Harvard Academics Reveal Blueprint For Avoiding Stock Crashes
From: fa-mag.com
Good news for everyone waiting for a bubble to burst. Predicting sectorwide crashes in the equity market isn’t impossible.
That’s the conclusion of Harvard University researchers who studied boom-and-bust cycles in publicly traded U.S. industries since 1926. In a new paper, Robin Greenwood, Andrei Shleifer and Yang You found that while not every violent advance in shares ends in horror, those that do share common traits. Among them: rising volatility and greater share issuance.
As is often the case with academic inquiries into financial assets, the study is a rebuttal to the efficient markets hypothesis, whose Nobel Prize-winning inventor Eugene Fama questioned whether anyone could identify bubbles that ended up wiping out returns.
While the Harvard authors found that much of Fama’s view is correct, especially that sharp run-ups in shares aren’t by themselves progenitors of market meltdowns, they say tools exist for bailing from the rallies most likely to end violently. Keeping out of crashes can add 10 percentage points to an investor’s long-term return, they said.
“When investors look at a very large price runup in an industry and they are concerned if there is a potential bubble, they should look at some of the other non-price features and behavior as a guide to what might happen,” Greenwood said by phone. “People who have studied bubbles have been solely focused on the price action. We wanted to have a serious attempt to bring in some other information.”
Fama didn’t reply to an email and phone call seeking comments.
Alas, for investors looking for guidance on whether to sell now, the paper holds few clues. The reason is simple: nothing going on in the market today would’ve qualified for investigation under the authors’ base case for bubbles. Maybe it will one day, but the academic bar for studying excesses in the stock market is high, and even industries that seem to be overheating in the Trump bump have a ways to go before entering the history books.
Defining Bubble
Greenwood and his colleagues defined a bubble as when share prices at least doubled within two years and found that among industries that rallied so much, returns were generally no better or worse than average afterward. Two things explain this. Surging stocks often keep surging, and when they do crash, they sometimes don’t fall enough to wipe out previous gains.
At the same time, if you can sidestep a crash, you should. And a methodology for doing so forms the meat of the study. The authors found that roughly half the rallies they examined ended in routs of 40 percent or more, the avoidance of which would obviously have been good. They posited various telltale signs of when you’re in the midst of that kind of runup — with time to get out and avoid the carnage.
They are:
• Increases in price volatility. Specifically, industries that end up crashing exhibit big increases in volatility compared with other industries, while the ones that avoid crashes, don’t.
• Increases in share issuance.
• The relative performance of new versus old firms.
• Acceleration, or a steepening in the slope of the rally.
“It is still the case that we cannot call the peak of the bubble, and some of the portfolios we examine keep going up,” they wrote. “Nonetheless, investment strategies that condition on high past returns in combination with these characteristics exceed the returns to a passive buy-and-hold all industries strategy by 10 percentage points or more on a two-year or longer basis.”
The analysis comes with caveats. One, only 40 times in 90 years did industries rise this fast, a fact that might limit statistical significance. Another is that the inquiry centered on industries that had already reached the 100 percent threshold — it was clear in hindsight that a major rally had occurred. In real time, while an investor might sense a bubble is happening, the study’s findings wouldn’t be strictly applicable until it got to 100 percent.