Third Quarter Commentary: The Beat Goes On

A man named John Adams attends every Cleveland Indians home game, sitting in the last row of the outfield bleachers. What makes Adams unique is that he always brings a large drum to rhythmically beat at various moments in the game. The sound reverberates throughout the stadium and into the homes of people watching the game on television. The team does not compensate him for this; in fact, until recent years he bought his own ticket. Adams has been beating his drum at Indians games for about 47 years. This season there were no fans allowed into the games due to the pandemic, but the beat went on, as the organization piped in sounds of a beating drum to give the game a little more of a normal feel.

The beat went on in the third quarter as growth stocks once again shone, propelling the S&P 500 to a 9% gain. The market continues to be narrow, with the index being carried by a relatively small number of companies. While the index is up this year, the average stock is down. This is generally considered to be unhealthy.

Another unhealthy development is the aggressive action by many market participants, particularly in the options markets. A call option on a stock can be thought of as a turbocharged position in that stock. The swings in value, and the ultimate risk, of an option are much greater than simply owning shares of the stock. It recently came to light that Japanese multinational conglomerate Softbank had bought $4 billion of options on US tech stocks over a short time period. The notional value of these was $30 billion. In addition, many more retail investors than usual have been playing the options game, again in the tech area. All this demand for options has not only caused options premiums (the price one pays for an option) to spike, but it also has helped drive the rally in the prices of the underlying stocks, as the sellers of these call options are forced to hedge themselves by buying the underlying shares. The rise in value of the shares creates more excitement for options, which again results in more demand for the shares, and so on. Late in the quarter this upward spiral unraveled a bit as some of the tech stocks sold off, but many retain lofty valuations.

Two examples of stocks that experienced frenzied rallies are Tesla and Apple, each of which announced stock splits in the quarter. Even though they have no effect on the true value of a company, stock splits in the frothy market of the late 1990s led to spikes in the prices of the companies that announced them. Though splits are much less common these days, the phenomenon has resurfaced. In the three weeks after Tesla announced its stock split, its stock price rose 76%, or roughly $200 billion in market value. It is important to note that there were not any significant developments at the company during that period that would explain the move. For perspective, only 30 public companies in the entire US market are worth at least $200 billion, which is how much Tesla’s market value increased over just three weeks. In the month after Apple declared a stock split, its market value increased by roughly $600 billion. There are only six companies in the US market with a market value that large, one of which is Apple of course.