MARKET UPDATE: HAVE THE FUNDAMENTALS REALLY CHANGED?
By Peter D. Henig Red Herring Online August 31, 1998
"I'll bet you we see 3,000 before we see 9,000," said Rick Berry, director of research for J.P. Turner, following Monday's vicious market selloff. Major indices fell 6 to 8 percent in high trading volumes.
The Dow at 3,000? Are the fundamentals really that bad?
While the bond market has benefitted from investors' flight to quality, pushing the yield on the 30-year Treasury bond down to 5.26 percent -- the lowest level since the government began selling them in 1977 -- the broader markets have been getting crushed.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 512.61 to 7,539.07, the Standard & Poor's 500 fell 68.23 to 958.91, and the Nasdaq Composite Index, a barometer for technology stocks, dropped 140.53, or 8.6 percent, to 1,499.15, its largest one-day drop and well below its opening 1998 level.
The advance-decline ratios were even more miserable, with declining issues outnumbering advancers by more than 7 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, and 6 to 1 on the Nasdaq. Only 20 companies made new highs on the NYSE on Monday, compared to 1,204 new lows, while on the Nasdaq, there were 1,483 new lows to 4 new highs. The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies dropped 20.59 to 337.95.
The fundamentals of what? But just what are markets' fundamentals? It depends on what you mean by the term.
"When I say fundamentals, I mean earnings and interest rates," says Charles Crane, market strategist of Key Asset Management.
But, amid the current carnage, determining what exactly the other "deteriorating market fundamentals" are has become quite confusing.
For example, market analysts are in broad agreement that as a trading partner, an obliterated Russian stock market, a deteriorating Russian economy, and a devalued Russian ruble are, for the most part, irrelevant. Yet, the important and disconcerting issue of Russia's uncertain political destiny as a world superpower is fundamental news to be reckoned with.
While news, is it a market fundamental worthy of dragging all stocks and all sectors lower?
Not to Mr. Crane, who draws a line in the sand at what can, and should, have an actual impact on corporate earnings and gross domestic product.
"It's not like Russia was one of the horses leading us to the promised land," says Mr. Crane. His concerns are more centered on Canada and Mexico, the U.S.'s more immediate trading partners. Their currencies are plunging while their economies, tied to our own, continue to worsen.
"I saw earnings growth at 3-5 percent this year, and 4-6 percent next year, and while those have deteriorated, the interest rate on the long bond is so low that there's now an argument for undervalued stocks," says Mr. Crane. "Investors bought too much on the way up, and have sold too much on the way down."
And while Mr. Crane and other market watchers admit that the international fundamentals have set the market on edge -- "Hong Kong is a bit mushy," says the analyst -- now they urge investors to examine fundamentals that truly matter.
"Trade represents about 12 percent of GDP," argues Mr. Crane, "but even a 50 percent drop in trade, which would never happen, couldn't have as huge an impact on our economy as everyone is now acting like it could."
The real fundamental to watch is consumer spending.
"Consumers represent two-thirds of the GDP and if they crawl under a rock, then that's what would have a major impact."
Not so fast Not everyone agrees, however.
"This is the inchoate rumblings of a bear, and I ain't talkin' a Russian bear," says Mr. Berry. "I'm talking a worldwide recession bear."
To say that Mr. Berry is bearish is to put it mildly. The market analyst has set a near term target of 4,460 on the Dow -- "Just look at the monthly chart on the Dow going back to 1989," says the analyst -- and argues that this decade-long bull market move to 9,000 is over.
But somewhere in between Mr. Berry and Mr. Crane lies a whole other range of analysts who don't even want to predict a near term direction.
"I think it's a fool's game to predict specific market direction in the short term," says Ryan Jacob, research director for the IPO Value Monitor. "What we're seeing is a vicious correction taking a lot of fluff out of the market, but this international fear is not going to effect a lot of these companies."
Mr. Jacob, like Mr. Crane, contends that what drives his sell decisions are sector- and company-specific changes.
"You've got to be able to endure the pain," shrugs Mr. Jacob. "If the economy shrinks, there definitely is an effect, but even then, I don't think it will be that much."
For his part, Mr. Jacob and Mr. Crane say they will stay relatively fully invested, holding some cash but not much even as they see bellwether stocks get hit.
Monday was the day when bellwethers got more than hit; they got obliterated. Whether it was Compaq (CPQ), America Online (AOL), or Lucent (LU) as the top-volume losers on the Big Board, or Dell (DELL), Cisco (CSCO), Intel (INTC) or Microsoft (MSFT) on the Nasdaq, or even the brand-name Internet stocks like Yahoo (YHOO) or Amazon.com (AMZN), the market showed no mercy.
For his part, Mr. Berry could care less.
"Words can't describe how bearish I am," says the analyst. "This is the real thing, and while you're at it short some Coke (KO). Get it?"
Why is it always Coca-Cola?
redherring.com
I hope your prediction is right Ray.
Regards, Jeff |