SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Graham and Doddsville -- Value Investing In The New Era -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (20)3/2/1998 8:40:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Respond to of 1722
 
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.

***************

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.

c 1998 TheStreet.com, All Rights Reserved.



To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (20)3/2/1998 8:42:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Respond to of 1722
 
Kansas to WSJ: Stop Dissing Beardstown Ladies!

Editor's Letter: Why the Market Is on Another Record-Breaking Tear

By Dave Kansas
Editor-in-Chief

The market is on a record-smashing rampage, and people feel
confused.

"What am I missing? Isn't this getting ridiculous?" asked a
networking executive this morning.

Good questions. By all traditional measures, the stock market is at
least fairly valued. Dividend yield screamed sell about 4,000 points
ago. P/Es have been in nosebleed range for the past year or more,
depending on your disciplines.

Why aren't these traditional warning signals working? Several things
could explain what's happening. On familiar ground, inflation is
really dead and American corporate dominance is extending faster into
more areas around the globe. But along with that, there's a growing
sense that perhaps the Asian disaster is becoming beneficial more
quickly than anyone realizes.

Inflation, it should be noted, is the most harrowing item in any
seasoned investor's mind. The 1970s scarred those who lived through
it much like the Depression scarred those who lived through the 1930s.
Such a scarring is difficult to remove. You could wait one year, two
years, 10 years, and still the fear would remain palpable. That's how
the elder pundits think today. They recall crisply the great pain of
inflation.

But inflation, by all indications, is deader than dead. Gold
collapsed last year and oil prices are now providing the latest
indication. Down, down, down oil prices go, with no relief in sight.
Untapped discoveries in Kazakhstan, new oil getting ready to flow
from Iraq, improved drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. On top of that,
slackening demand from Asia. Oil is not going anywhere, and the
industry knows it. Would proud Dresser merge with Halliburton if it
believed oil would rebound anytime soon? No sir. The pros in the
industry see the future, and it's a future of cheap, plentiful oil as
far as they predict. Oil is the most important inflationary
commodity. Its downfall marks one more chapter in the globe's
inexorable trend toward price stability. This factor, despite
protestations from some economists, is not fully accepted in the
market, which means it still has some juice to drive prices higher.

In terms of American corporate dominance, it's clear that each
iteration of new technology places American firms more squarely in the
forefront. Wireless, computer software, telecommunications, computer
hardware and semiconductors are dominated by U.S. companies. In more
prosaic businesses, such as banking, awesome cash positions have
enabled American companies to weather global turmoil more adeptly than
any other nation.

What's interesting is that the world has long obsessed on American
cultural imperialism. But the nation is no longer just making movies
and burgers for everyone. There is the definite danger that American
corporate hegemony could soon translate into an unflattering picture
of America, the economic imperialist. That debate, however, remains
mostly academic for the time being. Meanwhile, American business
strength continues to grow throughout the globe.

The final point is the most important, and, as yet, least
understood. The Asian economic crisis is swiftly changing the terms of
business engagement throughout the region. It will take time to
rebuild the damaged economies of Asia, perhaps a few years. But as
that rebuilding occurs, cash-rich, information-advantaged U.S.
companies are at the forefront. Cronies will be replaced by real
companies and American firms will find themselves more deeply
entrenched than anyone thought possible just one year ago.

This matters most in the monster market that is China. As the
economies of the region flail about them, mighty China suffers slowly.
Its position to dictate economic terms to outsiders (read: U.S
companies) diminishes by the day. Where one year ago the Chinese
government could write the deal terms, now the negotiating positions
have changed. If China wants to maintain economic stability and growth
-- which it so badly craves -- then it will need the help of outside
companies more than ever. In essence, the Asian crisis has vastly
accelerated the opportunities for companies seeking to enter the
largest consumer market in the world.

While examples of aggressive American inroads are not yet obvious,
the Chinese economic strategy indicates that the government is less
able to dictate action. IPOs expected this year are getting scrapped
and the domestic stock market is struggling to rediscover the
momentum that it possessed leading into last summer.

It is this rethinking of the Asian crisis that is contributing the
most to the mystical valuations in the U.S. stock market. For if the
U.S. position in a rebounding economy is sharply higher than before
the economic disaster, then the U.S. companies can anticipate
another round of surprising growth. Another round of surprising growth
could explain why the stock market is confounding just about everyone.

****

MediaNotes: It's really not that tough to figure out why the country
gets frustrated with the media. Take a look at The Wall Street
Journal's front page on Friday. As the Big Board sorts through
criminals in the mist, the Beardstown ladies are right there before
the world, getting dissed. The Journal story is there just in case
readers have missed the ripping the ladies have received in other
locales of late.

The entire thing embarrasses me as a journalist.

First off, the media crawled all over itself to lionize the ladies.
Hey, these old Midwestern women are pretty clever, aren't they?
Essentially the ladies articulated in all of their interviews and
tomes a kind of blue-haired Peter Lynch theory. Buy what you know and
like. On top of this, the ladies found the entire process fun and
interesting, a sewing bee with the business pages.

But now the Beardstown Ladies have become bad news. The journalistic
hue and cry is not about any of the fundamental things that made this
story initially interesting. No, it's about how the ladies' record may
not be as good as indicated. Gee. Stop the presses. Embarrass these
women. Paint them as shills and liars. Yes, we must make America safe
from these charlatans! Oh mercy, what will we tell the kids?

Apart from all of the inflated egos and records that get no scrutiny
from the press, everyday a thousand people walk by my office, each
with a tale 10 times more salacious than the Beardstown Ladies could
ever muster. Yet these folks munch on foodstand hot dogs and move
quietly about their business. The ladies? They get trashed.

Yeah, that makes a lot of sense to me. Good work...



To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (20)3/2/1998 11:19:00 PM
From: Jay Mowery  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1722
 
Porc,
Just read your post for the third time.
I'm beginning to get a much clearer picture of the separation of the various types of investing and how it's really not feasible to incorporate all into one.
The need to find one that has an overall track record and work it.
I'm also getting a better grasp of why I've liked reading the information on Value Investing. I never knew that's what it was called until now,( just sorta said oh ya Value Investing that's cool) but for some reason I knew it worked. I've read Buffet's book "The Warren Buffet Way" that he wrote with the other guy or however it was. I also looked at the one ya'll had mentioned that was written by his ex-Daughter -in-law was it? I haven't bought it yet though.(May have to do that next).
At any rate Keep posting and I'll keep reading!
BTW on one post you or Crimi had put an article that mentioned FICTIONAL ACCOUNTING?
Porc, Why is it if the government or their people do it it's called "FICTIONAL ACCOUNTING" but if you or I do it it's called "FRAUD?"
just one of those interesting concepts I guess!
Best to ya'll
Jay



To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (20)3/3/1998 5:01:00 PM
From: seminole  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1722
 
porcupine

<<<So, I continue to see the Market as mildly, but not wildly,
overvalued. If I knew how to time Markets perfectly, I might be out of stocks right now. But, I don't. Therefore, as a long term
investor, I would rather pay "too much" for a stock whose earnings
are growing at 20%+ annually than in a bond paying single digits.>>>

I must of missed this in Graham and Dodd's book. I thought
we needed to buy companies instead of buying the market. I would
rather buy small stocks with value than large cap stocks that
are overvalued.

richard



To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (20)3/8/1998 11:56:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Respond to of 1722
 
Wayne to porc: "designer-jeans" analogy like "bigger fool" theory.

<< Likewise, now that mutual funds are more "trendy" than designer
jeans, stocks sport prices higher than historical averages. When the
boomers retire, this trend will moderate. But, premium stock prices
won't necessarily disappear entirely -- just as pricey designer jeans
haven't disappeared entirely. >>

From: WCrimi
To: gadr@nyct.net

It is certainly possible. It just has nothing to do with value
investing. It sounds more like the greater fool theory, i.e., "I am
willing to own this overvalued security because another baby boomer
will buy if from me at an even more absurd price."

There are also economic implications to higher stock prices that
will force the corrections of the market place eventually.

Wayne