December 12, 1997
Heard on the Street Firms Link Shock to Asian Ills; Analysts Blame Other Factors
By SUZANNE MCGEE Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Are all the stock-market shocks out there really Asia's fault?
As investors and analysts continue to comb through disappointing earnings releases from Oracle and a host of other companies, they are starting to worry that corporate executives might be able to camouflage fundamental demand or profitability weakness by blaming the fallout from Southeast Asia's economic woes.
"Every company out there that has an earnings issue is going to be tempted to blame it on the most obvious problem that's already in sight, and that's what's happening in Asia," said Scott Pape, a portfolio manager with Loomis Sayles in Chicago. "It's just like retailers blaming the weather first of all when they have bad sales."
Placing the Blame
In the past two days alone, Asia has been cited for its negative impact on results by System Software Associates, semiconductor assembly-equipment maker Kullicke & Soffa Industries, Microsoft, disk-drive maker Quantum, chemicals and machinery producer FMC and conglomerate AlliedSignal.
Oracle's failure to meet analysts' expectations in the most recent quarter has unleashed a new bout of selling in technology stocks and resurrected the specter of the "Asian flu," thanks largely to prominent mention given in the company's own news release to the region's recent troubles. "The economic situation in Asia-Pacific clearly had a significant impact," said Jeffrey Henley, chief financial officer of Oracle, in the release.
But that's not the whole story, analysts and investors say. Oracle is grappling with demand issues in its core businesses at home, as well as dealing with currency problems overseas.
Possible Exaggeration
"It looks like they're raising the 'Asian shield' here to take shelter behind," said Erik Gustafson, a portfolio manager at Stein Roe & Farnham. "I expect to see a lot more companies with short-term earnings problems, however caused, find it awfully convenient to do the same. You'll have a great deal more companies that will see some impact on earnings from Asia, but they won't be as great as some of them or as the market might lead you to believe."
Indeed, investors are already scrutinizing the collapse of the $800 million sale by Corning of the controlling stake in its housewares business to AEA Investors, announced late Wednesday, and attributed by Corning officials to the deteriorating growth prospects for housewares in the Asian market. Some analysts believe the deal was already in trouble, that the price was too high, and that Asia offered both parties a face-saving pretext for walking away.
Charles Clough, U.S. market strategist at Merrill Lynch, compares the Asian upheavals with the imposition of a 10% tax surcharge imposed in 1968 by then-President Lyndon B. Johnson to help cover the cost of the Vietnam War.
"All of a sudden, when companies began to disappoint on the earnings front the next year, the tax surcharge got the blame over and over again," he said. "What really happened, of course, was that the economic cycle had peaked, and we were starting to roll over into the recession of the 1970s. The tax issue was a very convenient way of explaining away problems that had another genesis."
'Unsustainable' Pace
Mr. Clough said it is logical that technology companies are the first to disappoint, and quick to blame the woes on Asian demand. "Spending on capital goods like technology products has been growing three times as fast as the economy, and that's unsustainable," he said. "When you create a lot of excess productive capacity, it's only reasonable to expect to see pricing weaken as fast as it is."
Oracle isn't the only stock to take a market beating after citing slackening Asian demand in reporting less-than-expected earnings. Systems Software stock fell 37% after it cited "disappointing" Asian purchases as its earnings fell short of analysts' expectations in its fourth quarter, ended Oct. 31.
"In technology stocks, broadly, there's a need to fine-comb the results to see if there are deeper issues than just what's happening in the Asia-Pacific region," argued Melissa Eisenstat, an analyst with CIBC Oppenheimer. "That was definitely the case with Oracle: The part of their business that is growing is also the part of the business where they have to compete with Microsoft, so life is going to be a little bit more difficult."
Mr. Clough expects pricing problems to spread beyond high-tech to other parts of the economy, and to crop up in earnings statements from companies in other sectors over the coming months. Technology companies like Oracle, he adds, serve as an early-warning indicator because they are the fastest-growing part of the economy, and one where even modest slowdowns in sales can show up quickly in squeezed profit margins.
Investors and analysts who have begun to mull the "scapegoating" issue say they plan to question company managements very closely on the exact causes of earnings disappointments. They also say they will keep an eagle eye on the domestic operations of companies with big international operations, such as Coca-Cola, Proctor & Gamble and Gillette, for signs of declining profits that might be swept up behind the "Asia shield."
High-end retailers like Saks or Tiffany's, they fret, might blame a sales falloff on less spending by well-heeled Asian consumers. Airlines might try to blame a drop in travel on a decline in business on their Asian routes. Federal Express, which reported earnings after the market closed Thursday, didn't mention Asia, as some had expected it might.
"Whenever you get a headline event, it offers an umbrella to keep a lot of problems out of the rain," said Byron Wien, market strategist at Morgan Stanley, Dean Witter, Discover. "A company running into a variety of problems can easily succumb to the temptation of saying, 'well, you couldn't have expected us to hit the estimates; after all, you do read the papers and know that there's something bad going on in Asia.' "
Figuring out how much of an earnings shortfall is due to Asian troubles can be tricky. Among the variables are the mix of products and profit margins for sales in the region, and whether lower sales should be attributed to currency fluctuations or a plunge in demand as growth rates shrivel.
"How do you get a handle on this? That's the question we're grappling with, and it's very, very difficult and frustrating," said Tim Morris, chief investment officer at Bessemer Trust in New York. "This is an enormously fluid situation for the next few weeks, and more than anything, investors hate uncertainty."
The picture should become clearer as the months unfold and the magnitude of the economic setbacks in Asia crystallize. "Eventually, we'll be able to get a better handle on what's real, and what's another Asian excuse," said Mr. Pape of Loomis Sayles. |