Regime Change | Albert Saporta, GAM Holding - podcast episode cover

Regime Change | Albert Saporta, GAM Holding

Feb 24, 20261 hr 23 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

1. Strategic Actions and Decisions

* Rotate portfolio weights away from the U.S. and into non-U.S. developed markets: The structural overweight to the U.S. (75% of global market cap vs. 25% of global GDP) is an extreme anomaly that is likely to revert, making relative value trades (long rest-of-world, short U.S.) a high-conviction opportunity [23:15, 24:30].

* Initiate or increase exposure to hard assets and commodity producers: Shift capital into copper, agricultural commodities, and precious metals (specifically silver and gold miners), as these are entering a super-cycle driven by electrification, supply deficits, and fiscal debasement [46:15, 48:00].

* Reduce duration risk in bond portfolios and prepare for a spike in long-term yields: The “vigilantes” are targeting the long end of the curve due to out-of-control deficits; consider the Japanese bond market as a potential catalyst for a global repricing that could push the U.S. 10-year toward 5-6% [09:20, 19:45].

* Establish a tactical long position in Japan: Japanese equities benefit from a unique combination of improving governance, a weak yen, a steepening yield curve (helping banks), and deeply undervalued assets that could trigger significant capital repatriation from U.S. Treasuries [29:15, 33:40].

* Short or underweight the “MAG7” and overcrowded U.S. tech trades: While U.S. profit margins are high, they are cyclical and mean-reverting. The current environment of rising rates and new competition (e.g., in AI chips) creates a fragile setup for stocks trading at extreme valuations [26:00, 55:10].

2. Executive Summary

Albert and I dug into why the old 40-year playbook is dead. We’re in a new regime defined by inflation, deglobalization, and reckless deficits—yet the US market is priced for perfection. Albert sees real opportunity elsewhere: Japan is finally rewarding shareholders, copper is breaking out, and gold miners are absurdly cheap. The crowded MAG7 trade looks vulnerable. The big risk? A catalyst from somewhere unexpected—like Japanese yields spiking—that triggers a repricing in US bonds and exposes just how overvalued things have become. Time to look beyond the usual names.

3. Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons

1. Valuations Matter in a Regime Change: The U.S. market is as expensive as it has ever been, with indicators like Market Cap/GVA at historic extremes.

* Practical Lesson: Audit your portfolio’s exposure to the S&P 500 and the “MAG7.” If it exceeds 50%, implement a plan to trim these positions into strength, reallocating to cheaper geographies or asset classes.

2. The “U.S. Exceptionalism” Trade is Overcrowded: The U.S. share of global market cap (75%) is wildly out of step with its share of global GDP (25%). This divergence is unsustainable.

* Practical Lesson: Increase your portfolio’s allocation to the MSCI World ex-U.S. or specific country ETFs (like Japan) to bet on a mean reversion in relative performance.

3. Inflation is Structural, Not Transitory: The factors driving the last 40 years (globalization, peace dividends) have reversed. Deficits, defense spending, and re-shoring are inherently inflationary, putting upward pressure on long-term yields.

* Practical Lesson: Challenge any investment thesis that relies on a return to zero-percent interest rates. Instead, model your portfolio’s sensitivity to a 5-6% 10-year Treasury yield.

4. Commodities are a Secular Buy, Not a Cyclical Trade: Copper has broken out of a 20-year trading range, and gold is signaling distrust in fiat currencies. Mining stocks remain historically cheap despite rising metal prices.

* Practical Lesson: Initiate a small, dedicated allocation (5-10%) to a basket of commodity producers, focusing on copper and precious metals, as a hedge against both inflation and geopolitical uncertainty.

5. The Software Sector is in Liquidation, Not Correction: Software stocks are collapsing not because of AI disruption, but because they were outrageously overvalued. Comparing their current prices to recent highs creates a false sense of value.

* Practical Lesson: Avoid the temptation to “buy the dip” in software or meme stocks. Use a 20-year chart, not a 5-year chart, to gauge valuation, and recognize that asset liquidations move in cycles—software is just the first phase.



Get full access to The Noble Update at georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android