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Howard Marks says he’s made five great market calls in his career. Here’s how he did it.

Investors are playing the waiting game for Tuesday, a day ahead of what could be a pivotal consumer prices report.

“Over time, it takes just a few winners to work wonders.” That’s what one of the world’s most widely followed investors, Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett, told investors earlier this year. Some of his big victors have included Apple, which he bought in 2016, or Coca-Cola in 1988 — clearly those early investments have paid off.

Our call of the day comes from another legend, Oaktree Capital Management’s co-founder and co-chairman Howard Marks, who offers insight about how he made his best ever calls — five in 50 years — along with a key mistake for investors to avoid.

First, the latter. In a new note to investors, Marks addresses whether it’s worse for investors to buy at the top or sell at the bottom. “If you buy at what later turns out to have been a market top, you’ll suffer a downward fluctuation,” he says. If the long-term thesis on that stock is intact, the next top will usually beat the last so investors will usually come out ahead, he adds.

“But if you sell at a market bottom, you render that downward fluctuation permanent, and even more important, you get off the escalator of a rising economy and rising markets that has made so many long-term investors rich. This is why I describe selling at the bottom as the cardinal sin of investing,” he says.

As for his five good calls, Marks says the first was in January 2000, when he warned of a tech bubble that was about to burst because, simply, “stock prices had become unsustainably high.” The bursting came later that year.

In July 2007, he warned clients that “skepticism, fear and risk aversion” were in short supply as many were stuck believing the housing market would only go up. Oaktree made big defensive moves in its investment portfolio ahead of the crash that would arrive eight months later.

Another call came in late 2008, when Oakmark decided to invest aggressively, ignoring the aversion to put money to work as fallout from Lehman’s bankruptcy swept across the markets. “There was too much fear and too little greed, too much pessimism and too little optimism, and too much risk aversion and too little risk tolerance,” he says.

He also warned clients of excessive negativity around stocks in 2012, which worked in favor of those willing to take a contrarian stance. “Once again excessively negative sentiment had resulted in major gains. It’s as simple as that,” he said. The S&P 500 returned 16.5% a year from 2012 to 2021.

His last big call came in March 2020, when Marks cautioned about emotional stock selling fueled by panic over the COVID-19 pandemic. Indeed, equities eventually bounced. “When the knee-jerk reaction of most investors is to stand pat or sell, a contrarian decision to buy might be well called for,” he said.

Marks says a pattern emerges for investors, the main one being that they shouldn’t try to make too many big calls too often.

“You have to pick your spots — as Warren Buffett puts it — wait for a fat pitch,” said the investor. “Most of the time, you have nothing to lose by abstaining from trying to adroitly get in and out of the markets: you merely participate in their long-term trends, and those have been very favorable.”

Investors need to remember that in extreme times, “the secret to making money lies in contrarianism and conformity,” said Marks. But to be a successful contrarianist, one needs to “understand (a) what the herd is doing, (b) why it’s doing it, (c) what’s wrong with it, and (d) what should be done instead and why.”

More advice? Realize that much of what happens in markets and economies is not part of a mechanical process but really down to the back and forth of investor emotions. “Take note of the swings and capitalize whenever possible,” he said. With that, resist one’s own emotionality and finally look out for “illogical propositions.” For example, a view that stocks are down so much no one wants to buy.

The markets

Stocks opened higher, with Treasury yields
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.990%

TMUBMUSD02Y,
4.881%
tilting lower and the dollar
DXY,
-0.08%
weak — the pound
GBPUSD,
+0.40%
hit a 15-month high above $1.29 on surging wage growth. Oil prices
CL.1,
+1.32%
aremodestly up.

For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

The buzz

After announcing 10,000 jobs will go earlier this year, Microsoft
MSFT,
-0.87%
is making more cuts.

A leading U.K. fund manager dumped his Amazon
AMZN,
+1.30%
stake because of one key investment by the e-commerce giant.

Read: 20 of the absolute best deals you can get now on Amazon Prime Day that starts Tuesday

Shares of Better Therapeutics
BTTX,
+28.89%
are up 46% ahead of a conference call Tuesday morning after the company got Food and Drug Administration approval for a smartphone-based diabetes treatment.

Viridian Therapeutics stock
VRDN,
-14.78%
is down 14% after the biotech drugmaker announced changes to its study design for a chronic thyroid eye disease therapy. 

The National Federation of Independent Business June optimism index topped forecasts.

Sweden is set to join NATO after Turkey removed its objections.

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The chart

Top tickers

These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:

Ticker

Security name

TSLA,
+0.01%
Tesla

NIO,
+0.14%
Nio

MULN,
-3.24%
Mullen Automotive

GME,
+2.04%
GameStop

AMC,
+2.00%
AMC Entertainment

NVDA,
+0.96%
Nvidia

AAPL,
-0.32%
Apple

PLTR,
+2.94%
Palantir Technologies

RIVN,
-0.18%
Rivian Automotive

AMZN,
+1.30%
Amazon.com

Random reads

South African city sees snow for the first time in 11 years.

Passenger reportedly enraged over meal choice on Houston flight to Amsterdam forces diversion to Chicago.

Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton.

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