Interesting reading from unknown source:
Bigger maybe better since we are seeing large cap companies, with relatively low revenue growth, merge or acquire. In the last week we saw America On Line announce their plans to buy Netscape for $4.3 billion, Tyco buying out AMP for $11 billion, International Paper merging with Union Camp in a $5 billion deal, Deutsche Bank merging with Bankers Trust for $9.7 billion in cash, Provident merging with Unum valued at $5.2 billion, and the big block-buster of Exxon getting close to an offer to buy-out/merge with Mobil at a potential value of $80 billion. Believe it or not, this is only a few of the mergers announced last week. Revenues have stalled, expenses have escalated, and during the 3rd quarter earnings were down 6.2% versus a year ago, for the steepest earnings decline since 1989.
Each time we enter merger mania, creating larger companies, it allows the survivor to announce lay-offs of the overlapping employees, and add a few more computers who don't strike or require fringe benefits. Where will it end?? Beats me, but every round has produced huge employee lay-off announcements. In the last 3 months, we have seen the highest number of lay-off announcements since the 1991-93 economic trough.
The stock market has rewarded this process, with the bigger stocks soaring. During the latest week the large-cap dominated NASDAQ reached a new all-time record high. This comes on the heels of a panic decline 2 months ago.
It is mind-boggling to witness the explosion of money supply in the last three months alone. These statistics may not mean too much to you when you see them, but for the last one year the M2 aggregate of money supply has increased by 8.5%. If you annualize the growth in this aggregate for the last 13 weeks, you find that number growing at 14%. This is occurring with the nominal Gross Domestic Product growing at only slightly above 4%. This condition is appropriately called flooding. It is this flooding that has propelled the Dow Industrials, the S & P 500, and now the NASDAQ composite to move to new all-time record highs, with little regard it seems about over-valuation. For example, the latest price to earnings ratio of the S & P 500 has moved to 31.29. If anyone had predicted such a lofty level two years ago, they would have been laughed out of the room. Even the Valuation composite, which adjusts the P/E and price to cash flow ratio for inflation, is at the highest valuation in history--by far. But now it seems to be an accepted fact by the herd.
In the area of economic activity, if there is more money than can be immediately applied, it floods over into financial instruments. For two months in a row, the personal savings rate has dropped into negative territory. Of course this is a very faulty calculation in one sense, because it does not account for any capital gains achieved by the investor. But in another sense, it is very revealing. It is telling the Federal Reserve, and anyone else who will listen how vital it is to the health of the economy to keep stock and bond prices up. With the huge amount of mortgage refinancings, it is also important to keep the real estate markets healthy. We believe that future statistics will reveal the panic of the August decline in stocks caused a massive amount of selling of long-held stock positions by the public investor, with huge capital gains being realized. This is partly confirmed by the huge amount of assets that have moved into money market mutual funds. Last week, during only four days, there was $9.83 billion stashed away in money market funds. This was not just a 1-week phenomenon either. So far this year, there has been a total of $170 billion added to these funds, with $100 billion of that in the last three months of panic.
In addition to this, we certainly have seen that the very low bond yields prompted mortgage refinancings at record levels. We wouldn't be surprised if many of those refinancings were not for a slightly larger amount of money than the previous mortgage, giving a little extra bounty for the consumer to spend.
And they certainly have spent. According to the latest statistics, and the rush of Christmas traffic, the US consumer is doing its part to save the world's economies. We believe the health of the US economy, and consequently the world, is almost totally a result of the wealth effect. By the way, if we are right, this same phenomena will make the US tax receipts from those capital gains grow substantially as US 1998 taxes are paid, which could easily open the door for vital tax cuts to be enacted in 1999 as Clinton greases the skids for Gore's attempt into the White House.
Like a lot of other things in life, however, the above set of conditions has its good side, and its bad. The immediate gratification has certainly taken away most of the bruises from the panic decline in August. But the bad part is that it has not cured the root problem. We had to make a major adjustment in our year-ahead outlook last week as the huge input of money supply altered the course of events. We believed that the stage was being set for a period of about 18 months when the US Federal Reserve would be forced through several different financial panics to drastically lower "real" interest rates to the healthy level of 2%. Certainly, they have brought the nominal fed funds rate down from the 5 1/2% to today's 4 3/4%, but with the GDP deflator dropping to a 0.9%, the "real" rate is still almost 4% above inflation. At this level, it still doesn't encourage healthy economic expansion, or financing of new start-up growth opportunities.
At the same time, China, in its own way has done the same thing as our Fed, but even more potentially devastating. They have thrown money that they don't have at massive new infrastructure building to try to offset the natural economic weakness. Japan has also finally gotten the message, as they are headed down another onslaught of deficit spending, using their citizen's savings as a forced source of funds. Their new "flooding" of the system is the same old solution that they have been using for the last 10 years, and once again, we do not expect it to be a life-saving experience. But with all this money sloshing through the system, it is like putting the patient on a breathing machine. It says breath whether you want to or not. Nobody is letting anyone die a natural death. So instead of expecting a start and stop economy as we had painted in our early September analysis, the artificial resuscitation has made the breathing go back to look normal. But somewhere out there, the patient will have to come off the machine, and the longer it stays on it, the more the patient will depend upon it.
As a side note, Greenspan has practiced his flooding the system already once in his tenure. After the 1987 crash, he flooded the system, and the much anticipated economic slow-down did not occur. But by May of 1988, he started to put the brakes on again, which led eventually to the 1990 recession. We wouldn't be surprised to see May, 1999 return to that discipline again. The one big difference this time will be the relative valuation between the two periods.
Lawrence Lindsey, a former Fed Governor, is interviewed in Barron's this week. His comments are outstanding, and he states that the current economic expansion is the most unbalanced in the US since at least the 1920's. You can certainly see that in the statistics. For example, Japan's economy is obviously terrible, and their highly touted new Finance Minister who pushed through some of the latest reform suggestions is now quitting his job. Russia is collapsing, and in Latin America you find key countries like Argentina with their industrial production plunging at a 17% rate. Brazil's real GDP is declining at a 6% rate, and in relatively healthy Mexico, we are seeing auto sales down 27.4% in October. Now we see European countries, where exports are higher than imports, start to sag based upon this world weakness. Lawrence Lindsey expects a Euro banking crisis in 1999.
The unbalance is also very obvious by breaking down the US economy. While the service sector is still enjoying prosperity, and their workers are seeing nominal wages increase at a 9.1% annual rate, the manufacturing wages advancing at a much more subdued rate of 3.6%, while farmer's income is plummeting this year down 32%.
The best barometer to measure all this unbalanced economic activity is the price of commodities. Every index shows major declines, and last week, the price of aluminum and copper took another step backward. So as we sit here in the warmth of the US, the rest of the world is suffering badly, and highly dependent on exports to the US.
At the same time, almost every index has made some kind of revealing upside break-out in the last three weeks. Technically, these break-outs predict a further move up. It makes for a very exciting projection, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average now giving off a 10,000 target projection in the months ahead. But instead of the fed funds rate falling further as we had expected in the 3 steps up and 2 1/2 steps down in our original expectation, in today's current euphoria, the Fed will be hard-pressed to keep the money flowing in the months ahead, as it has done in the panic months behind. We now do not expect any more cuts in the fed funds rate until this euphoria has had a chance to run its course, and the financial markets return to reality.
There is no doubt that market psychology is bubbling. For example, bullish advisory service sentiment moved up to 57.9% last week. The weekly equity put/call ratio dropped to 37%. The 3-week average of this put/call ratio dropped 8% under its 39-week moving average. As a result, our psychology composite is losing a little of the power that eventually scared the Fed into cutting rates. Eventually, now, we expect a return in the months ahead to the "herd" becoming worried about a Federal Reserve that might have to tighten again. But that is still a few months away. Our guesstimate is that the euphoria and this bull-market will remain intact until the April seasonal strength runs its course.
We haven't changed our expectations of the new healthy conditions, but only postponed it until a later date, when reality is accepted, and the patient is made to breathe on its own.
But instead of expecting a healthy bout of pain in the months ahead, with each panic attack prompting another interest rate cut, we now expect a blow-off in the market that will continue until our asset allocation falls into negative territory. In our opinion, the stock market is highly dependent upon the bond market. Until bonds, and the monetary composite drops into negative territory, the optimistic bubble will just continue to grow and grow. The first hint that we receive will come from the dollar getting hot again, and then Mr. Greenspan will dust off one of his "irrational exuberance" speeches.
But so far, so good. Stay in there with the bullish trend, but avoid the temptation to chase the speculative favorites. |