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From: | "Peter" <pmaiden@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Sun, 8 Jul 2001 19:39:07 +1200 |
Gerry - I was
going to give the 'heroic' US consumer a holiday this week and not update his
efforts due to July 4th activities and all that sort of
stuff..
However seeing you
asked.....
I am afraid that the 'heroic' US
consumer is losing his battle in keeping the US out of recession. Even sadder is
that 114,000 lost their jobs in June. Who's next they keep asking
themselves.
In my opinion it is only what
defines a recession that has avoided the US saying they are actually in
recession.
I am convinced that this is now the
case. The poor presenters on CNN and CNBC this morning were really down and out.
Even the most optimistic of guests were worried. Nothing to suggest good times
for a while and a declining sharemarket.
A sharemarket where the S&P
500 is at a P/E ratio of 28. According to TheStreet.com the Nasdaq 100 index has
a market-cap weighted price-to-earnings ratio of 102.
And that is after the prices have
come down lately - except the earnings keep coming down as well.
Even Warren
Buffett agrees. At the latest Berkshire Hathaway meeting, Warren sounded a
warning that he thought stock prices were too high. "The probability of
us achieving 15% growth in earnings over an extended period of years is so
close to zero it's not worth calculating," said Buffett. "Nor
do we think any large company in the United States is likely to (post such
growth)." Of the Fortune 500 firms, he added, only two or three might
be about to sustain 15% annual growth rates for an extended period.
"Fifteen percent (return on stock investments) is a dream world,"
he warned
So what
happens to an overvalued US sharemarket in recessionary
times?
Professor Robert Shiller in his book,
Irrational Exuberance, says that investors have never shown a profit
after 10 years once a sharemarket with high P/E ratio's starts correcting.
Then somebody on dailyreckoning.com
said the other day that stock markets drop an average of 43% during recessions.
History has shown that the never has a market bottomed at a P/E ratio of 28
which is nearly 100% ABOVE average levels. If we were to get back to the
historic average of 15, we would see the S&P 500 close to 600. They would be
surprised if a bear market ever stopped at the historic averages -usually they
blow right past them.
Where to for
the NZ sharemarket? Over time we tend to follow the world so it is very likely
there will be a weak (if not declining) NZ sharemarket for the rest of the year.
Even though the NZSE40 has a PE of about 19 on forecast earnings I would say
that these earnings forecast are pretty optimistic - are analysts in NZ much
different from their US counterparts?
Ask yourself the following question.
Which will affect your lifestyle more: not gaining 10% in your portfolio or
losing 30%?
Pass up on all overpriced
stocks.
DR posted this from a newsletter he gets - "That means you have to be much more alert than in easier markets - the buy and hold strategy is unlikely to work - and you have to adopt a shorter term trading mentality that looks to ride such long term rising trends as are still available but also attempts to trade successfully within those trends and the more common sideways ones." DR -maybe whoever wrote that newsletter has the right strategy. Peter
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