"I'm as bullish as I've ever been," Kerschner exulted recently. "The market by every gauge I use is ridiculously cheap. This is one of the five best buying opportunities I have seen in the past 20 years. "
***************** Partied Out?
Once the bull shakes his year 2000 hangover, he'll be back for more
By Lauren R. Rublin
Call it what you will: Y2K or the year 2000, the start of a new millennium or, to be precise, the final gasp of the old. It seems only fitting, however you label it, that the year just ended should mark a sharp break with tradition. Quite a few traditions, it turns out.
For the first time in more than a century, America's quadrennial presidential contest produced a bumper crop of pundits and parodists, but no clear winner. The longest-running economic expansion in U.S. history stumbled on the heels of a half-dozen interest-rate increases orchestrated by the Federal Reserve. Dormant oil prices not only awakened but soared above $30 a barrel, taking a big bite out of consumers' wallets and corporations' profits. And, across the ocean, a fractious Europe finally united behind a common currency, only to see its value head due south.
But, for investors, the conflation of these unwelcome developments produced the cruelest reversal of all. The U.S. stock market snapped a five-year skein of double-digit gains, ending 2000 with a big black eye and, yes, double-digit losses. "The market was up more than 20% in each of the past five years," says Byron Wien, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter's U.S. strategist. "Most investors would like that to go on forever, and that was the principal affliction of 2000."
In short, misbegotten expectations of endless growth clashed with the reality of excessive equity valuations, producing one of the market's worst years on record. Plagued by declines in its newer technology components, not to mention the disembowelment of ancient stalwarts such as AT&T and Eastman Kodak, the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended 2000 down 6.2%, to 10,786.85, its poorest performance since 1981. The broader S&P 500 shed 10.1%, to 1320.28, also its worst showing since 1981, though as colleague Andrew Bary points out on page 17, the market's decline felt worse than it actually was.
But the Nasdaq Composite, Party Central in the first quarter, and now home to dozens of bombed-out dot.com stocks, outdid them both in pain and suffering, sinking 39.3% on the year, and 51%, to 2470.52, from its March 10 peak of 5048.62. That marked the Nasdaq's steepest annual loss in its 29-year history, and a sharp, if not entirely surprising reversal of much of 1999's 85.6% advance.
So, with this mournful litany out of the way, what's on tap for 2001? If Wall Street's most ebullient strategists are correct in their basic assumptions, the Federal Reserve first and foremost will engineer a soft landing, or moderate slowdown, in the U.S. economy, by lowering interest rates sufficiently to counteract the punitive effect of six rate hikes in the second half of 1999 and the first part of 2000. Helped by lower oil prices, more belt-tightening at home and stronger growth overseas, corporate profits will rise by a still-respectable 7%-10%. And stocks not only will recover fully, but hit fresh peaks before the year is out.
"We're standing on the threshold of a new environment," says Stuart Freeman, of A.G. Edwards. "We're moving from peak GDP growth of 8.3% in late 1999 and average growth in the upper 5% range to something in the 3% region. Earnings growth is declerating from a mid-20% rate early in 2000 to something slower, in the single digits. The first of these environments is almost always tough for equities, and the second is almost always friendly."
Stocks should be helped, as well, by Wall Street's fourth-quarter fire sale, which not only knocked many profitless New Economy issues back into the single digits, but also slashed prices on hundreds of profitable, creditworthy Old Economy names.
"The median price/earnings multiple on the S&P 500 is 16, the cheapest in four years," says Thomas Galvin, U.S. strategist at Credit Suisse First Boston (which purchased his prior employer, Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette, last year). "Expectations have been wound down, and people are bracing for a hard landing. But it would appear that the engines of liquidity are about to restart, which makes this a time to be aggressive, not to head for the hills." Galvin expects the Dow to end the year around 12,650, some 17% above current levels.
Valuations also tempt Edward Kerschner, who became chief global strategist at UBS Warburg when it acquired his longtime employer, PaineWebber, last summer. "I'm as bullish as I've ever been," Kerschner exulted recently. "The market by every gauge I use is ridiculously cheap. This is one of the five best buying opportunities I have seen in the past 20 years. |