What You Need to Know
- Her flagship Ark Innovation ETF (ARKK) is down more than 65% from a year ago.
- Innovation wins out in tough times, she argues.
- Wood calls inflation a lagging indicator and says forward-looking data tells a different story.
Ark Invest founder, CEO and Chief Investment Officer Cathie Wood reiterated her view that innovation gains traction in turbulent times, even as innovation strategies, including her firm’s Ark Innovation ETF (ARKK), have been hit hard during the recent market downturn.
“With crisis comes opportunity,” Wood said on a webcast Tuesday, also predicting that disruptive innovation will place value strategies “in harm’s way.” More broadly, Wood touched on various “alarm bells” signaling a deflation risk in the economy.
ARKK, which peaked in February 2021 and holds large stakes in Tesla, Zoom and Roku, among other innovation stocks, is down more than 57% year to date and roughly 65% from a year ago. Its recent $38.85 price is far off the 52-week high $132.50.
“I know it’s been a very difficult time for everyone in the markets, every asset class, practically, perhaps except for energy,” said Wood, whose firm loaded up on Coinbase shares after the cryptocurrency exchange’s stock tumbled sharply last month. “And as we know, the problem is inflation and the Fed’s response to inflation.”
The long-admired stock picker said she’s been asked what Ark Invest might have done differently had the firm known in advance about all the factors that have shaken markets this year.
“Had we seen the supply chain issues extending as long as they did with China locking down as late as it has, had we seen Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine, had we known this with full certainty a year ago, what would we have done differently?” she asked during her firm’s monthly market update.
“If we had known exactly what was going to happen, we probably would have evolved our strategies so that instead of concentrating toward our highest conviction names, we would have put more cash-like instruments in the innovation space. And when we say cash-like that would be the Apples, the Googles and so forth, and probably would have avoided some of the carnage. But it still would have been a very difficult period,” she said.
“All of the stocks associated with innovation have ultimately capitulated, so concentrating toward our highest conviction names is what we have done over the last year and a half, and obviously historically that has tended to be a very good strategy and we do think that it will play out again,” said Wood.
Supply chain problems and Russia’s Ukraine invasion have created many problems for equities, bonds and crypto, “and from my experience innovation tends to gain traction during very difficult times. Innovation solves problems,” she added.
Deflation Bigger Risk Than Inflation
More broadly, Wood said she sees deflation as a greater risk than inflation now and cited economic “alarm bells” in declining consumer sentiment, high inventories and fixed income market developments. “We do believe the greater risk now and now more than ever is deflation.”
Inflation measures from the Consumer Price Index and the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index are lagging indicators, while forward-looking indicators suggest a different story, according to Wood. The dollar is up 15% this year — “a huge increase and a powerful anti-inflationary force” – she said.
The Fed doesn’t seem to have picked up yet on various market signals, notably consumer sentiment, the flat yield curve and rising credit default swaps, according to Wood.
“There are a lot of signals out there to the Fed basically saying, ‘Watch out, you’re in dangerous territory here,’” she said.
Consumer sentiment as measured by the University of Michigan dropped to an all-time low recently, which, combined with inflation, suggests the velocity of money will start to slow, according to Wood.