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An archive of previous Tulips and Bears Long Term opinion

CLICK ON BUTTON TO VIEW PAST COMMENTARY

CLICK ON DATE TO VIEW PAST OPINION

5/20/98

6/8/98 7/12/98 8/5/98 8/28/98

9/7/98

9/24/98

10/9/98

10/25/98

11/23/98


11/23/98--                  

Once again, a remarkable transformation has occurred in our little town on the Hudson over the past   six weeks.  Our local weatherman has changed the forecast, and denizens of our village have been whipped into a frenzy trying to take advantage of the more favorable outlook.  The dark storm clouds of August and September are just a lingering memory.   The sun once again shines eternally bright on the street.  All around us, every house has hired an interior designer to redo the motif in colors that complement the new mood.  Even the youngsters have been caught up in the new mood.  High school students who once devoted their web space to pictures of Ferrari sports cars and musical groups have now turned their thought to developing stock market web sites.  The smallest children are busy writing to Santa Claus, who is equally busy replying, "Yes Virginia, there is a Bull Market".

It seems that the gloom and despair that resulted from the squalls of late summer was only a localized event.  On Main Street the average citizen never lost faith in the PermaBull.  During the U.S. market's  mid-July to early October tumble, the individual investor kept his eye focused on "being in it for the long term" and "buying on the dips".   This belief in the eternal nature of bull markets helped to stabilize the averages during their darkest hours.  It was the pros who were  feverishly selling stocks and shedding their bullish skins during the market's dive.  The very same pros and experts  whose "long term market outlook" changes with the direction of each day's market close ( thus providing an endless supply of sound bytes to the sensationalistic financial television networks).  Sentiment among investment advisors and newsletter writers has now come full circle.  Bullish sentiment among investment advisors has risen to its highest level in almost seven years. There is renewed talk of a "new paradigm", of a recession proof economy, of an unstoppable bull market.   The short lived realization that the U.S. operates as part of a still ailing global economy (and not in isolation from it) has been all but forgotten by many market participants.  Market players now feel the need to take part in the rally at any price because they are afraid of missing out on the start of a new bull market.   Thoughts about mundane little details like valuation levels and earnings have been cast aside in the rush to jump on the bull market express.  Internet stocks have been bid up 160% since October's lows as analysts issue buy ratings based on such astute analytical reasoning as "It's one of the few profitable internet companies therefore it's definitely a buy."  Unfortunately for the followers of the American PermaBull,  and unless several hundred year of financial market history are about to be rewritten, the current levels of bullish sentiment are not congruous  with sentiment patterns normally seen at the onset of bull markets.  Rather, the current degree of bullishness is historically consistent with those levels that in the past have been foreboders of the end of an upward run in equities.  

The extreme levels of bullish sentiment now held by many market participants has resulted in large part from a myopic view of recent Federal Reserve rate cuts.  The current consensus is that the rate cuts will act as a stimulant to an economy that is showing signs of underlying weakness. What has been overlooked is that the three rate cuts have actually resulted in an almost 1/2 percentage point gain in 30 year treasury rates.  Mortgage rates have increased since the onset of Fed rate cutting.  The jump in long bond yields could actually reduce economic activity in the coming months.  The main beneficiaries of the recent cuts in the fed funds rate and the discount rate will be the financial institutions whose inept wholesale dispensing of loans to fundamentally unstable emerging markets and large exposure to derivatives precipitated the crisis in the first place.  The Fed's emergency midday mid October rate cut should have come as no surprise to market participants since it occurred just before many derivatives were due to expire.  Many investors are still unaware of the severity of the crisis that occurred in mid October. According to the latest available government figures, the U.S. banking system had over $26 trillion in derivatives exposure.  The Fed's rate cut was thus a calculated effort to save financial institutions from facing the consequences of their poorly planned risk management policies. 

Derivative exposure aside and if one looks beyond the isolationist barriers through which many Americans choose to view the world, the recent success rates of  a policy of  rate cutting and rapidly increasing the money supply has been anything but a success.  The Japanese have been employing such a policy for much of the 1990's to no avail.  The Japanese economy is in the depths of a severe recession (some would say depression) and its stock market has made no headway this decade.  The Japanese economy is still burdened by overcapacity and the resulting lack of profit growth. 

Like the Japanese market and many of the world's economies, the U.S. economy is burdened by overcapacity.  The results have been a lack of corporate pricing power, narrowing profit margins, and slowing earnings growth.  The Fed's 3/4% cut in the Fed Funds rate will do little to ease the global overcapacity problem and the resultant deflationary forces that have made themselves felt this year.  The effects of the rate cuts will not be felt in fourth quarter profits which will show a continuation of this year's deterioration in earnings growth.  The market has been soaring on the coat tail's of the Fed's moves, and we suspect it will be faced with a severe reality check when earnings warning season rolls around next month.  The market's underlying earnings fundamentals have deteriorated since July's highs and the current extreme overvaluation of many stocks leaves little room for disappointments.

With the major averages approaching their old highs and likely to  set new highs on the back of the current overwhelming bullish sentiment led upward spike, the risk is now much higher than it was in July.   Sentiment has shifted dangerously to a bullish extreme, and the underlying fundamentals are considerably weaker than they were at the last peak.  While there is a very real chance the market's current momentum will carry it past its old highs, the stakes are much higher this time around.  This is a rally to be played by traders only, it is not a long term buying opportunity for the buy and hold investor.  There is a very real chance that sentiment, and the U.S. market, will take a sudden shift to the downside when fourth quarter earnings figures force investors to face the facts of a dangerously overextended market with deteriorating earnings. 

Investors wishing to participate in the start of a new bull market will not do so by buying a market that is trading at historically high valuation levels.  There is better value to be found elsewhere in the world.  The Asian markets, while short term overbought, are still trading at extremely  low valuation levels.  A long term buy and hold investor will do better on a 3 to 5  year basis buying quality companies in the undervalued markets of South Korea, Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand than he will by betting on overpriced tulips like EBay or The Globe.com.  Similarly, markets that are heavily resource dependent like Chile, Australia, and Canada offer better profit potential when the global economy starts to recover than the overvalued U.S. market does.

 

10/25/98--                  

The Federal Reserve's October 15th rate cut surprised many experts, and has been called an out of character move on Greenspan's part by virtually all commentators. The move is
actually completely in character. The Fed's primary function is to prevent systemic risk to the banking system. The move was a desperate attempt to prevent the potential collapse of a major financial institution by reinflating financial markets. The move worked. With cries of   "Don't Fight the Fed" investors stampeded back into equities. The subsequent run up in the markets (and inflow of unsuspecting individual investors funds) has given many firms with incredibly inept risk management systems a second chance to get out of ill-conceived positions.

The "Don't Fight the Fed" reasoning is only applicable in circumstances where the rate cuts are motivated by a desire to make adjustments to the future economy. Given the general lag time of 6 months before a rat cut is felt in the broader economy, it seems unlikely the Fed would see the need to make an emergency cut in between meetings. When rate cuts are implemented to artificially prop up the markets in order to prevent an immediate threat to the financial system, it historically has been better to stand aside from the markets. Of course you won't hear many experts telling the public to temporarily park their money in cash, cash just doesn't generate the commissions that buying on the dips does. The Fed's action is too late to help 4th quarter profits, which are where the market's attention will soon be focused.

The market's recent celebratory mood as earnings reports met estimates (which had been lowered significantly in the preceding months) will soon be replaced by thoughts of 4th quarter earnings. Estimates for the 4th quarter are still much too high, and will come down significantly in the coming months. We look for this quarter's earnings to be below those of  the 3rd quarter. The stock market, trading at an expensive 25 times earnings, will have to  make an adjustment to compensate for negative 4th quarter growth. The full effects of the global slump have yet to be felt in the earnings reports of corporate America. The recent rate cuts are too little, too late to cure the problems afflicting the global economy (yes,  we said, "global economy", a phrase which seems to have slipped from many U.S. investors vocabularies over the past 2 weeks) before the end of the quarter. The world economy is still suffering from overcapacity, a slump in demand, and falling prices. The inability to raise product prices enough to compensate for rising labor costs has been the primary cause of deteriorating profit margins in the U.S. The Fed's move will not erase the developing deflationary environment that exists in the major global developed economies.

The scenario of falling interest rates, falling prices, falling profits, and high valuation
levels is not a prescription for a continued bull market in stocks. One needs to look no
further than 1990's Japan to see the effects of this combination on equity prices. If an
easing of rates by the central bank guaranteed rising stock prices, the Japanese market
would be in the midst of a long bull run. The Fed will have to cut rates much further, and
faster to spark a profit recovery and stem the current global malaise. If the Fed cuts too
deeply it risks causing a repatriation of foreign assets. The 1/2% cut in rates by the Fed
has not erased the global problems. It will take a global effort to cure the global economic
slump.

We expect the next leg down in the U.S. market to occur when thoughts turn to 4th quarter earnings. With bullish sentiment/complacency among the average investor on main street and valuation levels still at extreme highs, and continuing global economic problems, we do not see the conditions in place for a new bull market based on fundamentals. Nor have we seen any convincing technical evidence to suggest this is anything but a bear market rally. While many technicians will cite a short term double bottom on their charts as a signal that a new bull run has begun, there is still the matter of the longer term developing right shoulder ( of a head and shoulders pattern) that is also apparent on charts--which is not a bullish sign. The Dow turned back after touching the 50% resistance level at 8615 this week, which is cause for concern. We have also been watching a Gann 2x1 angle on the S&P 500 chart which stopped September's rally. The market failed twice this week to break through this resistance angle (which now stands at 1083).

In a bear market rally the best place for longer term investors remains cash.

 

10/9/98--                  

As autumn slowly envelops this small town on the Hudson, there is a new feeling in the
air. From house to house the giddiness of summertime is slowly being replaced by a
deepening pervasive gloom. As the realization sets in that there never was a New
Economy, that the new paradigm was merely the welcoming committee for an
encroaching global deflationary cycle, the gloom starts to reach a crescendo. And so
we ask ourselves: does this panic driven wave of negativity signal the bottom? But then
we notice that there is still one large house, near the foot of Broad St., where the spirit
of summer still reigns. A house where visions of positive earnings growth and an
undervalued SP500 still are entertained. And so we ask ourselves again, is a bottom in
place? But this time we know the answer: the bottom is not in place.

In the U.S., a developing credit crunch and sliding consumer confidence will lead to a
period of zero or negative growth for the U.S. economy in the first half of 1999. In
Europe ,the Long Term Credit debacle has all but negated any positive effects from the
Euro . The full effect of the developing European and American recessions will not be
felt until next year. While the consensus is now for -2.7% third quarter profit growth,
estimates for the fourth quarter of this year and first quarter 1999 still call for positive
growth. We expect earnings growth to be -5% to -10% over the next two quarters. The
multinational blue chip big cap stocks are still priced for positive growth and will face a
period of P/E contraction as the global economic crisis hits the developed world.

Sliding earnings, and a recessionary environment are not the only problems the stock
market must contend with in coming months. A fear induced bubble has developed in
the treasury market (and in the closely correlated Utility stocks) with bonds hitting
record low yields as investors have rushed to the perceived safety of treasuries.
Unfortunately, as many investors (who tried to find safe, quality investments by buying
Coca Cola or Lucent at the top) have now learned from the stock market, buying a
bubble offers no safety. The risks presently inherent in the bond market were driven
home this week as yields surged when the dollar bubble finally popped.

It is the breaking of the dollar bubble that presents the greatest risk to stock prices. The
dollar's rally has been one of the primary legs upon which the bull market has rested.
The inflow of foreign funds into well known big caps and the U.S. bond market drove
the prices of these assets to historical highs. A falling dollar will lead to the repatriation of
funds as foreign investors seek safer harbors for their funds. We look for the still pricey
big cap stocks to endure the brunt of this repatriation of funds over the coming months.
A falling dollar could also tie the feds hands and prevent another rate cut. This would
provide a further blow to the stock and bond markets which have already priced in
another cut.

The falling dollar also has negative implications for foreign exporters. We would avoid
the large Japanese and European exporters at this time. The break in key support levels
in the dollar is causing us to lower our forecasts for the U.K. and German stock
markets. In July, with the FTSE at 6000, we called for a 20-25% correction . We are
now lowering our 6 month target for the FTSE to 4000-4200. Our August forecast of a
4000 DAX has now been exceeded on the downside. We are lowering our forecast for
the German market to 3500-3600.

Our forecast for the Dow Industrials remains at 6984-7204 by late October-early
November, with a final bottom in the 6387-6637 range to occur in the mid December to
late February time frame.

When one bubble after another is popping, unless you are an options trader or short
seller, the safest place to put your money is cash. 3% returns become very glamorous
when the alternative is -25% to -30% returns.

9/24/98-- 

We would like to thank Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan for making our September 7th call for a 10% rally in the Dow come true. Greenspan's rate cut hints helped spur the Dow to a 258 point rally on Wednesday. We remain short term bullish on the market's prospects. Today's rally saw the Dow close above its 21 week moving average and the SP500 above both its 200 day moving average and 55 week moving average. Both averages closed at important resistance levels, the Dow at the 38% retracement of its July highs and the SP500 at an important Gann resistance level. We expect the averages to move easily past these resistance points. Our indicators now show the SP500 in overbought territory, but these indicators can stay overbought (as they did from mid June to mid July) for extended periods before a correction sets in.

We continue to see upside potential to 8397-8458 on the Dow. Rate cut hopes, a renewed bout of internet mania, and investors ever ready to buy on the dips will spur the market higher. We expect short relief rallies to occur in October as companies meet expectations of 0% third quarter growth. We continue to see this as a rally only for short term traders. The conditions are not in place for a renewed bull market. The market's September snap back rally has not been confirmed by the brokerage stocks, whose share price movements are a leading indicator of the market's future direction. The reality of a slowing global economy and slowing (or declining) earnings will set in by late October.

We expect the U.S. market to begin the second leg of its down move by late October as thoughts turn to fourth quarter earnings. Current earnings estimates for the next two quarters will need to be drastically lowered to reflect the reality of a continuing global slowdown. We expect negative earnings growth for each of the next two quarters. The effect on corporate earnings of the global economic crisis will not end with third quarter results, it will only intensify. Stock prices will fall as the realization sets in that estimates are too high and that a fed rate cut will not help next quarter's earnings reports.

Rate cuts are not instantaneous miracle cures. They generally take 6 to 9 months to be felt by the broader economy. This is too long of a time frame to satisfy a short sighted market focused on the current quarter's results. Earnings will not be the only negative drag on the averages in the coming quarter. We expect heavy tax loss selling this year to further drag the averages down. We also look for a bursting of the bubble of irrational exuberance in the bond market to have a dramatically negative effect on stock prices (and the portfolios of investors who bought bonds at the top as a refuge from the volatility of stock prices). We look for the Dow to retest its lows in late October and fall to the 6984-7204 level by mid November.

This second leg down will finally break the confidence of the average investor. We look for a bout of panic selling to occur as the market falls beneath the 7000 level. With complacency gone and fear the prevailing market emotion, the final piece will be in place for a bottom to be put in place in the 6387-6637 range between mid December and late February.

9/07/98-- 


After a volatile week which saw a 500 plus point loss on Monday followed by a 288 point gain on anemic breadth on Tuesday, we are ready to declare: RALLY AHEAD! 10% GAINS IN DOW POSSIBLE! Our indicators have turned short term bullish. The market is deeply oversold.  Friday's last hour bounce off the lows has put a short term double bottom in place. This double bottom, combined with the ADX indicator turning down from a deeply extended 52, sets the stage for the rally. The catalyst for the rally will be a bad case of selective hearing following Fed Chairman Greenspan's Friday speech in which he let the cat out of the bag that the Fed has abandoned its bias towards tightening. We expect the new breed of astute analysts who possess a keen nose for value to give the rally a further push by pointing out the inherent value to be found in the likes of AOL, Yahoo, Microsoft, Dell, and the like. Never mind the fact that Dell and Yahoo are still 40% and 50%, respectively, above their early June prices, or that Dell is trading at the high end of its historical P/E range. "This is a buying opportunity" the analysts will tell their still complacent followers who will eagerly snap up the stocks.

We expect the rally to meet initial resistance in the 7886-8180 range. After the initial few
hundred points gain, we expect small investors who are eager to regain their portfolio losses to jump onto what they will believe is the start of a new bull market. This last leg of the rally will push the Dow up to strong resistance around 8397-8458. It is at this point that we should mention the phrases BULL TRAP and DEAD CAT BOUNCE.

This rally should only be played by shorter term traders. Unfortunately, we know that the
average buy and hold investor who has been conditioned to buy on the dips will view this as an opportunity to buy great stocks cheaply. The stocks they will be buying are the still overpriced analyst darlings that still have much further to fall before they reach fair value. These stocks will suffer the greatest declines as the reality of slow (or no) earnings growth, a slowing economy, and a renewed focus on domestic political turmoil once again take center stage.

We do not view the Fed's abandoning of its bias towards tightening as a positive for stocks. The circumstances under which this move occurred are a rapidly deteriorating global economy. The rapid deterioration in emerging market economies, combined with continuing stagnation in Japan, and slowing growth in Europe will make their mark felt on the U.S. economy in the remaining months of this year. Like it or not, the U.S. economy does not operate in a domestic vacuum.

The first signs of a slowing economy are already appearing. Productivity registered its slowest growth in 2 years in the second quarter. August retail sales growth slowed dramatically as consumers, fearful of a slowdown and hurt by a fall in stock prices, curtailed their spending. Perhaps most ominously, the transports, which historically have proven to be a good leading indicator of future economic growth, have registered one new low after another over the past few week.

Stock valuations, and earnings estimates, still do not reflect the coming slowdown in growth. The measure of stock market capitalization as a percentage of GDP is still at record levels, and while analysts have slashed 3rd quarter estimates from 10% to 1.7%, they have yet to cut estimates for the fourth quarter of this year and the first quarter of 1999. Current analyst projections still call for 12 to 15% growth in the next two quarters. We believe that when these estimates come down the market will suffer a re rating comparable to that which followed the cutback in estimates for the 3rd quarter. We expect this downwards cycle of earnings revisions and warnings to bring the DOW down towards the 6984-7204 level by late October- early November.

Earnings estimates that are still too high, and a deteriorating global economic situation are not the only factors that lead us to believe a final bottom is not in place yet. The technical deterioration in the dollar is also a decided negative for the stock market. A rising dollar has been a primary leg upon which this bull market has stood as foreign investors have flooded the U.S. market with cash. Any prolonged slump in the dollar will lead to a repatriation of foreign funds, with severe repercussions for both the U.S. equity and bond markets.

We do not see the current record low bond yields as a positive factor for stocks either. A flight to quality and deflationary fears have been the primary movers of bond prices in recent months. An easing of emerging market worries and the resulting end of the flight to the safety of U.S. bonds would lead to an upward spike in interest rates. If the U.S. were to enter a period of deflation you only need to look as far as 1990's Japan to see what the result would be for stock prices.

The final factor that has been worrying us this past week is the relative complacency and lack of fear exhibited by small investors during the Dow's 1800 point swoon. We still contend that a bottom will not be in place until the average investor's primary market concern is preservation of capital. With the large number of investors who still believe that investing in the stock market guarantees 20% annual returns and that buying on the dips will always work, we do not yet see the necessary fear level to signal an end to the market's decline.

RALLY AHEAD! 10% GAINS IN DOW POSSIBLE. Trade the short term rally and be
prepared to move heavily to the short side around the 8400 level. The current investor
complacency, and deteriorating technical conditions in the dollar and bond market have led us to lower our targets for the Dow to a final bottom of 6387-6637 to occur somewhere between mid December and late February.





8/28/98--
Yesterday’s 357 point loss in the Dow Jones Industrials left the average below key support levels at 8175-8180.  The market banged on this support level three times before falling through. This break through support on the third try is a signal to increase, or initiate short positions.  The SP 500 ended the day resting on a key support level at 1042. The SP 500, NASDAQ, and Dow Transportations are all now trading below their 200 day moving averages, a very bearish signal. The final bottom is still not in place. We expect the market’s decline to continue, although the conditions are now in place for the oversold market to stage a short term rally.

Yesterday’s sharp decline accompanied by heavy volume, and the ability of the SP 500 and NASDAQ to hold above key support levels set the stage for a short term rally. We expect Goldman’s reigning market guru to provide the impetus for this rally with a pep talk to her followers. Unfortunately for the Dow 10,000 crowd, these soothing pep talks have less affect with each additional 100 point loss in the Dow. Any rally will be limited by overhead resistance in the 8500 to 8600 range. We then expect the decline to resume with renewed force as political uncertainties and   the start of earnings warning season give the market a further downward prod.

The conditions are not in place for a final market bottom. While mutual fund managers have begun to show the first signs of panic, the average investor is still too complacent. Until the investors who first entered the market this decade stop believing that 20% annual returns are the norm and recessions have been abolished, we will not see a bottom. Bear markets do not end with complacency. They end when fear is the prevailing mood and the last bull has declared himself a bear.

A complacent investor isn’t the market’s main problem however. Declining earnings are the major concern. Analysts have yet to fully adjust estimates downward to reflect current fundamentals. It isn’t the Russian economy that has us worried, it is the sharp slowdown that we expect in Western Europe later this year that has us concerned. Rising European earnings have helped American multinationals offset declines in their Asian operations. With this prop removed, we believe earnings will fall short of expectations in the 3rd and 4th quarters. Stock valuations of large cap companies still do not reflect the lower earnings growth that we expect.

Despite their recent declines, the Nifty Fifty stocks are still overvalued. Paying over 40 times earnings for a company with slowing growth like Coca Cola is not our idea of a value play. We expect the P/E ratios of the large caps to shrink as growth slows. A market bottom will not be in place until the decline in the large cap household names catches up to the declines already experienced by the rest of the market.

We still look for the Dow to find a final bottom in the 6984-7204 range. However, if the small ‘buy and hold’ investor panics and starts redeeming his mutual funds, then all bets are off as to the market’s final bottom.

Offshore, we expect the declines in Western European markets to far exceed that experienced in the U.S. Slowing economies and lower export growth will lead to a rerating of share valuations. We are looking for the FTSE to decline to 4500 and the DAX to sink to 4000 in the coming months. We would avoid any new long positions in the U.S., U.K., Germany, and France until a bottom is reached. This is not a time to buy on the dips.

On a closing note, just remember that ultimately it does not matter whether we are in a bull market or a bear market. Profits can be made in either bull or bear markets if you position yourself on the right side of the trend.

8/5/98--
We remain bearish on the U.S. and Western European markets.Despite the recent sell off, the markets remain overvalued and the investor on Main Street is still too complacent. We expect further declines and would avoid any unprotected long positions in the following markets: U.S., U.K., Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Portugal, and France.

    The fundamental outlook continues to deteriorate in the U.S. and U.K. markets. The British economy is plagued by high interest rates and the manufacturing sector has entered a recession. The U.S. economy is slowing, earnings growth is anemic, and interest rates have bottomed. Earnings estimates will come down in the months ahead as they are adjusted downward for the slower growth scenario that lies ahead. Share prices continue to be based on the 'new economy' argument that has been pushed upon investors, rather than upon any  fundamental justifications.

    A top is in place. Foreign investors, a mainstay of the bull market, have been spooked by political instability in the Oval Office. This year's overhyped internet mania shows signs of abating and the sector has fallen sharply since its early July bubble high. The big cap favorites of investment clubs in America have finally joined the rest of the market in a downward spiral. Procter & Gamble's earnings warning sounded the death knoll for the overvalued new 'nifty fifty's' status as the last refuges of safety. We expect the overvalued big cap consumer stocks' PE ratios to deflate faster than the rest of the market does. We would  avoid the overvalued large cap name brands. We would also avoid long positions in the banking and brokerage sectors. Both sectors peaked before the Dow and are in sharp retreat. Rising interest rates and declining mutual fund inflows in the coming months will cause the banking and brokerage sectors to undergo savage bear markets.

    The market's technical picture continues to deteriorate. The utilities have entered a downtrend. The  transportation average is in a bear market, having declined 20% from its highs. The ratio of new highs to new lows is at its worst since 1994. The advance/decline line continues to accelerate to the downside. A double top is in place in the Dow Jones Industrials.  Today's 300 point plunge (largely caused by  Prudential's market guru turning bearish)   broke key support levels at 8675-8800 and 8560-8600. We look for the next downside support level to be the 200 day moving average at 1042 on the SP500. A break through this key support level would signal the end of the current bull market. The Dow will find strong support in the 7889-8171 level. Any further worsening on the economic, political, or earnings fronts will cause the Dow to accelerate its fall. Our final downside target for the Dow Jones Industrials is in the 6984-7204 range.

    Please read our July 12th commentary for further commentary on our current position on the market. 

7/12/98-- As predicted in our last column, the Western European and American markets have enjoyed a short term rally over the past month. We consider this rally to be the  last hurrah of  these markets, and not the start of a new long term rally.

    We see little value in Western Europe. Markets have come too far too fast this year. The Spanish market is overvalued by any measure and is showing signs of making a double top.The recent repeated setting of new highs in France and Germany has put these markets at unsustainable valuation levels.   Asia related effects will be felt on the profit margins of exporters in these countries. We expect these markets to experience 10-15% corrections once Asia's full force is felt. Italy is another story. The Italian market experienced a great bull run in anticipation of EMU. Now that EMU is here, the Italian economy has begun to return to its old self. Economic growth has all but disappeared. We expect the Italian markets to give back most of this year's gains over the coming 12 months.  In the U.K., the Footsie has made another foray over the 6000 level. Expect this to be its last upward trip over this century mark for a while. Signs of an economic slowdown abound in the British economy. The earnings of exporters are coming under severe pressure as a slowing domestic economy, an overvalued Pound, and heightened export competition from Asia take their toll on profit margins. The U.K. economy is in danger of slipping into a period of stagflation, and we expect this to be felt in the FTSE.  The FTSE could experience a 20-25% bear market if stagflation rears its head. Despite the overvaluations in Europe, it is in America where we see the greatest danger.

    We regard the latest speculative bout of frenzy for internet stocks in the U.S., and the announcement of Goldman Sachs' I.P.O. as the final sign of a top in the American markets. A constant talking up of the bullish case for Wall Street's outlook by celebrity market gurus has led  mom and pop average investor to have an unrealistic belief that the bull market is eternal. We believe that these poor souls are soon going to be in for an unwelcome experience as the supports of the 16 year old bull market show signs of giving way.

    The recent U.S. bull market has been led higher by a strong bond market, a rising dollar, and growing corporate earnings. We believe that all 3  of these legs of the bull run up are in danger. The dollar has probably seen its highs. It was driven up over the past year by a robust economy and a flight to safety from the turmoil in Asia. We expect a slowing U.S. economy and a lessening of the Asian flu to lead to a fall in the dollar over the next year.  The bond market's rally to historically low yields was led in large part by a panic driven run to safety by foreign investors. As the situation in Asia stabilizes and the U.S. economy slows foreign investors will begin to repatriate the money they have placed in the safe harbor of the treasury bond market. The recent bullishness towards the bond market by investment advisors is a cause for concern. Recent polls of advisor sentiment by Consensus and Market Vane show bullishness at the 75-80% level. Sentiment extremes of this level are almost always signs of a top. We believe that the highs have been seen in the U.S. bond market.

    It is the corporate earnings picture that gives us the greatest concern however. The over inflated, never before seen, valuation levels of the American market leave no room for a slowing earnings picture. The nifty 50 and large cap stocks are trading at historically high ratios of price/sales, price/book, and price/earnings. The Asian crisis will continue to increasingly make its mark felt on the profit margins of companies. The earnings woes of the tech sector are just a harbinger of the profit slowdown yet to be felt by corporate America. We expect low priced Asian imports, and a diminished demand for American products in Asia, to lead to a decline in profit margins  and lower selling prices for both globally exposed and domestically orientated U.S. firms. Cheap Asian imports will lower the ability of domestic companies to raise average selling prices in a saturated U.S. market. We do not feel that the severity of the earnings slowdown has been recognized by analysts who have only accounted for a 3rd quarter slowdown in their estimates. The earnings slowdown will last past the third quarter. When analysts begin to take this into account and lower their estimates the over priced stock market will be hit hard. Corporate insiders have already realized the dismal outlook for earnings growth and have been net sellers of stock. The ratio of selling to buying by corporate directors has risen to its highest level of this decade.

    Technically the market is displaying signs of an impending top. The advance/decline line has continued to show severe negative divergences during the past month's rally. Daily RSI has been registering divergences. Weekly MACD has turned down.  Failed double tops are forming in the Dow Jones Industrials and the S&P Utilities.  The recent decline in the Market Volatility index sets the stage for a period of turbulence ahead.  We expect the technical situation to continue to deteriorate for the bulls as earnings are rerated.

    We would continue to be short the overvalued U.S. market. The parallels between the new economy/new era mentality surrounding the American market and the similar sentiment that existed in Asia early last year just before the Asian meltdown are too great to ignore. We expect the American bubble to be punctured in the coming months by the triple whammy of disappointing earnings growth, a falling dollar, and a falling bond market. History has a way of repeating itself, and this time it's not different.

 

6/8/98--  We continue to remain bearish on the U.S. market despite the relief rally after the release of the May unemployment report. Friday's rally, and a recent bearish sentiment turn among members of the American Association of Individual Investors could presage a very short turn move up in the averages, but we expect the market to turn down strongly after this minor upward blip.We are ready to bestow our Tulip Award upon the U.S. Market. Valuations remain at never-before-seen levels. The market is trading at 140% of GDP--the previous record was 81% during another 'new era', the period preceding the 1929 crash. We don't buy the new economy argument. The only thing new this time is the ability of celebrity market gurus on Wall Street to feed the rally (and their end of year bonuses) by convincing investors that "this time it's different". We believe that reality will soon set in. Behind the creative accounting of recent earnings reports lurks a decline in profit margins.  We expect Asia related effects to seriously impact the earnings of the new nifty 50. The earnings problems in the tech sector will spread to other companies with heavy global exposure as profit margins decline. We expect Asia's full effects to be felt on U.S. companies in the coming months.

    We believe that April's anything-internet-related mania signaled the market's final upward surge. With margins shrinking, labor costs rising, and product prices declining, the market will soon have to wake up and smell the fundamentals--and it won't be a pretty sight for those who are long the market. We see serious parallels between the current euphoric sentiment towards the U.S. markets and the myth of the "unstoppable miracle economies of Asia " that prevailed just 12 months ago. It was widely believed that Asian economies had found the elixir for unlimited prosperity and eternal bull markets.  Events soon proved otherwise. We expect declining profits to be the catalyst that smashes the 'this time it's different/new economy' bullish hysteria of the recent western bull run.

    Technically the advance/decline line is still showing extreme negative divergences with the Dow, and only the large caps are remaining aloft as fund managers desperately try to hang onto their gains by seeking "safety". We regard the current overbought market environment as the best shorting opportunity  since 1972--despite what the market gurus might try to convince you.  We are remaining short the U.S. market. We would also avoid placing long-side bets on the overheated Western European markets at this time. Bearish sentiment towards emerging markets has reached an extreme negative level, and a bottom will soon be in place in many emerging markets. We would be selectively raising exposure to emerging markets with a long term time horizon.

    Once again, we say Go Short the overheated U.S. market and take profits on your long positions.

5/20/98:
"It's a new economy, the rules have changed, this time it's different"--Yeah, this time it is different. The market is trading at 140% of G.D.P.,  when the previous peak was 81% in 1929, which our market gurus tell us is OK because the rules of the game have changed. We beg to differ.  In the late 1920's and in 1987 the phrase "this time it's different" was also repeated ad nauseam, and we know what happened both times don't we? Perhaps some of the young  mutual fund managers who were playing Nintendo in 1987 should go back and look at market sentiment and news headlines during these two periods because this time it's not different--it's the same as at previous market tops. We try to avoid buying in situations where P.E. ratios, price to book ratios, and price to sales ratios are at record highs--these are the times when we prefer to take our profits.
To those individuals who don't feel comfortable making their own decisions,  we recommend that you do as your favorite broker or fund manager tells you to and be "in it for the long term" , buy,buy,buy. We'll enjoy watching the crowd  follow the market gurus off a cliff. The only reason the market mouths are telling you it's different this time is because it is--for them.  The Market Gurus have a lot more to lose this time.  A market downturn, or slowing of mutual fund inflows, would cut into their end of year bonuses and reduce the celebrity status they have attained during the current bull run. If you choose to use your brain, then ignore the talking heads and take a look at the current market. Signs of Tulip Bulb Mania redux are everywhere--extreme investor enthusiasm, tiny biotechs without any human trials jumping from 12 to 85 over a weekend, loss making KTel jumping from 6 to 78 in a month, anything internet related(even if it's selling garden products online) being treated as the greatest thing since the lightbulb's invention.  With the transportation and utility averages in downtrends, and the advance/decline line looking miserable, we believe the rest of the market will soon follow them down. We say sell the U.S. market.  

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Last modified: April 16, 2001

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