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Fixating on delusions




 

“We find that whole communities suddenly fix their minds upon one object, and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it, till their attention is caught by some new folly more captivating than the first.”
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds by Charles MacKay (1841).

In the previous post, we learned that Toronto real-estate is increasing – fast and furious, Vin Diesel style. The price growth year over year was 4 standard deviations above normal which means it is completely unprecedented in recent memory. We know that anytime an asset increases more than 2 standard deviations, something is amiss.

History does not always repeat itself, but it often rhymes. Whether you are a homemaker, a baker or a candle stick maker you are likely asking yourself why on earth are prices increasing at such an exponential rate?

Throughout history we seem to get caught up in speculative manias whereby logic and common sense are exchanged with greed and fear.  One of the earliest recorded speculative crazes was the infamous "tulip mania" in the Netherlands somewhere between 1634-1637.  When the tulip was introduced to Europe for the first time sometime around the 1500's, people were instantly attracted to its beauty. Let's face it, tulips have massive sex appeal. Professional growers could manipulate the colours and the tulips were a highly-sought item of the wealthy.

For some reason, the entire country became obsessed with tulips.  Speculators began to bid up the prices of tulip bulbs to the point where a very rare single tulip bulb could fetch 100X the average annual wage of a general labourer. Some people went as far as to exchange many acres of land for a coveted tulip bulb.  People became rich within weeks just for holding onto a rare tulip bulb as prices skyrocketed.  Why work when you can just own some tulip bulbs and earn several times your weekly wage for doing nothing? At the time, it seemed to be the rational choice for many people.

Unfortunately, the party came to an end and many people literally lost their shirts. Prices collapsed to where they initially started.

 

Sir Issac Newton was one of the most influential scientists and thinkers since the dawn of time. He wrote the book on the laws of motion and gravitational forces and was a brilliant mathematician.  He was one smart cookie. You likely read about his work at some point in high school and university.  What you likely did not read was the fact that Sir Newton got caught up in one of the earliest known stock manias – the South Sea Joint-Stock Company.


Without a full-blown history lesson, the South Sea Joint-Stock Company was created with the intention of possessing a monopoly on trade with South America. In reality, it was nothing more than a poorly planned scheme of trading government debt.  The shares began to climb rapidly even though the company was not turning much of profit at all. Everyone wanted in on the action, including smart people like Sir Newton.  Apart from a handful of insiders, most people lost a lot of their wealth.

How could this happen? How were people so obsessed with something to the point where they would pay obscene amounts of money for something and then sell it later for only a fraction of the price? Buy high, sell low?!

There are multitude of explanations but, if history is any guide, it comes down to psychology.  We are governed by greed and fear. When we see people making a lot of money very quickly, we want in and we want in now. No one wants to miss out on the action. We have a fear of missing out while others are gaining us and we openly regret "not getting in earlier".

Let's be honest with each other for a moment; if your good friend bought shares in a company that made sweaters for kittens and that company's shares were increasing 30% per year, you would likely ask your friend for some more information to potentially invest yourself.  Put aside the fact the company's profits were only growing by 4% a year. Now, if everyone you knew was buying into this company you would be very hard pressed not to get in on the action.  The media would likely be picking up on this company and there would be news articles day in and out.  Your co-workers would be talking about it at lunch on an almost daily basis. And, likely, your family would be pressuring you to get in on the action. Who cares about reading the financial statements of the company, if the share price is increasing quickly you must get in like everyone else so you don't miss out!  What happened in the last few months will assuredly happen again in the future.  This company will re-define stock valuations since 4% in profit growth now means 30% share price growth!

Ludicrous, is it not? 


The above graph depicts the stages of a speculative mania. The time for each stage is different, perhaps a few months, perhaps a few years, but the result is always the same - a return to the mean. Tulips, stocks, gold, oil, Japanese real-estate, Miami condos, baseball cards, even Beanie Babies, they all follow a typical pattern.  Yes, in case you forgot, many people got caught up in purchasing those Beanie Babies at several multiples of its original price as people were desperate to obtain that tulip bulb, I mean stuff animal, so it can be re-sold again for a higher and higher price.  [In case you're wondering, Beanie Babies can still be bought today for $10-15, which is the going rate for any average stuffed animal.]

Look up any speculative mania in the last 500 years and it pretty much follows the same pattern.

Can we predict which stage an asset is in when the masses are completely mesmerized by it? Not really. No one can with any precision and this blog will not bother trying.  But there are hints that a cycle has come to or is close to coming to an end.  They are not always clear at first but after the inevitable peak and decline takes place they become plainly obvious.

Enough with the foreplay already and let’s get back to Toronto real-estate. Does Toronto real-estate follow a pattern of expansion, mania, recession and recovery to the mean? Is it really different this time?
 

As this graph eloquently shows, the cycle repeats the same pattern: expansion, mania, recession and recovery. Every single time house prices reverted to the mean. Look closer and prices went below the mean every single time.  There were booms followed by busts and a return to the mean.  If I wasn’t clear enough, let me repeat again that history has shown that home prices always returned to the mean.  World wars, cold wars, technological innovations, communism, immigration influxes, political parties of all stripes, low interest rates, high interest rates, Madonna - it only had temporary impact and everything reverted to the mean. This is called "mean reversion".

As I’m sure you noticed right off the bat, this graph is out of the date.  Prices in 2017 are literally off the chart at over $900,000.00.  Will it continue to go up exponentially? Possible. Will it return to the mean? Your guess is as good as mine. Can we predict with any certainty where prices are headed? If Sir Issac Newton couldn’t, it’s highly unlikely that the writer of this blog or anyone else reading this blog could.  They key take away point is once psychological factors are at play such as greed, fear, delusion and euphoria, all bets are off.

On a serious note, though, I have some rare Beanie Babies that I’m selling for only $500 a piece, let me know if you’re interested in purchasing them.