Sunday, February 8, 2026

"But just months later, swept up in the wild enthusiasm of the market, [Sir Isaac] Newton jumped back in at a much higher price and lost £20,000 (or more than $3 million in today’s money)." --Benjamin Graham

REVERBERANT REVERSALS

REVERBERANT REVERSALS (February 8, 2026): We have become conditioned by society to want to "turn over a new leaf" each time we approach and enter a new calendar year. We join a gym pretending we will exercise frequently for the entire year; we close out losing positions which have been the most disappointing performers and are set to enjoy powerful rebounds, in order to not have to look at big red negative numbers each time we log into our accounts; we assume that the previous calendar year's trends will continue indefinitely. As a result, whenever I possess shares which used to enjoy insider buying but have recently experienced notable insider selling, while the media have become far more optimistic and brokerages have been making frequent upgrades, I may be tempted to sell such holdings near the end of any given calendar year. Instead, I usually wait until part of January has passed before doing so, giving investors enough time to pile into the previous year's biggest winners. I have been selling some shares which I had bought from October through December 2025 that had been wildly oversold due to their becoming tax-loss favorites, if they have rebounded sufficiently so they are no longer meaningfully undervalued and previous top executive buyers in the autumn have become recent sellers. The start of 2026 fits classically into this pattern, combined with unusually priced large-cap U.S. stocks similar to how the year began in 1973 but generally with even more dangerous overpricings of stock prices relative to their earnings.


I have been aggressively increasing my allocations to TLT and PSQ, although using small amounts per trade as I always do whenever I am increasing risk.


TLT is one of the least-appreciated and most-shorted funds in history. Hedge funds in particular have multiplied their net short position by a factor of about twelve, and all of this increase was done after TLT had already completed its bottom at 81.92 at 5:40 a.m. in the pre-market session on October 23, 2023:



TLT has been in a very unappreciated bull market for 27-1/2 months and yields 4.82% annualized.


We'll leave aside the obvious question about why anyone would want to sell short something with an annualized yield of 4.82% which has been in a bull market for 27-1/2 months, choppily forming numerous higher lows along the way. The media have been insisting for months that the U.S. dollar will collapse and will allegedly no longer serve as the world's reserve currency. Meanwhile, the reality is that the U.S. dollar keeps rapidly rebounding from all selloffs since July 1, 2025, with the sharpest selloffs leading to the strongest recoveries. The media also keep insisting that long-term U.S. Treasury yields will surge higher. The truth is that it is the strong gains in large-cap U.S. stocks, in no way justified by their earnings climbing far more slowly than their stock prices, which has encouraged investors to foolishly conclude that they will always be able to get a 20% or 30% gain in large-cap U.S. shares. if you are sure you will achieve such outsized profits from U.S. stocks, then you will have zero interest in investing in something conservative and guaranteed like the TIPS which mature on February 15, 2053 with a fixed yield of 2.64% which is added each month to the urban CPI for a current total yield near 5-1/4 percent.


PSQ is an unleveraged fund which tracks the inverse of QQQ. QQQ remains one of the most overvalued exchange-traded funds in history and is also one of the most popular exchange-traded funds.


Buying PSQ is like shorting QQQ, except that you have to pay the 0.95% management fee and you can't sell covered puts against it as you can with QQQ. You can own PSQ in a retirement account where short selling is not permitted, and if you own it in a non-retirement account then it will qualify for long-term capital gains if you hold it for at least one year and one day from your purchase date for any lot. Investors have been piling into leveraged long funds of most equity groups, while they have fled from bear funds whether they are leveraged or unleveraged. Any extended uptrend creates the psychological perception that it will continue indefinitely, and since we haven't experienced a true U.S. equity bear market since early March 2009 which was almost 17 years ago, many people can't emotionally imagine a similar percentage decline occurring soon.


Top corporate insiders have been selling their shares at an all-time record pace, along with other very experienced investors including Warren Buffett. The same very experienced investors have been making all-time record investments into "boring" U.S. government debt. Meanwhile, the least-experienced investors have been making by far their biggest-ever inflows into stock funds and have been shunning safe guaranteed investments of all kinds. You can ask yourself whether the most experienced investors will be proven right, as has always occurred throughout history, or whether this will be the first time that the least-experienced participants end up with the biggest gains.


I sold many of the shares I had purchased throughout 2025, primarily emerging markets and energy shares in January and April and tax-loss favorites in October through December.


I sold all of the energy shares I had bought in April 2025, especially RIG, WTI, and PTEN. Fortunately most of these shares had more than doubled in value. I also sold all of my Brazilian, South Korean, Turkish, and other emerging-market shares which I had purchased primarily in January for Brazil and in both January and April for several other countries including South Korea. The South Korean shares more than doubled, while the Brazilian shares including both exchange-traded funds and individual company shares had gained an average of between 60% and 75%. While additional gains are possible for emerging markets and energy shares, I believe that the easy money has mostly been made while the downside risks have increased proportionate to their percentage gains.


I sold all of my PALL and MOH and a few smaller positions especially when brokerages switched from downgrades to upgrades while top corporate insiders changed from aggressive buyers to sellers.


MOH had gained 44% from my average purchase price in just over two months and the media had become far more favorable toward its future prospects, so I sold all of it. PALL, a fund of physical palladium, was an exchange-traded fund which I began purchasing near the end of 2023 and kept buying into the spring of 2025 within a few dollars of 80. In the futures markets, commercials--those who actually use palladium for manufacturing or mine palladium themselves--built up a long position which was more than ten times their short position. This is one of the most lopsided ratios for any futures contract in history. Recently, commercials shifted dramatically to being short:long 3:2. Palladium went from being one of the most popular short positions for hedge funds to a recent net long hedge fund favorite. I therefore sold all of my PALL even though it hadn't quite reached my target. The average gain was about 125% (not annualized).


Many popular assets experienced intensified upward moves followed by downside reversals.


You probably already know how nearly all cryptocurrencies accelerated their uptrends during the summer of 2025, and afterward reversed so dramatically that they have mostly lost more than half of their previous peak valuations. The same will occur with many other asset classes. Large-cap U.S. stocks, including funds like QQQ, SPY, and VOO, will similarly lose more than half of their value over the next few years. The degree of the decline will be proportional to the percentage of very overpriced shares they own in their portfolios. During the collapse of the internet bubble, QQQ lost 83.6% of its peak valuation in exactly 31 months if you adjust for all reinvested dividends. A similar or greater percentage decline for this and similar funds is likely by 2029 or sooner.


We have experienced sharp upward bounces for the most overvalued stocks, with the sharpest surges higher often occurring near the opening bell. This is highly characteristic of U.S. equity bear markets and almost never happens during bull markets.


Investors during the early years of bear markets repeatedly conclude that "the bottom is in" and excitedly pile in numerous times, ultimately being disappointed at not achieving new all-time highs which had become routine in recent years. This is especially true of the most severe bear market years including 1931, 1974, 2002, and 2008, which featured far more frequent sharp up days than the strongest bull market years including 2013 and 2017. Mark Hulbert has done extensive research into this phenomenon. Friday, February 6, 2026 was a classic short-term upward spike.


Prior to a large percentage drop for the U.S. stock market, VIX will almost always form a sequence of numerous higher lows following a historic bottoming pattern.


While the S&P 500 during the previous severe bear market had peaked on October 11, 2007 and bottomed on March 6, 2009, VIX had actually bottomed several months earlier in December 2006 and peaked in October 2008. VIX is likely forming a similar pattern in recent months, sliding to 13.38 on December 24, 2025 which had marked its lowest point in over a year. Whenever VIX reaches an especially elevated level, perhaps during the final months of 2026, and then begins to form several lower highs, it will likely be followed by a multi-month recovery for large-cap U.S. stocks before they resume their multi-year bear markets.


There will continue to periodically be worthwhile purchases for unloved shares with brokerage downgrades and insider buying.


My favorite stocks for purchase in any environment are those where the top executives including the CEO are buying into all extended pullbacks, where brokerages have been downgrading their prospects, where the media have become persistently gloomy, with single-digit price-earnings ratios, and with above-average long-term annualized earnings growth. If this sounds like something that Benjamin Graham or Peter Lynch would have said decades ago then that is not a coincidence.


Expect far more dramatic intraday fluctuations over the next few years than we have experienced during the past few years.


The financial markets have become much more volatile since October 2025 than they had been for several previous months, with generally larger spreads between intraday highs and lows. This is typical of a transition from the final stages of a lengthy equity bull market to a classically severe equity bear market. Often the early part of any trading day, especially near the opening bell, will experience sharp gains which are followed by pullbacks later in the day. The most popular shares will often be among the most eager to move higher in the morning. Whenever we are approaching the next intermediate-term bottoming pattern, perhaps several months from now, we will see roughly opposite behavior with frequent downward spikes near the opening bell followed by multiple rebound attempts as they day progresses.


February 2026 has been even more volatile than January in both directions for many assets.


Last week was a classic example of intensified intraday swings which characterize all transitions to true U.S. equity bear markets. QQQ rallied to a Tuesday, February 3, 2026 peak of 630.54 at 2:58 a.m., not far below its all-time top of 638.94 at 11:49:13 p.m. on October 29, 2025, before sliding to a Thursday, February 5, 2026 bottom of 587.44 at 7:16 p.m. and rebounding sharply since then. In case you aren't accustomed to readings outside of regular trading hours, such activity has become increasingly common and increasingly extreme and will likely continue to do so for at least the next several years.


The following charts highlight the incredible unsustainable extremes of the first several weeks of 2026 which will be remembered as one of the most unusually lopsided inflection months in world financial history.


The price-to-sales ratio of 3.43 for the S&P 500 one month ago, which was already surpassed several times in recent weeks, was far above its peak of 2.30 from the 1999-2000 internet bubble and thus probably has further to drop in a bear market:



There is a popular myth that high-P/E shares gain more in annualized terms than low-P/E shares, but the opposite has been proven to be true for decades:



Commodities retested all-time lows relative to U.S. equities during the past several years. Commodities have since rebounded moderately, especially during the past year, and are likely to surrender most of their recent gains before resuming their uptrend into the 2030s:



Precious metals have become unusually overpriced relative to energy commodities:



Investors consistently make the most intense net inflows near market tops and the most dramatic outflows near market bottoms:



U.S. corporate bond yields have been trading at spreads relative to U.S. Treasuries of similar maturities that are among their lowest in history:



There is a clear correlation between the extent of overvaluation and subsequent underperformance of U.S. stocks:



The media often assume that Fed rate cuts are bullish for U.S. stocks, whereas history proves that they are far more often bearish:



Rolling 3-month net inflows into U.S. exchange-traded equity funds are consistently their highest just before the biggest percentage pullbacks in those funds:



U.S. stocks overall are among their most overvalued ever recorded by several fundamental measures:



The out- or underperformance of U.S. stocks is inversely proportional to the percentage of total U.S. assets that are invested in the U.S. stock market:



Disclosure of current holdings:


Below is my current asset allocation as of 4:00 p.m. on Friday, February 6, 2026. Each position is listed as its percentage of my total liquid net worth. The long positions should add up to 100%, while the short positions all use U.S. Treasury bills as collateral.


I extracted the totals for each position and grouped these according to sector.


The order is as follows: 1) U.S. government bonds; 2) shorts; 3) bear funds; 4) precious metals; 5) individual U.S.-listed stocks; 6) currencies.


17-Week/52-Week/26-Week/13-Week/2-Year/8-Week/3-Year/5,10,30-Year TIPS/4-Week/6-Week/20-Year: 25.50%;


VMFXX/TIAA Traditional, TIAA money market/bank CDs/FZDXX/FZFXX/SPRXX/SPAXX/BPRXX/Savings/Checking long: 25.12%;


TLT long: 13.07%;


I Bonds long: 3.97%;


LTPZ long: 1.38%;


EDV long: 1.31%;


PMM long: 0.01%;


XLK short: 32.88%;


QQQ short: 25.35%;


GDXJ short: 2.42%;


SMH short: 1.55%;


GDX short: 0.53%;


PSQ long: 6.22%;


Gold/silver/platinum coins: 13.51%;


WEN long: 1.31%;


UTZ long: 1.20%;


HUN long: 1.04%;


LYB long: 0.86%;


SG long: 0.83%;


OXM long: 0.75%;


CAG long: 0.52%;


VIRC long: 0.50%;


AVTR long: 0.49%;


VAC long: 0.45%;


BLMN long: 0.34%;


FMC long: 0.30%;


ALIT long: 0.29%;


OGN long: 0.28%;


MOS long: 0.27%;


DEI long: 0.26%;


FISV long: 0.17%;


FXY long: 0.05%.