| A look into the past: 
 August 15, 1982
 
 Dark Days on Wall Street
 
 By WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD Jr.
 
 The last leg of a bear market is often
 crushing - a swift plunge in stock prices
 on heavy volume that pounds small investors
 and institutions alike, leaving them with big
 losses and shattered emotions. The effect can
 be cathartic. But in the vacuum that remains,
 investors can begin rebuilding their
 confidence.
 
 That last leg is exactly where the stock market now seems to be heading. Indeed, it
 is hard to find anyone on Wall Street these days who does not believe, or at least
 suspect, that the bear market is moving into some sort of climactic phase that will
 purge the investment community of its pent-up fears of economic collapse.
 
 In the past two weeks, all the market averages have plunged to new lows as Wall
 Street, beset by cruel economic news from all sides, has time after time been unable
 to mount a sustained rally. That is a discouraging omen, an indication that the bottom
 has not been reached, many securities analysts say, and a sign that even the most
 steel-willed optimists may be about to throw in their towels.
 
 ''The market's going to take the ultimate dive to culmination in the next few weeks,''
 said James L. Freeman, director of research at the First Boston Corporation,
 echoing the comments of many other market strategists. ''Batten down the hatches.''
 
 There is certainly good reason for pessimism. The Dow Jones industrial average,
 battered by the protracted recession, a deepening erosion of corporate profits and
 anxieties that brokerage firms as well as banks are becoming increasingly vulnerable,
 slid 45 points in eight straight days through Thursday before regaining 11.13 points
 Friday to close at 788.05. The average is down almost 25 percent from its peak in
 April 1981 of 1,030. Broader measures of stock market performance, such as the
 Standard & Poor's 500, began declining even earlier - in November 1980. So far,
 the bear market has cost shareholders $450 billion in losses.
 
 Though the consensus is that the market is in for a tailspin, there is no clear idea on
 how to play it and confusion seems to be the order of the day. ''Nobody can tell if
 the we're starting a depression or ending one,'' said a mutual fund manager who
 asked to remain anonymous. ''The market is one giant gamble.''
 
 Many bulls - while they concede that a sharp decline is likely - are acting on the
 longer-term assumption that a boom is coming on the other side. They are
 determined ''to tough it out,'' said Robert J. Farrell, chief market analyst at Merrill
 Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc.
 
 It is just that group of optimists, Mr. Farrell said, that must be driven to sell before
 the market hits bottom. Mr. Farrell calls it a ''capitulation'' phase - a time when
 everybody simply gives up. ''It doesn't have to be a lot of screaming and
 100-million-share days,'' he said. ''It can be a disinterest in stocks and a preference
 for something else.'' As Mr. Farrell figures it, a final sell-off could come by
 November and maybe sooner.
 
 But a cardinal rule of the stock market is that what most people expect usually does
 not happen. In 1974, when panic selling was widely anticipated, one of the longest
 and most severe bear markets ended in more of a whimper. The last leg of the bear
 market was spread in relatively orderly fashion over nearly three months. The worst
 market debacles - in 1929, 1962, and to a lesser extent in 1970 - have always been
 those that caught investors off guard.
 
 The most recent example of expectations betrayed has been the market's failure to
 react to declining interest rates. Thoughout the spring and the first part of the
 summer, the prevailing wisdom was that once rates began to come down stock
 prices would shoot up. Short-term rates did begin to come down in late July, and
 since then yields on three-month Treasury bills have dropped to 9.35 percent from
 12.5 percent. But the market has continued its slide.
 
 This has utterly confounded the theorists. The more agile among them quickly
 concocted two explanations. One is that they meant longterm rates, which have not
 declined yet. The other explanation is that credit is actually tighter now because the
 jittery banks do not want to make any more bad loans.
 
 Barton M. Biggs, the portfolio strategist at Morgan Stanley & Company, is
 probably closer to the mark. ''I don't know what's going on,'' Mr. Biggs said in an
 outburst of candor. ''The market's reading tea leaves.''
 
 Even more disorienting is what investors perceive to be the disarray in economic
 policy and the abandonment of economic leadership in Washington: The inability of
 anyone to cut the Federal budget, the flight of economic advisers from the Reagan
 Administration, and most recently, President Reagan's sudden repudiation of his
 own tax cuts in favor of a $99 billion tax increase.
 
 The proposed tax increase is having an especially insidious effect. Bewitched by the
 implications of large budget deficits and high interest rates, Wall Street now has to
 worry about the proposed remedy, too.
 
 As if this were not enough, the market has been buffeted in recent weeks by a
 sobering series of economic developments:
 
 * The economic upturn is no where in sight. It did not appear in the second quarter
 of the year, as many people had hoped. It does not seem to be appearing in the
 third quarter, either. ''My analysts come back from visiting companies,'' said John R.
 Groome, senior vice president in charge of equity research at the U.S. Trust
 Company, ''and everybody's despondent. No orders. No sign of an upturn.''
 
 * Corporate profits are continuing to slide, increasing the likelihood that companies
 will have to cut their dividends. A recent Standard & Poor's survey of 885
 companies found that corporate earnings sank 16 percent in the second quarter
 following an 11 percent drop in the preceeding three months.
 
 * Gulf's withdrawal of its bid for Cities Service - and the subsequent collapse of
 Cities Service shares - did not just produce huge losses for the professional
 arbitrage community; it also bashed thousands of amateur speculators and a number
 of brokerage firms that had risked their own capital in Cities Service stock. Coming
 on top of the public's withdrawal from the market during the past year, which dried
 up commission income, that blow has produced considerable alarm in the brokerage
 community.
 
 * Another government securities firm, Lombard-Wall Inc, went under in a smaller
 version of the collapse of Drysdale Government Securities Inc., which stung major
 banks last May. A small bank - Abilene National -closed its doors within weeks of
 the demise of Penn Square.
 
 * The trouble is spreading abroad. Following the mystery-drenched collapse of
 Italy's Banco Ambrosiano, Germany's mighty AEG-Telefunken suddenly declared
 bankruptcy. Meanwhile, the only rising stock markets left, in Japan and Britain,
 started falling - suggesting that the slump is becoming worldwide.
 
 ALL this has led to confusion and fatalism that is perhaps best illustrated by an
 ancient tale of inevitability that John O'Hara made famous in a 1934 novel called
 ''Appointment in Samarra.'' One version of the tale:
 
 A man of Tabriz - call him Ahmed the Sandalmaker - sees Death staring at him
 strangely in the crowded marketplace. Terrified, Ahmed slips out of town unseen
 and flees to Samarra, a city far to the north.
 
 Death, meanwhile, is puzzled. ''Wasn't that Ahmed the Sandalmaker I saw in the
 market?'' he asks another man. ''Yes,'' the man replies.''Odd that he should be here,
 in Tabriz,'' Death says, ''when I have an appointment with him tomorrow, in
 Samarra.'' What might be called ''Samarra anxiety'' is becoming a major
 undercurrent in the stock market as more and more people, with their imaginations
 running wild, are drawing parallels between current happenings and those just prior
 to the Great Depression.
 
 Economic historians recall that when the economy turned down in the early 1930's,
 Herbert Hoover considered cutting taxes as a stimulant. But his economic advisers,
 on the grounds that a balanced budget was of paramount importance, persuaded
 him to raise taxes instead.
 
 That decision is considered one of the classic mistakes - along with the Federal
 Reserve's drastic reduction in money supply - that led to the Depression.
 
 U.S. Trust's Mr. Groome spoke for a great many professional investors last week
 when he said: ''To raise taxes during a recession is in my mind idiotic.'' The tax
 increase might just turn out to be President Reagan's flight to Samarra.
 
 Considering all that has happened in the past months it is astonishing that the market
 has not fallen further. On average, bear markets since World War II have lasted 15
 months, and stocks have lost roughly 25 percent of their market value. The current
 bear market is far longer in duration; now in its 21st month, it is only a few weeks
 from surpassing the 1973-74 debacle.
 
 But so far the decline has been comparatively shallow. The familiar Dow Jones
 average of 30 industrial blue chips, which peaked at 1,030.98 in April 1981, is
 down only 24 percent. The broader-based indexes peaked late in November 1980,
 amid the euphoria following Ronald Reagan's election. They have fallen further,
 reflecting greater demolition among small stocks. The Standard & Poor's 500 is
 down 27 percent, while the S.& P. 400 industrials is down 29 percent. By contrast
 - although the recession was not nearly so brutal -prices in 1973-74 fell 47 percent.
 
 Some ways of looking at the market, however, suggest that it is on a par with the
 1974 bottom. One yardstick is corporate earnings. When the Dow Jones industrials
 hit 577.60 in 1974, their price/earnings ratio was 5.8. Today, with the Dow 200
 points higher, the P/E ratio is only 6.5. The S.& P. 400 industrials are lower than in
 1974. Their P/E is currently 7, compared with 7.2 in 1974.
 
 But virtually every professional investor believes that Wall Street's earnings estimates
 are too high. ''The market didn't anticipate how lousy earnings would be,'' said
 Ronald A. Glantz, who heads investment strategy at Paine Webber Mitchell
 Hutchins Inc., and who has been slashing earnings estimates drastically. If earnings
 do, indeed, turn out to be much lower, the market would have to fall further to equal
 the 1974 bottom.
 
 A better yardstick is book value, which shows that today's market is no higher than
 the darkest days of 1974. ''The S.& P. 500 hasn't sold below book, and the Dow
 hasn't sold more than 20 percent below book since 1932,'' pointed out Morgan
 Stanley's Mr. Biggs. In 1974, the S.& P.'s price divided by the book value of its
 component companies was 1.0 while the Dow's was 0.8. Today the S.&P.'s is
 again 1.0 and the Dow's is a shade lower, 0.78.
 
 BECAUSE the public has largely withdrawn from the market, trading has
 increasingly been dominated by institutions. Thus, if high-volume selling materializes,
 it may be the portfolio managers at bank trust departments, insurances companies,
 mutual fund and pension fund management firms that will do the dumping.
 
 That could set the stage for a repeat of the 1970 plunge. In that bear market, it was
 the professional who panicked and the muchmaligned ''small investors'' who, to
 everyone's astonishment, moved in to buy at the bottom and to stem the decline.
 
 Wall Street likes to look on the public as naive and likely to be wrong most of the
 time. But the fact is that when it comes to the mysteries of the marketplace, the
 professionals can be as wrong as anybody.
 
 Thus, it is interesting to speculate what the public might do. Joseph Granville, a
 flamboyant market-letter publisher who has a wide following among amateur
 investors and is heartily disliked by the Wall Street establishment, correctedly called
 the market's top late in 1980.
 
 In his most recent published interview in the newsletter Bottom Line, Mr. Granville
 stated that he expects the Dow to bottom between 550 and 650 by January. He
 then foresees a rally of 200 to 300 points, possibly followed by another steep
 decline.
 
 Merrill Lynch's Mr. Farrell also wields a great deal of influence among small
 investors, as well as professionals. His view is more temperate.''I've been saying for
 a long time that it could go to 700 or to the low 700's,'' he said. ''When people start
 saying, 'Why stop at 700? Why not 600, or 500? - when the risk seems
 open-ended - that's when the bottom will occur.''
 
 Mr. Farrell believes that the bottom may be only two or three months, and perhaps
 only one month, away. Beyond that, though, he is strongly bullish. ''Once you get
 through this critical period, say the next six months,'' Mr. Farrell said, ''I believe you
 really will see the start of the Great Bull Market of the 80's.''
 
 William G. Shepherd Jr. writes about finance from New York.
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