Elite investors are privately warning that the market is headed for a second wave of pain
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The stock market has started off the year in a state of euphoria, shrugging off the anxieties that dominated investors’ minds over the previous 12 months: inflation, hot war, cold war, soaring interest rates, recession.
“The economy is BOOMING! now,” one legendary hedge-fund manager told me via email, citing the 517,000 jobs created in the US in January. “That is not what a recession looks like.”
This elation has lulled Wall Street into a false sense of security, according to the investing world’s elite who I’ve spoken with over the past few weeks. Privately, these market masters warn that this complacency will make the coming reversal more excruciating.
“The surprise is that inflation is about to reaccelerate, and the Federal Reserve will have to respond by doing much more,” the hedge-fund manager, who spoke on condition of anonymity to talk freely about his positioning, said. “At that point, we may wind up with the hard landing part.”
Put these 20 books on your Christmas wishlist if you want to understand investing and conquer bear markets, according to top Wall Street experts
The S&P 500 has slumped over 19% this year as investors fret about a potential recession.
We asked experts for the essential reading that’s helped them to better understand bear markets.
Here are 20 books to help investors navigate a stock market downturn.
2022 has been a tough year to make money in the stock market.
Equities suffered a broad and deep sell-off this year, with investors panicking about a potential recession, rising interest rates, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Growth stocks have led the downturn, with the Nasdaq down 32%. Some retail and even professional investors are experiencing their first prolonged bear market after two years of record-breaking outperformance from major indices and the extended bull run in the decade after the 2008 financial crisis.
Insider asked a number of veteran Wall Street strategists which books have helped them better understand bear markets, recessions, and stock market crashes.
They shared 20 top picks, ranging from Michael Lewis’s “The Big Short,” which tells an important story of the 2008 financial crisis, to “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator,” a 1923 novel written by the journalist Edwin Lefèvre.
1. “The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine” by Michael Lewis
Michael Lewis’ “The Big Short” chronicles three sets of investors who bet against the US housing market ahead of the 2008 financial crisis. It was later adapted into an Oscar-winning film that starred Christian Bale as Michael Burry.
The book details how Burry, hedge fund manager Steve Eisman, and Cornwall Capital’s Jamie Mai, Charlie Ledley, and Ben Hockett used unconventional methodologies to identify the US’ housing bubble — and then shorted bank stocks and bought credit default swaps against subprime mortgages to profit from the stock-market crash.
Recommended by: Amanda Rebello, head of passive sales at DWS Group
2. “Stocks for the Long Run: The Definitive Guide to Financial Market Returns & Long-Term Investment Strategies” by Jeremy Siegel
In “Stocks for the Long Run,” famed markets guru Jeremy Siegel shares his ultimate stock-picking strategies, with a particular focus on the impact of the 2008 financial crisis. The Wharton School professor recommends that investors should avoid bonds due to their weak long-term performance, instead preferring index funds for their passive income.
“It’s a must-read primer for investing in the stock market,” Bernstein Private Wealth Management’s co-head of investing strategies Alexander Chaloff told Insider. “You don’t buy stocks for a month, or a quarter, or even a year. You buy them for the long run. And this book captures that concept.”
Recommended by: Nancy Tengler, chief executive of Laffer Tengler Investments; Alexander Chaloff, co-head of investment strategies at Bernstein Private Wealth Management
3. “When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management” by Roger Lowenstein
Roger Lowenstein’s “When Genius Failed” chronicles the rise and fall of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management. In four years, the $100 billion fund suffered enormous losses, not only sending ripples through Wall Street, but the world’s financial system at-large.
“It’s good to study other people’s mistakes,” Court Hoover, head of research at Pervalle Global, said. “There’s an old quote that says ‘Every trade either makes you richer or wiser.’ When you get something right, there’s a tendency not to think about it. You made money. If you get something wrong, you really study it, but that’s a really expensive way to learn a lesson.”
Recommended by: Court Hoover, head of research at Pervalle Global
4. “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator” by Edwin Lefèvre
Edwin Lefèvre’s “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator” is a first-person chronicle about a master stock market trader who made and then lost all of his fortune. Written in 1923, the book details a fictionalized account of prominent Wall Street speculator and day trader, Jesse Livermore.
Recommended by: Michael Wang, founder and chief executive of Prometheus Alternative Investments
5. “Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders” by Jack D. Schwager
Jack D. Schwager’s “Market Wizards” features interviews with 17 of the most successful Wall Street vets including Paul Tudor Jones, Bruce Kovner, Richard Dennis, and Michael Steinhardt. Published in 1989, the book recalls how each person had unprecedented success, turning small sums of capital into large fortunes.
Recommended by: Michael Wang
6. “Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World” by Liaquat Ahamed
Liaquat Ahamed’s “Lords of Finance” retells the events that led to the 1929 Wall Street crash, focussing on central banks in the US, the UK, France, and Germany.
“‘Lords of Finance’ is more of a dire-warning book, but it’s helpful to understand the dynamics that can create market crashes that are driven by central bankers,” Bernstein’s Chaloff told Insider. “This is my recommendation to people who ask ‘how bad can it get’ — a world war and a great depression, that’s how bad.”
Recommended by: Alexander Chaloff
7. “The Asian Financial Crisis 1995-98: Birth of the Age of Debt” by Russell Napier
In “The Asian Financial Crisis,” author Russell Napier recounts his time writing for institutional investors amid an economic downturn, when the US dollar value of certain Asian stock markets sunk 90%. The catastrophe led to the loss of billions of dollars and hundreds of lives in rioting .
“Understanding financial crises is really important because they present such opportunity. In order for there to be a financial crisis, it has to be unforeseen by the majority of participants,” Hoover said. “Otherwise, it wouldn’t occur in the first place. And those sorts of unforeseen events offer the most asymmetry in terms of prospective returns.”
Recommended by: Court Hoover, head of research at Pervalle Global
8. “The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable” by Nassim Taleb
In “The Black Swan,” Nassim Taleb details times throughout history when highly improbable events have occurred like the enormous success of Google or catastrophes like 9/11. The book explores the implications of these as well and what readers can take away from them. Black Swan events have three major characteristics, per Taleb, including their massive impact, unpredictability, and that later people try to explain the phenomena to make it seemingly less random and bizarre.
Recommended by: Amanda Rebello
9. “A Random Walk Down Wall Street: The Time-Tested Strategy for Successful Investing” by Burton Malkiel
Written by Princeton economist Burton Malkiel, “A Random Walk Down Wall Street” popularized the “random walk hypothesis ” – a financial theory that argues traditional stock markets cannot be predicted, and, well, are random. Malkiel critiques popular investing strategies like technical analysis and fundamental analysis, adding that the traders cannot consistently outperform market averages.
Recommended by: Kevin Philip, partner at Bel Air Investment Advisors
10. “Anatomy of the Bear: Lessons from Wall Street’s Four Great Bottoms” by Russell Napier
Many investors are now aiming to identify the bottom of the bear market so that they can start snapping up undervalued stocks that are well-positioned for long-term growth.
In “Anatomy of the Bear,” Russell Napier investigates what causes bear markets to end. The investor and economic historian read over 70,000 old newspaper articles to try to pinpoint when sentiment on Wall Street started to shift the stock market bottoms of 1921, 1932, 1949, and 1982.
Recommended by: Patrick Diedrickson, equity analyst at Ameriprise Financial
11. “Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises” by Charles P. Kindleberger
Charles P. Kindleberger outlines the speculative panic associated with major financial crises, along with the mismanagement of money and credit, in his 1978 book “Manias, Panics, and Crashes.” From the so-called “South Sea Bubble” of 1720 to countless stock market bubbles since, the book engages readers by detailing financial explosions throughout the centuries.
Recommended by: Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex
12. “Debt: The First 5,000 Years” by David Graeber
Before money, anthropologist David Graeber argues, there was debt and credit. “Debt” by anthropologist Graeber explores how it seeps into every major social institution like marriage, religion, government, and war.
Recommended by: Marc Chandler
13. “Stabilizing an Unstable Economy” by Hyman Minsky
In “Stabilizing an Unstable Economy,” Hyman P. Minsky argues that our financial systems are inherently dubious and prone to tottering. Published in 1986, Minsky makes sense of why the United States undergoes phases of rising unemployment, debilitating inflation, and even credit crises.
Recommended by: Marc Chandler
14. “Triumph of the Optimists: 101 Years of Global Investment Returns” by Elroy Dimson, Mike Staunton, and Paul Marsh
In “Triumph of the Optimists,” the authors compare and contrast the performance of the US stock market over time to markets in 16 other developed nations.
“The big reveal is that equities have upward bias regardless of jurisdiction,” said David Waddell, chief investment strategist and CEO at Waddell and Associates. “A bet against global equities is quite simply a bet against human progress. The best way to survive bear markets is to zoom out!!!”
Recommended by: David Waddell, chief investment strategist and CEO at Waddell and Associates
15. “A Short History of Financial Euphoria” by John Kenneth Galbraith
In “A Short History of Financial Euphoria,” economist John Kenneth Galbraith proves the age-old adage of history repeating itself by exploring major market collapses over the last 300 years in the US economy.
“When you talk about volatility, this classic never goes out of style,” said Dan Kimerling, founder of venture capital firm Deciens Capital. “There are cycles of irrational exuberance throughout history in all kinds of assets and those bubbles are not permanent.”
Recommended by: Dan Kimerling, founder of Deciens Capital
16. “Too Big To Fail” by Andrew Ross Sorkin
In “Too Big to Fail,” esteemed financial journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin recounts a gripping retelling of the 2008 economic crash, presenting the crisis from two points of view: both the regulators and the most powerful leaders of the biggest investment firms. One of the book’s highlights is that it reads just like a novel without slipping into over-technical territory for readers who may come from an extensive finance background, said Robert Johnson, CEO of Economic Index Associates.
Recommended by: Robert Johnson, Creighton University finance professor and CEO of Economic Index Associates
17. “Irrational Exuberance” by Robert J. Shiller
Originally published in 2000, Nobel laureate Robert Shiller wrote “Irrational Exuberance” to explain the stock market’s cyclical peaks and troughs and make the case that the US stock market was significantly overvalued – one month before the historic burst of the dot-com bubble. Since then, two editions have been published: one in 2005, prophetically warning readers of an impending housing bubble crash, and one in 2015, cautioning against holding long-term bonds.
Recommended by: Robert Johnson
18. “Boom and Bust: A Global History of Financial Bubbles” by John D. Turner and William Quinn
In “Boom and Bust,” authors Quinn and Turner dive into the history of financial busts to explain the actions investors and speculators took leading up to these crashes.
“The authors use creating fire as an analogy to bubbles. Just as fire needs fuel, heat, and oxygen, the necessary elements for a bubble are; excess money, easy liquidity, and speculation. Oftentimes, new technology acts as the spark to set things in motion,” said Garrett Aird, Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Company’s vice president of investment management & research.
By providing this historical context, the book highlights the three key elements of a financial bubble to help future investors predict an upcoming economic decline.
Recommended by: Garrett Aird, vice president of investment management & research at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Company
19. “Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds” by Charles MacKay
Charles MacKay’s book, written over 150 years ago, is a classic early case study of crowd psychology. In “Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds,” MacKay dissects historical market crashes like the Dutch tulip mania and the South Sea Company bubble in the early 1700’s to prove that market speculation has always been around.
“The underlying causes may be different, but human nature hasn’t changed,” Aird explained to Insider. “The book is helpful in understanding herd mentality and avoiding groupthink.”
Recommended by: Garrett Aird
20. “The Dow Jones-Irwin Guide to Modern Portfolio Theory” by Robert Hagin
Robert Hagin’s “The Dow Jones-Irwin Guide to Modern Portfolio Theory” is an encyclopedia of risk management, portfolio strategies, and asset valuation. Hagin, a former executive director at Morgan Stanley, breaks down investing and financial concepts, recalling lessons he learned in his 40-year career on Wall Street.
“In my opinion, it’s a master class of individual investment analysis and portfolio allocation, which was really pivotal in my growth as an investor and capital allocator,” Franzen told Insider in a statement.
Recommended by: Caleb Franzen, senior market analyst at Cubic Analytics
21/21 SLIDES
Rapid US economic growth makes inflation harder to kill. It means the Federal Reserve has to continue hiking interest rates, which breeds volatility and uncertainty across the markets. It means the story of the global economy’s normalization is still being written. And it means recession continues to be one of the many scenarios on the table. The stock market is still deep in the woods — and there are bears in this forest.
What we do in the bear markets
It’s easy to forget about a bear market when things are looking good. Even with some recent weakness, the S&P 500 is up nearly 5% year to date, and the Nasdaq is up just under 11% for the year. The US economy is continuing to surprise with strong consumer spending and bumper job growth. It’s like all the good little boys and girls on Wall Street asked for a rally for Christmas and got it.
While a hot economy is all good for average Americans, it’s a double-edged sword for Wall Street. For months, analysts and investors have debated whether the battle with inflation will result in a hard or soft landing for the economy. In a hard landing, the Fed’s interest-rate hikes slow the economy so much that it tips the country into a recession and unemployment spikes. In a soft landing, the Fed is able to bring inflation down to its target of 2% without doing much damage to the economy. Apollo Global Management’s chief economist, Torsten Slok, has started telling his clients this strong economy and still high inflation mean the US could be heading toward a third option: a no-landing scenario.
In a no-landing scenario, we’re chasing inflation, and it’s a greased pig. Our strong economy and robust consumer prevent supply and demand from fully realigning, increasing the risk of inflation flare-ups and keeping the consumer price index above that 2% target for a protracted period. As a result, the Fed will have to continue hiking interest rates, which makes cash harder to come by for businesses and for investors. Debt becomes more expensive to carry, too. All that squeezes profits and profit margins, harming businesses’ bottom lines.
As it stands, we remain far away from any sort of landing: The consumer price index — the most widely watched measure of inflation — has come down from its peak of 9.1% in June, but it was still at 6.4% in January, well above the Fed’s goal and barely a nudge down from December’s 6.5%. The Fed must consider the possibility that the 6% range is a sticky spot for inflation — and to get prices down, it could be forced to hike rates higher than what analysts have been expecting.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell has made clear that he takes this no-landing scenario seriously, reminding Wall Street that he can and will hike rates further if prices remain high. In a speech on February 7, he said he saw a “bumpy” path for inflation ahead if the job market remained strong. Raphael Bostic, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s president, warned in a separate interview that the Fed may have to hike rates higher than expected to fully beat inflation.
But do you think Wall Street listened to those words of caution? Hell, no: It’s rally time.
“Until Cathie Wood selling fantasies with an adoring press isn’t a thing, we haven’t left the bubble,” the investment chief for a large family office told me. He added that nonprofessional retail investors’ strong return to the market indicated an unsustainable rally. “Everyone believes the Fed will cut rates by year-end, but the market itself is ensuring that can’t happen,” the investment chief said. The Fed’s goal is to soak up the cash floating around the economy that’s making it run hot. And nothing says “still too warm” like Americans revving up their Robinhood accounts to buy meme stocks again.
And just because the market is headed back up doesn’t mean the economic gravity can’t pull it back down. Charles Lemonides, the founder of the hedge fund ValueWorks, recently reminded me that bear markets were characterized by long, grinding downward moves in stock prices, followed by sharp, rip-your-face-off rallies. Since the market turned down in March, we’ve seen two such sucker-punch rallies — one in August and another in November — but neither of them lasted. And sure, maybe this one is different. But Lemonides, who’s fund returned 39.3% last year, according to documents viewed by Insider, is keeping his eye laser-focused on what’s happening under the hood.
“Inflation at current levels remains unacceptably high,” he wrote in a letter to investors last month. “So I expect tight monetary policy to continue to drain liquidity for more than another couple of months. Whether that culminates in economic contraction or just slower growth is to my mind a very open question that does not in itself lead to investment conclusions. Either way, I would expect tighter policy will weigh on equity prices for at least the first half of 2023.”
The economic conditions that prompted the market’s initial paradigm shift — rising interest rates and inflation — are not going away soon. Anytime Wall Street has forgotten that over the past year, it has gotten punished. In fact, with the economy as strong as it is, inflation may even try to stage a comeback. The dramatic variability of outcomes injects volatility into the market that even the most seasoned investors find hard to navigate.
Head fakes
The little rays of sunlight motivating the current market rally aren’t coming from just the US: Investors are starting to see signs of life in China and Europe as well. But much like the good-news-now-means-bad-news-later scenario in the US, top investors are cautious about the overseas turnaround.
The reason for optimism in China is obvious. The country is reopening to the world after nearly three years of COVID-19 lockdowns. The relaxed restrictions also came with a more-conciliatory tone from Beijing toward investors — a clear attempt to reheat enthusiasm for the country’s financial markets. Chinese officials were rewarded for that sweet talk: Foreign investors plowed $21 billion back into Chinese stocks in January.
In Europe, the energy-supply shock created by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has not battered the economy as badly as some had feared. Optimistic analysts also think that renewed demand from China will help boost Europe’s biggest economy, Germany — which exports a lot of goods to the country.
But according to Justin Simon, the founder of the hedge fund Jasper Capital, the recent good news from both regions are head fakes. Eventually, their long-term problems — inflation in the EU and structural growth constraints in China — will rear their heads, Simon told me. It’s just a matter of when.
Inflation remains persistently high in the eurozone, so policymakers will need to remain aggressive. This isn’t inflation directly related to the war in Ukraine, either. German core inflation — that means stripping out food and energy — came in at 5% over the past year and 6% annualized over the past six months. That means it’s not out of the woods yet and tighter policy is still coming.
In China, there are signs that its reopened economy will not create the demand that it has in the past. Economists are seeing this dynamic in prices for commodities like oil and copper. China used to gobble that stuff up. But when the country reopened a few months ago, the prices didn’t surge; they fell. At the same time, China’s policymakers are trying to be as accommodating as possible, cutting interest rates, relaxing lending restrictions on its overinflated property sector, and injecting record amounts of cash.
“Price action, caused by central banks easing financial conditions, has initiated a chase for performance,” said Simon, whose fund returned over 40% in 2022, according to people familiar with the situation. “I’m skeptical that conditions will remain this accommodating for the remainder of the year.”
If China’s strategy for growth sounds familiar to you, that’s because it’s an old playbook the country has been trying to wean its economy off of for years. We know how it works. The banks start lending to the property companies again — which make up 30% of China’s gross domestic product. Those property developers pay for land from local governments, and the whole system inflates again.
That is, of course, until it looks like it’s going to topple under its own weight again, like it did in 2015, in 2019, and in 2021. There is a ceiling to this economic-growth strategy, and it’s getting lower. China’s population is also shrinking. That’s why it has admitted that it will have to accept slower growth and that it needs to change its economic model. All this will be painful and take time to shake out. But, hey, if you want to make some fast money on Chinese internet stocks while the head of state Xi Jinping says it’s OK for everyone to get in the pool, take a dip.
There can be only one
The economic growth we’re seeing is strong, but it’s not going to save stocks from the influence of rising rates. There is only one way to bring certainty and stability back to the market, and that’s by reaching the Fed’s 2% inflation target. Consider the rallies that come before that a test, perhaps a painful one but only a test.
There are people telling Powell to “chill” on interest-rate hikes since it seems like inflation is going down on its own. But Powell has said in speeches that would be his biggest mistake. Powell does not want to chill too early and then see inflation spin out of control while he is — and I hate to use this word again — chilling.
The same stock promoters who — at this time two years ago — were encouraging investors to jump into the market and buy anything are now preaching the religion of accounting metrics and due diligence at private investment conferences. Something has shifted. And Wall Street’s most adept investors know that our economy’s journey to something like normalization doesn’t have to move in one consistent direction. Like I said, it’s a greased pig.
We don’t know at which rate, or how high they will go, but more hikes are coming. And that means Wall Street will eventually have to open its eyes, take its fingers out of its ears, and watch this bear-market rally fall apart.