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This week we look at the Land of the Rising Sun. Japan is going through major
upheavals, and they will have consequences all over the world. And what are
those wild and crazy Swiss central bankers up to? It's time for another round
of competitive devaluation. And of course I have to look at the recent Barron's cover
story, about how stocks are cheap. There's a lot to cover.
But first, and quickly, I just wanted to take a moment and remind you to sign
up for the Richard Russell Tribute Dinner, all set for Saturday, April 4 at
the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego - if you haven't already. This is sure
to be an extraordinary evening honoring a great friend and associate of mine,
and yours as well. I do hope that you can join us for a night of memories,
laughs, and good fun with fellow admirers and long-time readers of Richard's Dow
Theory Letter. The room is filling up and there will be a very large crowd.
A significant number of my fellow writers and publishers have committed to
attend. It is going to be an investment-writer, Richard-reader, star-studded
event. You are going to be able to rub shoulders with some very famous analysts
and writers. If you are a fellow writer, you should make plans to attend or
send me a note that I can put in a tribute book we are preparing for Richard.
And feel free to mention this event in your letter as well. We want to make
this night a special event for Richard and his family of readers and friends.
So, if you haven't, go ahead and log on to https://www.johnmauldin.com/russell-tribute.html and
sign up today. The room will be full, so don't procrastinate. I wouldn't want
any of you to miss out on this tribute. I look forward to sharing the evening
with all of you.
Where Have My Earnings Gone?
Barron's probably jinxed the stock market by stating why they think
the Dow won't fall to 5000, although we do have what I hope is the start of
a nice bear market rally. Part of their reasoning is that stocks are cheap.
They assign a price to earnings (P/E) ratio of a lowly 13, based upon 2009
estimated earnings of $51 in operating profits, which they suggest is historically
low. And I agree that 13 is toward the low end and would represent a good long-term
buying opportunity - if indeed it was 13.
Actually, if you want to get really bullish, go to S&P's web site and
look at their estimated earnings for 2009. They calculate a P/E of 10.89 on
2009 estimated operating earnings.
As I have written over the years, the long-term P/E studies all use "as-reported" earnings,
or earnings that are reported on tax returns. Operating earnings are of the
EBBS variety, or Earnings Before Bad Stuff (or whatever you want to designate
as the BS component). Companies like to tell us to ignore all those "one-time" writedowns,
which seem to happen a lot more than once these days.
Going back a few decades, operating and as-reported earnings were very closely
aligned. That relationship began to change in the mid-'90s, as management wanted
to make a more bullish case, which certainly helped with their stock options.
And the difference between operating and as-reported earnings is now wider
than ever.
The difference between estimates for 2009 operating and as-reported earnings
is almost exactly 100%. Which means that analysts are projecting there is going
to be a lot of Bad Stuff in 2009 to be written down. The table below is a cut
and paste from the S&P web site, where they calculate the earnings for
the S&P 500. Notice the difference between the P/E ratios for operating
and as-reported earnings. The latter P/E is based on the previous 12 months
and used Thursday's price, so if you calculate it today it would be slightly
higher.

Did you notice the as-reported estimated earnings P/E for the quarter ending
September 30, 2009? In the 20 years of data on the web site, the highest it
ever got to was 46, in the last recession. That P/E of 181 is because of the
negative earnings for the 4th quarter of 2008. Of course, this assumes that
earnings estimates don't keep being revised downward, which is not a safe assumption.
They have been revised downward every quarter for almost two years. Seemingly,
past projections are not indicative of future results.
Now, to be fair, using the extremely bad earnings of the recent past as a
one-time metric is not altogether indicative either. Robert Shiller of Yale
uses ten-year average earnings to smooth out the business cycle, and this would
give you a P/E of about 13.
My good friend Ed Easterling uses a different methodology to project earnings,
involving the historical relationship between GDP and P/E ratios. This is based
upon the historical fact that earnings more or less rise at the level of GDP
plus inflation. This is a mean-reverting chart, as earnings cannot grow faster
than GDP for too long, and also acknowledges that rough patches like the one
we are in now will not last, and earnings will rebound. Using his methodology
we end up with a P/E just south of 13.
So, I know a lot of you have stayed in the market the whole time it has been
falling and are now wondering what to do. If you have a ten-year time horizon
you probably can buy here and do OK. But I wouldn't. I think this market is
going to have more problems as we confront the real possibility that we will
get some really poor earnings for the first and second quarters. The economy
is simply weak, and that weakness is hitting more and more companies. From
exporting companies to the big international firms, a global slowdown is hitting
almost everyone. Even hospitals are being challenged. We could see a real bear
market rally lure investors back in, just to crush their hopes this summer.
Markets go from high valuations to low valuations and back again over long
periods of time. I believe that we have a long time to go in the current secular
bear cycle. As I have written for years, this one began in 2000 and could last
until the middle of the next decade. While we will see a "bottom" in stock
prices at some point, maybe even this year, we have a long way to go to get
to a really low P/E ratio.
Big secular bull markets happen when P/E ratios drop below 10 (and even lower).
That acts just like winding a spring. When it is let loose, it explodes for
a very long time. There is another bull market in front of us. I would rather
be patient and rely on an absolute-return style of investing for now. If I
miss the first part of this run, so be it. I see more risk than reward in this
latest run-up.
The Land of the Setting Sun
Japan has been in a malaise for 20 years. And just when it looked like the
country might turn around, the bottom has seemingly fallen out. Japan's economy
shrank a slightly revised 3.2% in the last quarter of last year, confirming
the sharpest contraction since the oil crisis in 1974, and economists warn
of further contraction in the next two quarters.
The Japanese economy, mired in its worst recession since World War II, is
forecast to shrink a further 2.5% in the first quarter of this year and another
0.4% in the second quarter, a Reuters poll shows.
But if you look at the underlying data, it's even worse. Let's turn to a recent
letter from my good friend and favorite data maven, Greg Weldon. (www.weldononline.com)
Japanese exports have fallen 54% in the last 6 months, an average of $40 billion
a month, or down over a quarter of a trillion dollars. Greg notes that past
6-month changes in exports in Japan were hardly ever up or down more than a
trillion yen. This is four times that level, about 4 trillion yen. To get a
visual view, look at the graph below. That is called falling off a cliff.

The decline in exports is about 45% year over year. Japan is one of the countries
that has run a very large trade surplus, allowing them to buy lots of dollars
and lend a great deal of money. Their banks have been an engine for growth
worldwide, but especially in Asia. And the graph below shows that trade surplus
turning into a large trade deficit of 952 billion yen, or somewhere over 9
billion dollars.

To give that some perspective, the US trade deficit came in today and was "only" $36
billion, the lowest level in six years, mainly due to lower oil prices, as
our exports have been shrinking as well (more on that below). The US economy
is roughly three times the size of Japan's (and Japan is the world's second
largest economy); so $9 billion is no small sum of money, relatively speaking.
(Quick note - while looking for that number on the web, I came across this
tidbit in the China Daily. They project that the GDP of China will surpass
Japan's next year.)
Inventory-to-shipping ratios in Japan are rising by over 50%, as industrial
production is down more than 10% and likely to fall much further. Japanese
auto exports are down 63% in just four months. Auto exports have literally
fallen off a cliff, as inventories have doubled.
No surprise, Japan is promising even more government support programs, and
aid to industries of all sorts. This from a government that has over 140% of
debt to GDP, about twice that of the US. And their rapidly rising credit default
swap rate is not helping. Who would have thought of Japan as a credit risk?
Three years ago, almost no one. Now, rates are 30 times higher.
Japan's economy is driven by exports. And those exports were crushed as the
yen rose in buying power and Japan's exports became less competitive in the
last quarter, with calls for intervention to bring the yen back to a level
where their industries can be more competitive. Look at the chart below of
the Japanese yen versus the US dollar. (The moving average is 90 days.)

Note that less than two years ago the yen was over 124 to the dollar, and
fell last quarter to below 87, and has risen back to 98 today. Think about
the Japanese auto manufacturer. Two years ago he could sell his car in the
US (or wherever) for $30,000 and get 3,750,000 yen. Today, that $30k only gets
him a little under 3,000,000 yen. Think his costs dropped 20%? Think he can
raise prices 25%?
If you sell machinery, you are competing with companies, countries, and currencies
all over the world. If your currency rises, you are less competitive, or your
profits have to fall.
Japan has problems, and not just in manufacturing. The population of the country
is now literally shrinking, as they have the highest proportion of elderly
people and the lowest proportion of children. By 2050, 70% of the labor force
will have disappeared. While Toyota is the world's largest car company, auto
sales in Japan peaked 18 years ago. Supermarket sales have fallen every year
for the last 11 years. This is a country in a long-term decline, with massive
debt. While there is still a lot of economic power there, it is not the country
of the future. Unless they figure out how to grow their population, it will
be a long slow slide.
The Swiss Start Their Engines
About five years ago Greg Weldon (mentioned above), a big NASCAR fan, introduced
the idea of a competitive devaluation raceway among Asian countries trying
to make sure they could compete against each other to produce "stuff" for the
US consumer, with each "car" drafting the other as they went around the turns,
trying to get a competitive advantage by manipulating their currencies.
Today, I heard a new engine roar, one that I have never heard before. It is
a deep-throated and powerful new entry into the devaluation race, and one that
will have large ramifications for world trade. Gentle reader, this is huge,
and we visited Japan first to give you some idea of the problems all over the
world, for indeed we could have picked any number of countries and told as
sad a tale.
But who would have picked Switzerland? Yet we read this morning, "The Swiss
franc posted its biggest weekly decline against the euro since 1999 after the
country's central bank sold the currency to halt a 7.6 percent appreciation
in the past six months.
"The franc was also near the lowest level versus the dollar in three months
after the Swiss National Bank's (SNB) first solo intervention in foreign-exchange
markets since 1992. The SNB also said yesterday it will buy corporate bonds
as it cut the benchmark three-month Libor target rate to 0.25% from 0.5% to
revive the economy."
This is tectonic. It is a game changer. First, they did it before the upcoming
G-20 meeting. They clearly felt they could not wait. And they moved the currency
big-time. Look at the chart below of the Swiss franc against the euro. The
far right bar jumped 7 big "handles" in a few hours. (A handle is trader talk
for a unit of movement.) Currency markets have been violent of late, but this
is huge. Currencies are supposed to move at a glacial pace, not by 4-5% in
a day!

The Swiss economy will slump by as much as 3% this year, the most since at
least 1975, the central bank said yesterday. Price pressures evaporated in
recent months as oil prices sank, the franc strengthened, and domestic demand
dropped. Prices will probably decline this year and inflation will be "very
close to zero" in 2010 and 2011, the SNB said. The franc's appreciation made
Swiss products less competitive in Europe and the US, where deepening recessions
were already curbing demand. (Bloomberg)
The story goes on to talk about numerous Swiss businesses that simply were
not competitive with the rise in the value of the franc against the euro. With
their economy slumping, with deflation knocking at their door, they clearly
felt the need to act. Note they plan to buy corporate bonds to inject money
into their economy. The Swiss, being frugal, don't have that many bonds, so
the central bank may have some trouble finding enough to stimulate their economy
- thus they are clearly prepared to use the currency tool in the cabinet to
help stimulate their economy.
The last time a G-10 nation intervened in its currency was in 2003 when Japan
tried, and oddly failed, as their currency had risen about 6% a year later.
That caused me to write back then that their central bank established a new
level of central bank ineffectiveness, because they could not figure out how
to destroy their own currency, even when they wanted to.
The point is that such interventions by major developed countries are rare.
Whatever their reasons, the Swiss have opened Pandora's box. Do Senators Schumer
and Graham now start talking about that major currency manipulator, Switzerland,
and start to introduce bills to punish them? Will Secretary Geithner come before
a Congressional committee and call the Swiss currency manipulators? If not,
then how do we deal with China?
Because China can now say, with some justification, that if the Swiss can
manipulate their currency to make themselves more competitive, then why is
it wrong for us? And how long do you think it will be until Japan tries once
again to push the yen lower, with its export industries in tatters? And Korea?
Taiwan?
You can almost hear the announcement over the loudspeakers: "Gentlemen, start
your engines!"
My One True Nightmare
Let's be clear. As bad as things are, and they will probably get worse, I
am a believer in free markets and the ability of people to figure out their
own paths. And it is 300,000,000 people in the US and billions worldwide, each
acting in their own interest, that will bring us back to a growing global economy.
But there is one thing that worries me above all else. For over six years
I have been writing that the one thing that could truly derail the world economy
is protectionism. Nothing would be more deleterious in today's global economy.
And that brings us to this stark note I read today on Bloomberg. It sent chills
down my spine: "American exports have slumped at a 44% annual pace in the most
recent six months of data, with imports shrinking 51%, probably the most since
the Great Depression, according to Morgan Stanley analysts. The figures may
add to pressure on the Obama administration to rework international agreements
and include protections for US workers and the environment."
The US steel industry is planning to bring anti-dumping charges against foreign
steel. India just raised steel tariffs. It seems like every day I read that
someone somewhere is calling for their particular industry to be protected,
bailed out, or subsidized. And it is not just the US. It is happening all over
the world.
Right now, it is just small amounts and nothing that will rock the system.
But these things can get a life of their own. If the Swiss can move to take
their currency lower, then there will be a score of countries that will ask
why they shouldn't be allowed to do the same. And the one currency they all
want to be lower against? The dollar. Even though our economy is in shambles
and consumer spending is falling, it is still a huge spending machine. And
every export-growth-led country wants a piece of it.
We are getting ready to run a huge, $3-trillion deficit, and the Fed is going
to print a lot of money and inject it into the economy. There is real reason
to worry about the strength of the dollar. And yet, the dollar is the weakest
currency except for all the others. As much as we in the US worry about the
fall of the dollar, it could rise over the coming year.
That is going to put a lot of pressure from a lot of sources on President
Obama, who ran as a populist. Here is hoping that his advisors steer him away
from starting a round of trade protectionism that could beggar the world, just
as Smoot-Hawley did 75 years ago. This bears watching closely.
New York, Vegas, and Happy Birthday, Tiffani
I will be in New York next week for a few days, and hope to have dinner with
Art Cashin. I have a lot of meetings scheduled. Details are firming up. Then
it's Doug Casey's "Crisis & Opportunity Summit," March 20-22 in Las Vegas,
where I get to be the resident bull! Click
to learn more about the Summit.
I will then go to La Jolla for my own Strategic Investment Conference, April
2-4. It is sold out; but as I mentioned at the top of the letter, you can still
get tickets to the Richard Russell Tribute Dinner.
And today, Tiffani, my oldest daughter and business partner, is 32. She is
holed up in the wilds of Kentucky working on our book. It is hard for me to
express how great it is to be working with her. As all my partners know, she
really does run the business, letting me do what I do and giving me the time
to research and write to you.
And just to brag a little, here is a picture of my four girls. Dad is very
lucky. And maybe this is just a little reason I remain so optimistic in spite
of everything.

Time to hit the send button. Have a great week, and remember that we will
all get through this together. That is what friends are for.
Your ready for some down time analyst,
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