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TSC: To start with, what's your synopsis of what's going on with the market? What do you think is going to happen?
Jeff Applegate: We're still bullish. We think the correction is behind us. The house view is that the Fed isn't entirely out of the picture: We're still looking for the Fed to go another quarter-point -- not at the June meeting, but the August one. Obviously, it's highly dependent on what kind of data we get between now and then. It looks to us like the second quarter is probably below 4% in terms of local GDP, which we think puts things below potential. That should take some of the heat off the Fed.
Obviously, we have a fair amount of evidence now of a slowdown. Decent CPI, PPI and Greenspan's pretty market-friendly commentary on productivity. Obviously he's been on that for some time, but he keeps on extending his argument. I guess what I found interesting about this set of comments was that where 18, 24 months ago he was fretting, "Well, we've had this acceleration in productivity and how long will it last?" now it's, "Well, we've made a structural change here and it looks like this can persist for a long time." That has enormous implications for how fast the economy can grow, what that means for inflation, what that means for profit margins. And profitability can improve even though you don't have any significant pricing power.
In a cyclical sense, we do think the worst of the correction is behind us and it's entirely conceivable that the Fed is done. If you look at the history, and if you look at prior periods during extended business cycles when the Fed has been tightening to slow, but not stop GDP [not create a recession], there were two examples in the '60s ('62 and '64), two in the '80s ('84 and '87) and now one in the '90s ('94-'95). If you look at history, because markets are discount mechanisms, both the stock and the bond market tend to trough and begin to rebound in advance of the final Fed tightening. On average, it's about four to five weeks in advance, and that's been the pattern over decades. It's entirely conceivable that the final tightening was May 16, and the trough in the bond market was April 10, and the trough in the stock market was April 14.
If you look what the stock market does forward 12 months from that trough, historically the forward 12-month return has been very good -- in excess of 30%. If you look at where we are at the moment from April 14, the S&P is up about 9%. I think the markets are in the process of reprising what they've done a whole bunch of times. We still think we're in the same bull market that got under way in October 1990.
---------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------- "The key driver of the market is going to be earnings growth." ---------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------
TSC: In terms of a repeat of the '94-'95 scenario, what do you say to the idea that part of what got the market further was the fact that bond yields fell about 200 basis points after the Fed was done tightening? They're pretty low now and there probably isn't that much room for them to fall further. Do you need to see much lower bond yields to get the stock market reaccelerated?
Jeff Applegate: No. We've got forecasts that earnings growth is going to be double-digit. We've got it slowing, sequentially, because we've got global GDP slowing. So we've got earnings growth going from about 20% in the first quarter to about 16% this quarter, then 14%, then 15%. But it's still double-digit earnings growth. And next year we have inflation down-ticking a bit. That ought to buy you a little multiple expansion -- I don't think much, but a little.
To me, the key driver of the market is going to be earnings growth.
TSC: Is that concentrated in any sector?
Jeff Applegate: It's pretty pervasive. We've had a very bullish view on profit-margin expansion. At the moment, we're sitting around with a forecast that next year after-tax profit margins are going to get higher than they've ever been before. And if you look at where we are in that pattern, because we now have the data from the first quarter, profit margins increased by another 20 basis points. At the end of the first quarter, after-tax margins are up to 6.8%, which is the highest in half a century. We've basically got a view that companies can deliver consistently above top line, because margins are expanding. We relate that to two things: globalism and technology, and the impact of both those things on productivity.
All things being equal, if the Fed's either on hold or close to being on hold, that should be OK for the stock market. You've got a few bumps in inflation, just because of what energy just did, but with some disinflation next year and double-digit earnings growth, and productivity that, if anything, looks like it's accelerating -- that ought to be fairly decent for the stock market.
TSC: Could you talk about why you don't see great risk to what's going on with energy prices right now?
Jeff Applegate: I think part of it is just going to be a slowdown here. I think the other part is you get to a point where OPEC doesn't want alternative sources of energy coming on stream. We're at that level now. Plus, the outlook we have for global growth is OK, but it's not wildly robust. We've got Europe growing around 3%, us decelerating to below 4%. But we've still got Japan, which is the second-biggest economy on the planet, bumping along the bottom at 1%. We've got global growth around 3%. That's better than it was, but still not wildly robust. Certainly in the futures market and the spot market, you probably have some more upside on energy prices, just because you tend to overshoot on the way up just like you tend to overshoot on the way down.
TSC: You're still overweight capital goods, communications and technology. Even the groups that aren't technology per se, like communications services -- you have Nextel (NXTL:Nasdaq - news - boards) -- those are companies that are definitely using technology like no other companies are.
Jeff Applegate: And if you look at the capital goods names -- Flextronics (FLEX:Nasdaq - news - boards), Jabil Circuit (JBL:NYSE - news - boards), Solectron (SLR:NYSE - news - boards) -- those are the guys who make all the stuff that Cisco, etc., don't make.
The tech thesis is really pretty simple. It's also pretty compelling. We've been overweight tech since the summer of '93, and at the time tech was 7% of the S&P. We put in place a weight of 12%. Today, tech is about 32% of the S&P, and our weight is in excess of 50%. The ratio in the portfolio is about the same as it was seven years ago. Obviously the absolutes are much higher, because the tech weighting is much higher.
The thing that originally got us there seven years ago was simply observing what was going on with capital goods as compared to the cost of labor. If you go back about seven years, capital goods prices in the U.S. were rising by about zero, and labor costs, as measured by the Employment Cost Index, were rising by a little over 4%. Just looking at those economics, we came around to a view where it looks like we've got in place the economics for a pretty robust capital-for-labor substitution process. That should mean on the corporate side that demand for technological products ought to be fairly consistently good, possibly for an extended period, because if you go back earlier in this business cycle, about 30% of cap-ex was on tech.
Fast forward to where we are today.
Overall capital goods prices are now falling by 2% a year, and labor costs are rising in excess of 4%. So the spread between these variables is now about 6% -- it's actually wider than it was earlier on in this business cycle. We would submit that the bunch of conclusions we came to seven years ago are still valid. The economics driving the capital-goods-for-labor substitution process is still intact. That should mean that workers will continue to get better tools on a recurring basis, so that will be pretty good for productivity. Since your increasing capital spending is generally faster than GDP, prospects remain good for a long business cycle -- because you're increasing capacity as you move through the cycle. This is the best capacity creating cycle that we've had -- you can't find one better than this. A corollary to that is pricing power. Since you're increasing capacity, companies don't have a lot of pricing power, but productivity ought to be good because of tech. What's chiefly different today, versus seven years ago, is that 60% of cap-ex is tech, not 30%.
I'm not an economist, but when I look at the economics, I have a very difficult time dismantling the deflation in capital goods. The reason you've got this deflation is the world of semiconductors that we live in, and the big debate in tech-land these days is not whether Moore's law is intact, but whether it's accelerating. If you look at labor cost in the U.S. -- given that unemployment is bumping around 4% -- I think it's tough to make a forecast that labor costs are going to start falling a significant amount.
---------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------- "In all the rich countries on the planet, capital goods prices are low or falling, and labor costs are fairly high." ---------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------
Moreover, this phenomenon is not just a U.S. phenomenon, it's a rich-country phenomenon. In all the rich countries on the planet, capital goods prices are low or falling, and labor costs are fairly high. Relate that back to tech. For the S&P tech sector, 48% of sales are from outside of the U.S.
And then of course you have the Internet. Obviously, we couldn't foresee that in the summer of '93, nobody could, but that's a pretty interesting metric.
No question we've got a big weight in tech, it's a highly concentrated portfolio. But we still think that's the way to go. These are the growth stocks of our era. |