in 2023 has been just the opposite, as earnings for the S&P 500 through the second quarter were down while the market advanced nearly 16%. This is not how celebrated market wizard Peter Lynch told us things work! I’m being facetious because what Lynch implied in the advertisement was that while the link between earnings and the market can be tenuous over any shorter period, it generally holds over the longer-term.

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October Investment Comments

As we head into the fall, 2023 has left egg on the face of most forecasters. The seemingly inevitable recession on the heels of a turbulent 2022 hasn’t materialized. The economy continues to grow, inflation is abating, and the stock market has had a remarkable year. Interest rate increases haven’t torpedoed the employment market. Government, consumers, and the market have coalesced around a “soft landing” narrative. However, as always, there are risks.

Since March 2022, the Federal Reserve has executed eleven separate increases to the Federal Funds rate, bringing it to a range of 5.25% to 5.5%. This rapid pace of increases is having the desired impact on inflation and a red-hot labor market.

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Artificial Intelligence: Skynet or More of the Same?

Artificial Intelligence has burst on the scene in 2023, paced by OpenAI, L.P.’s release of ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer) last November and Microsoft’s further $10 billion investment in OpenAI that will support incorporating Artificial Intelligence (AI) into current and future products. Investor enthusiasm has been somewhat bubble-like as companies viewed to be on the cutting edge of AI have been rewarded with rich valuations that will only be justified if AI produces profits. It seems that every company has jumped on the AI bandwagon. I can hardly get through the first few minutes of company quarterly earnings or conference presentations without hearing about how they use AI or plan to do so in the future.

For non-investors, I’ve seen and read several articles and blogs speculating that ChatGPT and its further development will eventually lead to Skynet, the fictional conscious-mind AI from the Terminator movies that launched a global nuclear holocaust to destroy its enemy, humanity.

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September Investment Comments

Long-term interest rates were choppy with no clear trend in 2023 through the end of July but broke to the upside in August. The 30-year Treasury’s yield recently surpassed its 5-year high of 4.2%, with the 10-year also nudging above 4%. Long-term rates have not traded above these levels for an extended period since the financial crisis of 2008-09. It will be interesting to see whether investors treat this like a ceiling for rates or keep allowing them to rise.

Basic supply and demand for government debt may force a new equilibrium at higher rates, meaning lower bond prices, as the U.S. fiscal deficit will balloon to more than $1.5 trillion in the government’s fiscal year that ends in October. Deficits as a fraction of GDP have averaged 3.6% since 1973. This year’s deficit is likely to be more than 6% of GDP. That is a lot of supply.

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A New Service for Employer Retirement Plans

Clients often ask whether Provident can manage the assets in their 401(k) or 403(b) employer-sponsored retirement plans. Until recently, our answer was “no” because we could not trade client accounts custodied outside of Schwab. Assets left behind in a previous employer’s plan could potentially be rolled over into an IRA at Schwab which we could manage. However, with respect to assets in the current employer’s plan the best we could do was to evaluate options and offer a complimentary recommendation for the client to consider. Whether the client acted on those recommendations or revisited the problem in the future as life circumstances changed was beyond our control.

A new technology provider, Pontera, now allows us to trade accounts in employer plans, turning that “no” into a “yes”. Pontera integrates with our reporting system, Tamarac, and allows us to show you a combined portfolio report, including current holdings and historical performance for assets custodied at Schwab alongside those in your employer plan.

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August Investment Comments

Since early 2020 the economy has undergone a series of shocks. First came the Covid-19 pandemic, which continues to impact the economy more than three years later. Next came the war in Ukraine, impacting global oil and wheat markets.

Most recently the emergence of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GAI) is a technological development that some have said could be as profoundly positive as the invention of the internet, mobile devices and cloud computing. Only time will tell if GAI lives up to the hype, but these shocks have brought tremendous volatility to the economy and financial markets.

Unprecedented monetary and fiscal support in response to the pandemic has brought elevated inflation. Since March 2022, the Federal Reserve has been pursuing monetary tightening, resulting in the fastest pace of rate hikes in U.S. history, eleven separate increases bringing the federal funds rate to a range of 5.25%-5.5%. The Fed is attempting a soft landing for the economy, raising rates just enough to slow growth without causing a recession.

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Reflections of a Long-Time Provident Employee

Most of you do not know me, but I have been behind the scenes at Provident for almost 25 years. Scott Horsburgh asked me to share my observations with clients following my retirement on June 30th.

When I joined Provident Investment Man­agement in October of 1998, the company was Seger-Elvekrog, named after its founders. I interviewed with Ralph Seger, Maury Elvekrog, and Scott. Ralph was pleasant with his wonderful reassuring smile, and it was apparent his mission was to share his gift of successful investing. Maury was eloquent, easy to talk to, and then presented me with a psychological multiple-choice test with his charming smile.

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July Investment Comments

The U.S. economy is still feeling the after-effects of the Covid emergency more than three years after it began. In the early going, consumers hoarded items they feared would be in short supply like toilet paper and cleaning products. Demand for many types of services like travel and dining collapsed. In the next phase, component shortages caused prices of many goods to surge. Then, as Covid restrictions eased and demand returned, labor shortages led to further price increases. The war in Ukraine exacerbated growth and price challenges.

The government played a role as spending levels and easy monetary conditions were left in place for too long even as the worst of the crisis had clearly passed. The Federal Reserve was caught flat-footed, assuming the nascent surge in inflation two years ago to be “transitory.”  It has spent the last year and a half making up for its initial failure, raising short-term interest rates from around zero to 5.00%.

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Rebalancing for Life

I recently became an uncle. Meeting my nephew was a great experience. After I held the little guy for as long as he would let me, his parents put him to bed and we talked about newborn things – how he was eating and sleeping, where daycare costs and college savings fit in the budget, etc. I asked my brother if he had increased his life insurance coverage with the new dependent. I was happy to hear that yes, he took care of this a while ago and hadn’t thought much about it since. That’s how it should go. The sooner you set it and forget it, the lower the cost to you. But it’s important to periodically review your life insurance policy as your life progresses.

Life insurance is not the kind of thing we think about every day. There are no news programs dedicated to daily moves in policy rates or conversion options. For most people, life insurance serves to replace income when one passes away. The risk of losing your life in any particular year is low, but the financial severity of the loss is high, larger than the accidental loss of your home or automobile. For risks with those characteristics it’s smart to transfer the risk to a third party. Customers pay the life insurance company a premium to assume that risk.

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June Investment Comments

The chattering class in the media and in Washington D.C. is wailing about the debt ceiling, but stock and bond market behavior suggests little concern. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says that there is only enough financial flexibility to avoid default until early June, so this matter is coming to a head. President Biden and the Democratic Senate insist on a “clean” bill to raise the debt ceiling which seems unlikely to pass the Republican-controlled House. Republicans insist on spending cuts and a slowdown in future spending growth as a condition of raising the debt ceiling.

The concept of a debt ceiling has not always been part of U.S. finance. From the founding of the Republic until 1917, each and every bond issuance was approved by Congress. Article I of the Constitution specifically empowers only Congress “To borrow money on the credit of the United States.”  During World War I, Congress enacted the Second Liberty Bond Act, permitting the Treasury Department to borrow without prior congressional authorization, as long as total debt didn’t exceed the approved amount. The debt ceiling was born.

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What is Going on with our Banking System???

A new chapter in the history of American bank regulation began the night of Wednesday, March 8. That’s when Silicon Valley Bank revealed that the need to raise cash to meet customer withdrawals forced it to book $2 billion in losses on the sale of securities, leading it to look for more capital. Less than 48 hours later, regulators shut down the bank as it lacked sufficient liquidity to satisfy withdrawal demands. An incredible 96% of its deposits exceeded the FDIC insurance limit of $250,000 per depositor. Shockwaves rippled through the bank system. Clients asked us whether their banks were safe, even behemoth Chase.

Over the past 40 years, we’ve had the “Latin American debt crisis” in the mid-1980s, the “savings and loan crisis” in the late 1980s-early 1990s, the Global Financial Crisis in 2008-2009, and now this mini-crisis. Regulatory changes are made after each one, but we always end up back in the soup!  Many blame this crisis on changes to bank regulations in 2019, but in fact there is plenty of blame to go around.

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May Investment Comments

The Economist, a British news magazine, put a cowboy on the cover of its April 15 issue and sang the praises of America’s resilient economy. They wrote, “America remains the world’s richest, most productive and most innovative big economy. By an impressive number of measures, it is leaving its peers ever further in the dust.”

Indeed, while Britain and much of continental Europe are experiencing recession, U.S. GDP expanded 2.6% in the fourth quarter, with the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta forecasting 2.5% growth for the recently-completed first quarter. After a volatile period during the pandemic, we appear to be regaining our old form of consistent real GDP growth above 2%. Although some forecasters are contemplating a late-year recession, almost no one expects a deep or long-lasting one.

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