Muhlenkamp & Company Quarterly Letter – July 2024

Jeff and Ron MuhlenkampFellow Investors,

Economically the second quarter of ’24 has been as quiet as the first quarter. Inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) was 3.3% on May 31, 2024. It’s been within .2% of that number since October 2023. The U.S. Unemployment Rate on 5/31 was 4.0% up .2% since October 2023. Not much change there either. Real (inflation adjusted) year-over-year GDP growth in the first quarter was 1.3% and the Atlanta Fed’s “GDP Now” estimate was 3.0% on June 20, 2024. In light of those metrics the Federal Reserve has maintained their Federal Funds Target Rate at a range of 5.25% - 5.5%. The Federal Funds Target Rate has been maintained at that level since mid-July 2023. With the yield on the 2-year treasury bond at 4.7% and the yield on the 10-year treasury bond at 4.3% the yield curve remains inverted (short-term interest rates higher than long term rates) which has historically been a pretty good indicator of an approaching recession. We’re not willing to say “this time is different” so we still consider it possible that the U.S. enters a recession in the near future.

The year-to-date return for the S&P 500 Index is 15.29% as of the end of June with Artificial intelligence (AI) related companies and big tech in general providing most of that return. AI chipmaker Nvidia Corp led the charge with a year-to-date return of approximately 150%, becoming for a brief time the most valuable company in the S&P 500 and one of only three companies with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion (Apple and Microsoft are the other two). Nvidia at the end of June sold at 25 times this year’s sales estimates: a very high valuation and a clear indication of the market’s expectation of even greater things to come than we’ve seen in the recent past.

You’ve probably not read much about it but the bond market, at least the longer end of it, is in its 47th month of a bear market. The yield on the 10-year treasury bond bottomed in mid-2020 at about .5% and has risen steadily since then to the aforementioned 4.3%. Prices of long bonds have consequently fallen over that period with the S&P U.S. Treasury Bond 20+ Year Index illustrating the decline by losing 40% of its value since its peak at the end of July 2020. Declines in the value of bonds can create problems for companies that hold bonds on their balance sheets and are forced to mark the value of the asset to the current market price (typically banks and insurance companies own lots of long-term debt). This explains the failure of Silicon Valley Bank last year and it is still creating problems for banks. A recent news item is illustrative: Norinchukin Bank (Japan) announced in mid-June that it would sell $63 billion of its holdings of U.S. and European government bonds during the year ending March 2025 to stem the losses from bets on low-yielding foreign bonds. We’ll probably be dealing with the ramifications of higher interest rates for quite a while. If we are fortunate, the problems won’t cascade into a crisis.