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Window Pains...Investing in the financial markets necessarily involves one's
ability to change perspectives over time. Often the job of assessing what is
important at any particular point becomes increasingly difficult in a period
of heightened short term volatility. Not difficult in terms of staying focused
on the factual reality of the economy, corporate earnings, etc., but difficult
in that the financial media feels compelled to come up with rationales for
daily movements in asset prices. Possibly the single greatest task of any investor
today is filtering out white noise. And there's more of the white stuff than
ever before.
Just a month or so ago, many investors seemed convinced that sell side Street
analysts were nothing but shills, yet post specific 3Q corporate earnings announcements
individual stock prices movements were influenced by results relative to the "expectations" of
these very folks. And sometimes those price movements were significant. So
now analyst expectations are again important so soon after having been deemed
next to worthless? Just a month or so ago, it seemed like conflict with Iraq
was a forgone conclusion, at least as reflected by the price of crude. Maybe
not so anymore. Who knows where we'll be on this issue next week. Near the
July and October equity market lows, folks became pretty convinced that Fed
rate cuts were all but ineffective. After all, there has really only been one
other time in US history when this type of monetary largesse had been met with
as much negative equity market response as we witness today. But the firmer
tone in stockland over the past week is clearly in anticipation of a helpful
Fed Funds rate decrease next week, right?
We need to remain cognizant of the fact that heightened financial market price
volatility accelerates the simple human need to explain daily life as we experience
it. Trying to put order and meaning to something that is often random by nature
over very short periods of time. We need to continually teach ourselves to
look at the financial markets and the economy in simultaneous shorter and longer
term windows of perspective. Neither at the exclusion of the other. Quite simply,
all we are trying to do is avoid window pain, as translated into the dollar
and cents of our investing activities.
Look Here Is That A Teardrop In The Corner Of Your Pane? Now Don't You Try
To Tell Me That It's Rain...Looking at financial history in a series of time
demarcated windows is often helpful to us in putting current circumstances
into context. As you know, many a technically driven investor or trader will
look at hourly, daily, weekly and monthly charts with related indicators to
get a sense of rhythm. Rhythm of the moment and rhythm of the longer term.
Given the October fireworks show put on by many an equity index, we thought
it might be worthwhile to look at historical S&P price performance in time
sequenced slices. Is the bear market in equities over? Does it get worse from
here? Certainly there are no definitive answers to these questions, but rather
perspective on human decision making relative to our financial history in this
country.
Some of the oldest data we can find comes directly from professor Bob Shiller
of "Irrational Exuberance" fame. Bob has tracked the S&P back
to its origins and has derived data back to the early 1870's. Now that's what
we call long term in perspective. Certainly investors of today are much smarter
than their investment forebears given the technological tools of the moment,
correct? In our first little look at life, we've simply charted the year over
year price change in the S&P starting back in 1872. (As a quick note, in
this and all of the related charts that follow we are simplistically looking
only at price. No adjustments for dividends, interest rates or inflation. Just
simple human decision making in terms of price. Also, in all charts we have
used a current S&P value of 835 - somewhere in the middle of the current
rally range.):

Certainly the current year has been quite a special occurrence for the S&P
500 as there have only been five years in S&P history dating back to the
early 1870's that have witnessed price deceleration on par or in excess of
what we have experienced this year. As you can see with a bit more careful
look at the chart, years following maximum pain events such as we have seen
this year have been followed by years where returns were quite positive, with
minimum return experience near 15% and maximum price gain near 45%. Does this
mean that 2003 should be a good year for S&P investors if the index does
indeed close near 800 this year? Certainly no one can forecast what is to come
next year with precision. At best it's a guess. This is simply a history lesson.
In moving ahead to a five year average annual return window certain other
observations become obvious:

In looking at life in five year increments, we have not yet experienced the
longer term rate of return lows seen in the 1973-74 bear, and are nowhere near
the running time period rate of return lows seen during the 1929 aftermath.
Do we have to revisit these prior secular bear market lows as our ultimate
date with destiny for this cycle? It remains to be seen, but what really stands
out to us as possibly very significant in the above chart is the fact that
since 1870, never has the market (as measured by the price action in the S&P)
seen a five year average annual rate of return peak as was witnessed in the
latter part of the 1990's. This suggests to us that the animal spirits on the
Street were in hyperdrive like never before. The emotional love affair with
equities as being characterized by price was unequalled in financial history.
The only other period even close to what we lived through in the late 1990's
was the half decade preceding the 1929 mania top. If the current pendulum of
emotion is to complete a swing even approximating the post 1929 experience,
there are more teardrops to fall ahead.
In looking out the largest picture window over the landscape of our choosing,
the following is a ten year rate of return sequence:

To suggest that the above chart is provocative is probably a serious understatement.
If this is not as clear a picture of the longer term cyclical pattern of human
decision making regarding financial assets as we have seen, then we just don't
know what is. Maybe the most impressive message of the above chart is that
based on a rolling decade of average annual return experience, equity manias
have always ended their almost predictably cyclical journey somewhere in the
same general vicinity of zero. We're not quite there yet for this cycle, now
are we? Unless it's different this time, we would expect nothing less than
a repeat performance of financial history before the present cycle concludes.
How do we get to a zero ten year average annual equity rate of return from
here? Is an imminent price collapse dead ahead? That would certainly be one
way to accomplish the statistically high probability end game, but not the
only path. Our very probable journey to zero could easily be accomplished with
low to mid single digit positive experience for a period ahead as the future
rolling ten year average annual rate of return loses ever more of the extremely
positive influence of the latter 1990's return years as we march forward. Much
like the five year window of perspective, never in US history has the ten year
average annual return on the S&P peaked at a higher level than was seen
in the late 1990's. In fact it is quite interesting to note that every US equity
mania in history exhibited consecutively higher rates of ten year average return
performance peaks going all the way back over the 130 year span.
We'd suggest that the above charts carry quite a few sobering implications
for the baby boom generation in this country. If we indeed repeat the patterns
of the past and the running ten year annual average rate of return for the
S&P ultimately dips to zero, retirement balances that remain levered to
equities are not going to be rebuilt to former levels seen three years ago
by sheer price appreciation alone. Even low to high single digit returns at
best may not do the trick for most boomers wishing to retire before this decade
elapses or early in the following. Are the boomers going to be forced to actually
increase their personal savings rate in order to meet the financial hurdles
of retirement? It seems a darn good bet. The ten year chart is telling us that
it's probably a much better than even money proposition. And that will not
be good news to the consumption dependent US economy. Although, again, focusing
on too short a time perspective in forming economic and investment assumptions
can be a dangerous game, recent patterns of consumer behavior suggest households
may be forming opinions about the future much different than their thoughts
over the past ten, five and even one year.
Ursus Interruptus...In last month's discussion, we mentioned rising levels
of personal stomach acid over the fact that the mood among the investment community
had become so glum. Unlike anything we'd seen in years. The contrarian in us
was screaming, our heads just wouldn't let us immediately reach for our pocketbooks
and throw a few speculative chips on the green felt table. Playing bear market
rallies are a matter of personal conjecture and temperament. As you know, linearity
on Wall Street is a very rare phenomenon. Where the current bear market rally
in equities ends is really anyone's guess at the moment. What we do know is
that although the absolute insanity of price levels seen a few years back has
experienced a good dose of reconciliation, other bubbles that we have spoken
of in past discussions remain to be addressed. The credit reconciliation in
the corporate sector is in full bloom, but for households, balance sheets have
only ballooned ever larger over the past few years. The consumer in the US
has been pushed, prodded, cajoled and poked into further levering to support
consumption. Despite the recent rise in the equity market as a potential discounting
forecast as to what lies ahead for the economy, a look in the shorter term
window of statistical economic life suggests the economy will move in a near
term direction opposite to the recent equity rise, at least in the quarter
ahead. And most importantly, it may now be the consumer that leads the economy
into a certain stagnant mush ahead. No quicksand, at least now now. Just mush.
The very recent Fed Beige book release painted a picture of spreading weakness
in retail sales. Quite noticeable relative to prior Beige book commentary,
In fact, the tone was a somber as any we've seen since near the academic end
of the recession in 2001. Consumer spending was weak in all districts reporting.
Unusual in that there have typically been a few districts experiencing strength
in prior reports. Last Tuesday's Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi chain store sales
report revealed a weekly 1.9% tumble in results, putting the index at a low
not seen since the first weeks of the year and a one week deceleration rate
not seen for almost two years. The vehicle sales report for October revealed
a one month unit sales volume number not seen since 1998:

Quite unusual auto sales activity for October given that incentive and financing
plans were some of the most generous we have seen yet. It's no secret that
auto sales can account for anywhere between 20-25% of retail sales over any
period of time. Maybe it's just a post summer buying spree spike in autos that
has consumers in hangover mode at the moment. Or maybe a full year of incredible
incentives has sated market demand at the margin. Again, although it may be
short lived in deceleration, we witnessed the recent week's refi data walk
right off the edge of a cliff:

Certainly the near 60 basis point rise in the 10 year Treasury yield that
is an approximate de facto reference rate for conventional mortgage activity
did not help near term activity any, but refi cycles such as we have witnessed
recently are simply not sustainable over any meaningful time period. Hence
the term spike. A short term window at best set against the longer term trends
of the broad economy. Above and beyond the virtual structural economic supports
that have been housing and autos over the past year or more, even the Wal-Mart's
of the world are showing signs of potential consumer change as their sales
growth trends become more anemic by the month. Although we place very little
faith in consumer surveys, we place a tremendous amount of faith in the fact
that human patterns of ultimately emotionally driven decision making repeat
over time. The "white noise" media was all aflutter, at least for
a day or two, over the recent consumer confidence report. The fact is that
recent trends were almost totally predictable and it's a very good bet based
on past experience that we are still a good way off from the ultimate consumer
confidence lows.

Not only has every meaningful consumer confidence cycle of the past three
decade perceptual window ended somewhere a bit below the 60 range, but so has
every meaningful equity bear market cycle. As you can see above, this chart
has simply been uncanny in its ability to almost pinpoint significant equity
bear market lows of the past 30+ years. What is also important in the historical
message of the consumer confidence report is that the rate of change in personal
consumption expenditures has also spiked to a low for each cycle along with
the consumer confidence report. Over very short term time windows, the correlation
between consumer confidence and retail sales is tenuous at best, but over longer
term periods, it is relevant and meaningful. If we have not yet seen the lows
in CC, is it also true that we have not yet seen the rate of change lows in
personal consumption? We only have history as a guide.

Although equity markets can go anywhere they choose over short periods of
time, it's important to keep in mind that factual cracks in the spending armor
of consumers is clearly evident. Consumer spending has been propped up over
the last year-plus with anomalies in financing possibilities. With easy credit.
As the broader corporate credit reconciliation process continues to smolder,
the ability of the corporate financial sector to continue creating "cheap" credit
is diminishing at the margin. With every ABS (asset backed securitization)
downgrade by the bond rating agencies. Unfortunately it is quite apparent that
credit has driven the game for household consumers over the recent past as
the year over year rate of change in wages and salaries is quite near a four
decade low:

As a last few comments, we reiterate the importance of monitoring near term
consumer spending dead ahead as recent durable goods, ISM, and other data pertaining
to the corporate sector have been deteriorating. In some spots such as manufacturing,
deteriorating badly. Deteriorating to the point where the Fed is to be called
up from the bullpen for the 12th time in post bull market season play.
I Went 12 Rounds With Jose Cuervo...By the time you read this it may already
be a foregone conclusion that the Fed has lowered the Fed Funds rate. After
the recent durable goods and consumer confidence reports, the Fed Funds futures
aficionados swung into action and immediately discounted an immediate Fed move.
From our standpoint, it sure seems that we have arrived at the point in the
reconciliation of the credit cycle where cost of capital in terms of an additional
dollar of credit generated is becoming more of a moot point than not. It is
the dead weight of balance sheet and associated off balance sheet liabilities
that is moving to front and center stage in terms of economic and financial
importance. Any near term Fed action is largely perceptual in the greater scheme
of things. Humble question: Does lowering the Fed Funds rate change the cost
of capital for either Ford or GM, the former whose debt is already trading
as if it commanded a junk rating and the latter not too far behind? Does lowering
the Fed Funds rate guarantee lower mortgage interest rates to continue the
bubble in real estate backed credit creation?
It is quite telling to watch credit spreads. When yields along the US Treasury
curve were spiking lower in late September and early October, the consensus
believed that Treasuries were the "safety trade". It was a natural
to witness spreads between Treasury and corporate yields widen as Treasury
prices were bid higher in almost a mad frenzy of safety flight. If this was
so, then why did the spread between Treasuries and corporate bonds actually
widen even further when Treasury yields recently went back up?

As you can see in the chart above, the current yield spread between ten year
Treasuries and corporate debt as represented by Moody's Baa rated yields is
at near record levels. 11 Fed Funds rate cuts has only witnessed this spread
widen, not contract. The last time this yield spread was as wide as we witness
today, the Fed had probably 1400 basis points of Fed Fubds wiggle room with
which to attempt to lower the cost of capital to corporate America. Today,
at least as of this writing, the Fed only has 175 basis points left. As you
can see in the following chart, corporate cost of capital is relatively unchanged
over the past four years while short term Treasury yields have dropped like
a rock. Just what does another Fed rate cut buy the corporate sector? Not a
hell of a lot, that's what.

One of the characterizations of the current financial marketplace that is
truly different this go around is that the capital markets have played a much
more important role in late prior cycle system-wide credit expansion than possibly
ever before. Greenspan has gone out of his way to praise the banks for essentially
offloading a substantial degree of credit risk onto the capital markets in
the form of securitizations, etc. during this cycle. Offloaded right onto the
portfolios of many a pension fund and assorted other institutional investors.
The problem of the moment being that capital markets are meting out financial
justice with a very large and swift emotional sword. For all intents and purposes,
they have simply turned their backs on many a company. With a little encouragement
from the Moody's and S&P's of the world, of course. A byproduct of simple
human fear. Alternatively, as we have shown you in charts during past discussions,
bank lending for anything except real estate rests at a multi-decade year over
year rate of change low. In aggregate, banks are acting in a very risk averse
manner. So the Fed lowers rates. Does that really change the nature of access
to capital for the corporate sector? Or for that matter the household sector
already dependent for credit on non-bank financial intermediaries? Not when
it's in good part been the capital markets that have supplied that credit in
the first place. A capital market that is acting scared to death (and rightly
so).
Rotten Until The Core?...Although economic fundamentals and financial market
price movements are rarely seen in lock step similarity (largely because the
markets are anticipatory animals by nature), it's important to keep multiple
time perspectives in mind when looking at both the current equity market rally
and current fundamental backdrop against which that movement is occurring.
Important in that valuations ultimately do matter, regardless of short term
supply and demand fluctuations. Something to keep in mind as we move ahead
is the movement to simplify and make meaningful corporate earnings reporting.
In that effort, S&P recently released their "core earnings" calculation
for the S&P 500. Although we spent a good part of an entire discussion
on this subject in the subscriber portion of the site, we'll keep it simple.
We believe the markets will ultimately (a year or two out) demand moving toward
an S&P or similar S&P approach in looking at corporate results. Adjusting
for the reality of option expenses and pension obligations have been and will
continue to be large issues. The calculation for S&P 500 earnings, as per
the recent report, for the 12 month period ended 6/02 was as follows:
| S&P 500 Core Earnings
Reconciliation |
| As Reported |
$26.74 |
| Adjustments |
| Employee Stock Options |
(5.21) |
| Net Pension Adjustments |
(6.54) |
| Goodwill Impairment |
1.46 |
| Gains/(Losses) On Sale Of Assets |
2.15 |
| Other Post-Retirement Benefits |
(0.42) |
| Settlements and Litigation |
0.43 |
| Reversal Of Prior Period Charges |
(0.14) |
| TOTAL CORE EPS |
$18.48 |
We're not about to scream that the S&P is wildly overvalued based on these
numbers and that the world is about to come to an end. We'll skip the melodrama
for the moment. Ultimate reconciliation between realistic accounting presentation
and macro equity price levels lies in front of us, not behind. In the midst
of an equity market currently in "rally" mode, and quite forgiving
of a fair chunk of sobering macro economic and company specific fact of the
moment, we need to keep in mind that every significant equity bear market of
current magnitude bottomed with valuations based on earnings well south of
what we now experience on an "as-reported" basis, let alone potentially
getting close enough to address S&P's work in the calculation of "core
earnings". For ourselves, it makes the "beating the expectations" game
of the last few weeks just seem surreal. Isn't this how we got into trouble
in the first place?
Fun With Funds...By now it's common knowledge that investors yanked another
($16+) billion out of equity funds in September according to the ICI data.
Although the equity mutual fund cash to assets ratio rose to 4.9% as of September
month end, it was not because fund managers raised cash. In fact actual cash
levels fell $10 billion in September above and beyond redemptions ($10 billion
was put to work). The cash to asset ratio rose to 4.9% because the value of
the equities held dropped hard. We estimate that through October, the public
took another +/- $13 billion out of funds. Let's put it this way, we're not
dead sure what happens to autos and housing in the weeks and months ahead,
but consumers have certainly stopped "consuming" equity funds over
the past four months. Do you think another rate cut will help them change their
minds?
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