Why Cramer's Bullish
Mar 02, 1998
Dispatches from the Front: Cramer's In-Depth Explanation of His Bullishness
By James J. Cramer
I want to depart from my usual format of tackling an obscure trading issue and instead talk about some investing concepts more in depth. Earlier this week after I finished co-hosting "Squawk" on CNBC I penned this very abbreviated piece because I felt so strongly that the bull was not being championed correctly. Now I want to go back and annotate it for all of those who were confused by my bullet points.
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Why shouldn't it go up? Let's go over the tenets of the bull. (Let's be basic for a moment. When stock prices go up and up, we call that a bull market. This piece explores what underlies this particular bull market, the one that began in January 1991 and continues merrily to this day.)
No inflation -- and I mean no inflation. (Inflation is the most important determinant of future prices. If people think inflation is going to roar back to life, they know that financial assets, such as stocks, will not be worth as much in the future as they are now. That causes people to want to sell. The Federal Reserve's chief tenet is to stop inflation and preserve purchasing power. As long as inflation remains low, or dormant, the Federal Reserve will tolerate a buoyant stock market. The moment inflation rages, the Fed uses its blunt instrument of higher short-term rates to crush inflation. People will sell stocks to pick up a high, risk-free return from short rates. In other words, if the Fed raises rates, say to 7%, I know I would regard 7% as a great competitor to stocks. Therefore, some of my money would get plowed into investments that aren't stocks. That's how the market as a whole thinks.)
Lots of liquidity. Money is just pouring in, and there's no real competition for the dough. (Liquidity is a very overused word and if you are not in this business it seems like a silly, confusing term. What it really means in this case is that there is a ton of money around looking for a home. In the landscape, money can go into bonds, stocks, real estate, gold, foreign currencies, stamps and more esoteric things. Right now stocks seem to offer the greatest appreciation potential, so that's where the sloshing money is going. Why is there a lot of money around? Because there are many jobs being created and lots of jobs means lots of paychecks, which means lots of discretionary income for spending and investing.)
Earnings that turned out to be just fine, despite all the mostly bogus hand-wringing. (Here's a very important point. Lots of talking heads come on TV and say that corporate earnings will be impacted negatively, say, by Asia. It turns out that, yes, some were, but many weren't. In fact, most weren't. There were not that many disappointments after all and the worrying about corporate earnings was misplaced. For instance, Dell smoked in Asia during the fourth quarter. That's just one example.)
Nobody loves, loves, loves the market, and people are reluctant to call a bull a bull. Skepticism runs rampant. (Helene Meisler, the TSC Chartist, did a terrific piece Friday about this issue. In the 1980s, before the crash, people used to be like I was on Squawk: outright bullish. Now it is very de rigueur to be so positive. As long as it stays like that and there aren't a lot of cocky bulls, the rally will continue. This is that wall of worry concept which is very valid, IMHO.)
No rush of equity offerings to sop up the funds going into the market. (Most people don't monitor supply and demand very well. I watch it like a hawk. When a lot of stock is retired routinely through buybacks, and not much stock is issued through underwritings, that is an explosive situation, given the liquidity we have. Let's take Gap stores, for instance. The company reported the other day. I was shocked, I mean shocked, that GPS bought back millions upon millions of shares in the last year. GPS probably retired more shares last year than were created in retail-land. That's staggeringly positive. Most big-cap companies have ongoing buybacks, as they don't need all of the capital for their businesses, and it is a safer and cheaper way to return capital to shareholders than boosting the dividend regularly. That, by the way, is one of the constantly overlooked issues for quant guys. They keep hoping the dividend yield of the market will increase. Forget it, companies love buying back stock, and paying out fewer dividends! And shareholders don't mind, because they understand that dividends are double-taxed. In the meantime, the underwriting calendar this year has been sluggish, at best. Very few big deals to put money to work in. Imagine yourself at a large mutual fund. New money comes in everyday. You feel as if you have to put money to work, lest you fall too far behind the indices. Now what do you do with the cash? Typically you look for new ideas, and underwritings. But there aren't many. So you end up buying the same old stocks. And they all go up!)
Massive takeovers that, even when they fall apart, spawn interest in groups. (Nothing retires millions of shares like takeovers, and boy have we had takeovers. These take stock out of the market and put cash in. They also create fear among short-sellers, who could otherwise lay on stocks and keep them lower. Even stock-for-stock takeovers are bullish, as they create more wealth -- at least in this market. Don't email me about the academics of this; it's empirical.)
A Fed Chairman who gets it. (Greenspan is the great bull protector. By keeping inflation at bay, he creates a climate that is perfect for investing. The man's credibility is his biggest asset. And he is the market's biggest asset.)
A Treasury Secretary who gets it. (When I worked for Rubin at Goldman, I knew he was the smartest man I ever met. He turned around every department and made the place run smoothly, efficiently and profitably. But not greedily. His handling of the budget deficit, his decision to change the maturities of Treasury bonds, his staunch dollar support are all wonders that we take for granted. Okay I will say it: best Treasury Secretary since Hamilton. And I am NOT looking for a job in Treasury! Never go to Washington. Don't even want to visit.)
I was acutely conscious when I was on CNBC's Squawk Box this morning that other than Mark Haines, everybody gives me a hard time when I say how bullish I am. I always feel like the least rigorous guy in the room when I expound positively. (This is a direct attack on the Grantism of our time. The debate for equities has been set by the bears. They have, since the Crash of '87, owned the media. Someone emailed me this week to say how courageous I was to talk openly about my views on Squawk. I had to think twice before I realized that it must seem that way, given how caveated everybody else is. Fortunately, I have numbers that back me up, that allow me to speak my mind and say how I feel without inhibition.)
But Haines gives me a chance to tell the truth without all of those caveats that everybody else invokes. He doesn't try to trip me up by saying "but weren't you worried about Asia." Of course I was, but now I am less worried. He listens and understands that it is not a sin to be bullish. (My two points here -- I don't believe being bullish is a religion. I think there are times to be bullish and times to be bearish. I was bearish on Japan for a decade! I have been bearish on U.S. equities many times in the last 20 years. When I am bullish, I go long. I do not think, oh no, I can't turn bullish because six months ago, or even six weeks ago, I didn't like the tape. I have to do what my gut and my brain tells me to do. Haines understands that.)
As long as I have traded stocks, 20 years, when I have been bullish I have found myself under attack from so-called experts who claim to have all of the rigor on their side. I am sure that there will be many more such attacks. The price-to-book, the P/E ratio, the price-to-sales ratios have been crummy for years. Traditional valuation got you out 5,000 points ago. Remember, I would rather make money than be "right" by those measures. I would rather look for relative value than shun it for absolute vertigo. [porc feels the same way -- RR.]
I would rather run the risk of seeming overanimated than keep people out of a market I think can make them money. (This is the absolute essence of my philosophy. I hate to lose money. I like to make money. I don't want bias or emotion -- or even a misplaced reading of history -- to get in the way of that process. And when I like the market I like to tell others.
Someone emailed me this week accusing me of getting bullish on Squawk to help my portfolio. Can I tell you something? I don't need to go on Squawk to make a ton of money. I debate daily with my partner Jeff Berkowitz about how much time I spend on television and writing for TheStreet.com. I just Friday canned a March Squawk because Berko is going on vacation and no way I am going to have both of us out at the same time. I do this stuff because, as anyone who has met me in the last 20 years knows, I live and breathe and love it. I love to help others make money. It is pure enjoyment for me. I am no Robin Hood. I steal from no one. I want to help. I don't want to pick stocks for you. I want you to learn how to control your money. How you can be a better client. How you can be empowered about your pocketbook so others don't rip you off. I don't want to be your bullish guru. I want to help educate you about the world I trade in and invest in everyday. I don't want your commissions. I don't want your money or a percentage of your money. I just want your money to grow. You have a problem with that? Go pay 200 bucks an hour to a psychiatrist. He can help you better than I can.)
James J. Cramer is manager of a hedge fund and co-chairman of TheStreet.com. Under no circumstances does the information in this column represent a recommendation to buy or sell stocks. Mr. Cramer's writings provide insights into the dynamics of money management and are not a solicitation for transactions. While he cannot provide investment advice or recommendations, he welcomes your feedback, emailed to Jjc@thestreet.com.
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