First Quarter 2023: March Madness

At the end of 2021, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 36,338, and the career scoring total of LeBron James stood about 60 points lower, at 36,279. (In defense of LeBron, the Dow had a head start of more than a century.) Shortly thereafter, James passed the Dow for good (at least for the time being), and about a year later, on February 7 this year, he eclipsed a more-relevant mark: the all-time NBA scoring record. When Kareem Abdul-Jabbar retired in 1989 with 38,387 points, his record was thought by many to be unbreakable, and in fact it stood for decades. It took a kid from Akron to break it. What basketball aficionados are quick to point out is that the irony of James holding this record is that scoring isn’t even his strongest skill! Rather it’s his passing ability – a function of both his ability to see a play developing and his unselfishness. It’s this quality, much more than his scoring, that has allowed James to elevate many otherwise mediocre teams to contender status.

In the first quarter, like a LeBron James team, the market was pulled higher by a small number of players, with seven of the eight largest stocks in the S&P 500 advancing between 17% and 90%. This turned what would have been a 1% return for the index into a 7% gain. The quarter was also marked by speculative issues rising from the ashes. Companies possessing undesirable attributes (such as being unprofitable) that normally augur poor stock performance saw their stock prices bounce back from a disastrous 2022. Our sense is that this will prove fleeting. The performance of stocks in general has been remarkable so far this year, considering the frustratingly slow progress on inflation and a banking crisis that saw two major banks fail.

For much of the quarter the focus was on the Federal Reserve (Fed) and its battle against inflation. The market seemed to be positioning for the end of the Fed’s interest rate hiking cycle. But inflation has proven to be stickier than expected, and unemployment, which hit a 53-year low, slow to rise. This has forced the Fed to continue its tough talk on inflation and to forecast rates higher for longer. The thought that keeps popping into my head is that, while everyone is hanging on every data point in hopeful anticipation that it could end the Fed’s tightening cycle, there seems to be insufficient attention being paid to the actual effects that the cycle will ultimately produce. As Milton Friedman used to say, monetary policy works with long and variable lags. In other words, it takes time for changes in interest rates (in either direction) to affect the economy, and it’s hard to know when those effects will occur. If history is any guide, we haven’t yet seen all the effects of the Fed’s interest rate hikes.