Widely followed hedge fund manager Jeremy Grantham thinks investors can pick up something like a quick 15 percent return on their money in a final market expansion before an expected crash.
The usually grim Grantham, known especially for his eco-pessimism but also for successfully dodging market crashes, was unusually sanguine in his firm Grantham Mayo van Otterloo's [GMO] latest shareholder letter as a result of the potential for easy profit that is associated with the third year in the presidential cycle.
In the quarterly communique, Grantham calculates a 2.5 percent monthly return for the seven months starting from Oct. 1 through April 30 (hence, the "third year" actually kicks three months early and ends eight months early).
That would result in a greater than 17 percent return in seven months, though he points out that overpriced markets such as today's may see just 15 percent, while underpriced markets could generate 19 percent return in that short period.
The calendrical quirk is borne out in 17 out of 20 actual experiences, though randomized odds would see a mere 1 out of 200 chance of returns like this in 10 million trials, Grantham says.
What's more, of the three out of 20 historical experiences that were not positive, the worst market performance was a loss of just 6.4 percent.
Grantham says the balance of the presidential third year is historically still positive, though at a less impressive 0.75 percent monthly rate, whereas the subsequent 36 months generates a trifling 0.2 percent monthly return.
In other words, if the current seven-month window follows the historical pattern, investors can quickly make more than 10 times their return during the three years that follow the presidential third year.
Grantham does, however, acknowledge the appearance of "more negatives than normal" at this particular third-year juncture — "though many of the previous 20 occurrences may well have seemed that way to investors at the time," he adds parenthetically.
Today's negatives include the ending the Fed's bond purchase program; talk of a rate increase early next year; the escalation potential of various world conflicts; and the Ebola outbreak.
Perhaps surprisingly, Grantham does not include the market's current valuations, which he and other commentators consider lofty, as a negative, saying such overpricing has "had no material effect on third-year returns or the particularly sweet seven-month subset."