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The Communications Revolution

Global Financial Data has reorganized its sector and industry classification system to make Communications a separate sector. The introduction of the internet 25 years ago has transformed the world and will continue to change the global economy in ways we still cannot predict. Many services which formerly were provided through brick and mortar stores are now provided online. Businesses which formerly were included in Consumer Discretionary, such as Media and Broadcasting or the Internet in Information Technology have more in common with each other than was formerly realized. A company such as Amazon not only has a huge retail business, but also hosts huge amounts of data on the cloud and provides streaming services for video and music. Netflix not only rents and streams video, but produces its own movies and series, as does Amazon. These changes have caused a re-evaluation of the classification system of industries and sectors by all of the index providers.
Global Financial Data’s classification system is based upon 12 sectors and 72 industries. While most other providers have Sectors and Sub-Sectors, Industries and Sub-Industries, we keep it simple and limit our system to Sectors for the whole economy and the industries that make them up. GFD’s sectors differ from other index providers because we keep Transportation as a sector rather than making it part of the Industrials as other providers do. GFD focuses on sectors and industries that have existed over the past 200 years, not just the ones that exist today. The Transportation sector laid the foundations of the stock market back in the 1800s and deserves to be recognized for this as a separate sector. While other index providers periodically rejig their classification system to adjust to new trends in the market and investing, Global Financial Data has created a timeless system that covers over two centuries of sector classification and recognizes industries that no longer exist. Canals and Docks have their own industry because that industry dominated the stock market in England in the early 1800s. Telegraphs, Cables and Express were all important industries in the 1800s, but no longer exist. We don’t delete industries that economic change has eliminated.  

 
GFD’s goal is to create a sector and industry classification that reflects not only the present, but the past, to help its subscribers to analyze the market and determine which sectors and industries outperformed or underperformed the market today or 200 years ago. After all, finding the high alpha stocks and why they had a high alpha is the whole point of analyzing the past. The Communications Sector has been broken up into several industries. The components of the Communications Sector are Advertising, Broadcasting, Entertainment, Publishing, Internet, Telegraph Cable & Express, Telephones and Retail – Internet and Media. By making these changes, Communications becomes the second largest sector in the United States after Finance, in part because several of the largest companies in the world, Alphabet, Facebook, Amazon and others are now part of the Communications sector. If you look at only the Telecommunications sector, it represents 4.69% of the total market cap, but the Communications sector represents 12.53%. GFD will revise the historical data for all of our GFD Indices to reflect these changes. Our Communications Sector Index is a Communications sector index from the 1800s to the 2000s. Other index providers will introduce these changes this year and keep their old indices as they were. S&P’s Communications sector will actually be a Telecommunications sector through 2018 and a Communications sector after that. The reason is the recalculation would affect not only the historical data for Communications, but for Consumer Discretionary and Information Technology as well. Only GFD’s Communications Sector provides true Communications 150 years of true Communications data back to its beginning. The Communications Revolution has transformed the world and now it is transforming stock market indices. To follow the path of changes in Communications over the past 150 years, GFD’s sector capitalization tool provides the perfect means of analyzing these changes. Welcome to the communications revolution.

The Risk-Free Rate in the United States in the Nineteenth Century

The Risk-Free Rate of Return is an important concept in financial markets since it provides the return an investor can receive on his money without running any risk of loss. Typically, the rate of return is measured by the one-month treasury bill issued by the government. But what happens when there are no Treasury bills to measure the risk-free rate of return? Investors in government bonds have found out that government bonds are not risk free, even if there is virtually no risk of default, because the price of the bond produces capital gains and losses to bondholders. The longer the maturity of the bond, the greater the change in the price of the bond whenever bond yields change. Treasury bills, on the other hand, are redeemed within a month at their face value, and short of a default, there is no risk of loss due to capital gains or losses. But what if there are no Treasury bills, as was generally the case in the 1800s, that investors can use for a risk-free investment? One alternative is the interest rate the central bank pays on deposits with the bank. England has had a central bank beginning in 1694 and this rate enables historians to provide a risk-free rate of return in Great Britain for over 300 years.
But what if there is no central bank and no treasury bills? This is the situation that the United States faced between 1836 and 1913 when the Federal Reserve was established and before 1918 when the Federal government began issuing treasury bills to cover its borrowing needs. Unlike most European countries, the United States almost managed to pay off its debt before World War I commenced. The easiest solution would be to use commercial paper as a substitute for Treasury bills. Since the risk of the issuing bank defaulting is low and the bills’ maturity is only a month or two, they would seem to be the best substitute for Treasury Bills. The problem with this solution is that when you calculate the rate of return over time, before 1918, commercial bills provided a higher return than Government bonds! When we put together a risk-free bill series to compare with Government bonds in the United States between 1835 and 2017, we found that the bills outperformed the government bonds until World War I when treasury bills were introduced and bonds outperformed bills between 1918 and 2018. Clearly, this was not a solution. There were periods of time in the nineteenth century when commercial bills paid lower returns than government bonds, and there were periods when they paid higher returns. The solution seemed simple, use the coupon rate on government bonds as the basis for the risk-free rate of return, but during those periods when commercial bills paid a lower yield than government bonds, use commercial bills. This solution worked! Risk-free bills provided a lower rate of return than risk-free government bonds and the balance between bills and bonds was restored.

GFD’s Annual Review of Global Market Trends

Global Financial Data’s analysis of global markets gives a positive review for 2018. Our review for 2017, “2017: Let the Bull Markets Continue,” hit the mark right on the spot. We noted that a “relatively large number of countries put in … a bear market bottom in 2016. Investors should expect that global markets will continue a bull market run in 2017.” And right we were. Global Financial Data covers over 100 stock markets worldwide with over 100 years of data on bull and bear markets back to the 1800s. We keep track of the tops of bull markets and the bottoms of bear markets. A market top occurs when a peak is reached followed by a 20% decline. A market bottom occurs when a stock market hits a trough which is followed by a 50% or greater rise.
Data on market tops and bottoms for over 100 world markets is available through our Events-in-Time tool, and the summary numbers for global tops and bottoms are available through our GFD Indices. By our count, there were 47 market bottoms in 2016 and only 2 market tops, giving a net score of -45. This was the lowest score global markets had seen since 2009 which had a score of -53. It didn’t take artificial intelligence to figure out that 2017 was going to be a banner year. 2017 was a year in which all markets moved upward in sync. There wasn’t a single major market in the world that hit a bottom. The S&P 500 was up 19.4%, MSCI’s EAFE index was up 21.8% and MSCI’s Emerging Markets were up 34.3%, and that was before dividends! 2017 was one of the best years in the 21st Century. Part of the problem from American investors’ perspective was that even though many European and Asian markets hit a bottom in 2016, the United States did not since it has been a global market leader since the Great Recession of 2009. US markets did sell off in August 2015 when Brexit was approved by the British electorate, but the market put in a double bottom in January 2016, and the trend has generally been straight up since then. In 2017, five markets hit a bottom and three markets hit a top. None of the markets hitting a top or bottom was a major world markets. The five hitting tops were Bosnia-Herzegovina, Côte d’Ivoire, Nepal, Qatar and Tanzania. The three hitting market tops were Iraq, Mongolia and Pakistan. Only 2018 will tell whether these nine markets bounce back. And the forecast for 2018? High numbers of markets hitting bottoms exceeding the number of markets hitting tops only happens every five to seven years. During this century, this occurred in 2003, 2009 and 2016, so this data generally portends positively for global markets for the rest of the decade. 2018 will probably be more volatile than 2017, but there is little reason to believe that 2018 and 2019 won’t be a great time for investors worldwide. Our advice, ignore volatility and stay in the market for 2018. We’ll let you know how our prediction went in a year.

Debt, Defaults, Depression and Other Delightful Ditties from the Dismal Science Released

  Bryan Taylor, Chief Economist for Global Financial Data, has just released his first collection of articles and blogs on financial history. The book is a light-hearted look at some of the more entertaining episodes of economic history. There are 27 chapters covering a wide variety of topics. You can either read the book straight through or pick it up for a single chapter. Bryan Taylor uses his knowledge of the past to illustrate how corporations and governments have helped and harmed the economy and financial markets. Readers will learn about the greatest counterfeiter of all time, the first publicly traded bonds, the worst inflation in history, the currency that created two countries, zombie bonds, and the New Jersey tailor who went to jail for undercutting other tailors by 5 cents. Taylor provides his insights on the gold standard, government debt, the stock market and why the Fed will keep interest rates low for years to come. He discusses why the gold standard will never return and provides his own theory of the equity-risk premium and how it has changed over time. The author also gives his own personal experience of the Alice-in-Wonderland world of Cuban economics. Whether looking for an amusing glimpse into the past or to learn how the economy can affect the stock market, Debt, Defaults, and Depression provides this and more. Even people who think calling economics the "dismal science" is being too kind will enjoy this book. The book is available from Amazon as both an e-book for Kindle and as a paperback to be taken to the beach or on an airplane. This book is the first of two collections of articles and blogs that Taylor has written. Taylor’s second collection of blogs, Stock Market Scams, Swindles and Successes will be released this summer.

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Our comprehensive financial databases span global markets offering data never compiled into an electronic format. We create and generate our own proprietary data series while we continue to investigate new sources and extend existing series whenever possible. GFD supports full data transparency to enable our users to verify financial data points, tracing them back to the original source documents. GFD is the original supplier of complete historical data.

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