Use Extrapolation to Help You Not Hurt You

One of the most dangerous things you can do when investing is extrapolate. “Hey, Tesla is up 800% in a year – it’s going to keep going!!” Extrapolation hurts you because a. past returns don’t predict future returns and b. these types of returns are unsustainable. Let me demonstrate.

FAAMG (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Google) are up 64% the last year. These stocks are now 18% of the value of all stocks.

So let’s BUY right!? I mean, these companies are everything and amazing and blah blah blah. Well, let’s see what happens over time if they continue to outperform.

Below I graph the percentage of the value of all stocks these 5 companies would represent over time assuming they a. return 64% per year, b. Return 30% per year, or c. Return 20% per year. I assume the stock market returns 12% per year.

You can see how this analysis can save you. In *5* years, these stocks would be worth more than the total stock market (that means the other stocks would have a negative equity value which can’t happen).

Even at 30% per year, this issue would happen in 12 years. At 20% per year – doesn’t sound like much right? – in 25 years they would be worth the entire stock market and then some.

This won’t happen. These stocks may not underperform, but certainly they wouldn’t outperform over time. It’s just not possible once you get to a certain size.

Permanent Job Losses Past Tech Recession

Pretty good jobs number this morning – excluding the fact we still have missing millions of jobs from February and labor participation is way down.

The real concerning part – and what I’ve mentioned many times in my econ talks – is that temporary is becoming permanent. Here’s a comparison of permanent job losses of the last 3 recessions.

There was a large increase in permanent job losses and we have now equaled the tech recession.

These jobs will take a long time to come back and will stall a recover even once we get good testing and/or a vaccine.