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Today's
Market WrapUp 02.13.2002 Mon
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Puplava Archive
Pro Forma Economics?
BY
JAMES J. PUPLAVA, CFP
First we have had
to deal with pro forma earnings. This meant learning to interpret what a
person's definition of “earnings” meant. We have now learned that
earnings can mean whatever a company or the media want them to mean. Just
as we have political spin, we now have the pervasive practice of financial
spin. Most of the time the spin deals with the earnings numbers, but it
has slowly been creeping into the economic reports as well. Today was a
good example of that practice with the government reporting that retail
sales fell last month. The Commerce Department reported retail sales fell
last month by 0.2%. However, if we exclude sales for automobiles and car
parts, which fell sharply despite incentives, retail sales rose 1.2%.
Leave it to Wall Street, which has grown accustomed with pro forma
earnings, to go with the pro forma economic numbers. In
other words, by excluding and taking out of the report those
elements that were bad (decline in auto sales), retail sales actually went
up. No matter how they finagle the facts, actual sales were down.
This new economic
reporting is a lot like the way earnings are reported by the financial
media and hyped by Wall Street. By taking out write-offs, big expenses and
big bath charges or investment losses, earnings were actually up. So we
now have pro forma economic reports. Today,
if the numbers don’t look good, take out what doesn’t look good and
rearrange the report to fit the spin. During the fourth quarter when auto
sales rose due to zero-percent financing, we counted auto sales in retail
reports because they made the numbers look good. Now when auto sales go
down, we remove them from the report to make retail sales look better.
That way we always have reports that portray a sunny disposition for the
financial markets.
Today's Truth is
"Go Ahead, Pick Your Version"
I’ve included three versions from today’s financial press to
illustrate how Wall Street and the financial media spin the headlines.
CNNMONEY’s headline was “U.S.
Retail sales Dip” which was the true headline. Bloomberg went with
“U.S.
Economy: Retail Sales Excluding Autos Rose 1.2%”, a partial spin by
emphasizing the positive aspects of the report. CBS.MarketWatch went with
”Jan.
Retail Sales Ex-Autos Soar 1.2 %”. Although on their web site, the
title was “January’s
Jump”. The impression was that the economic numbers were getting
better because retail sales were picking up even though auto sales,
despite incentives actually fell. So we now have economic numbers that
leave out vital but disturbing news so that investors always get a great
picture to look at. It is similar to a weather forecaster in Arizona who
always talks about nothing but sunny skies.
Conservatism Lost -
Ratings Found
In another example in this bias in reporting, Barron’s, the
weekly publication of The Wall Street Journal is now using pro
forma numbers for the major indexes in its calculation of the Price
Earnings ratio and earnings yield number for the three major indexes: the
Dow, S&P 500, and the Nasdaq. In that way. the P/E multiples will look
much smaller and therefore the stock market more attractively priced. The
current P/E multiples for the three major indexes are 28.5X for the Dow,
61.9X for the S&P 500, and a negative P/E for the Nasdaq since there
are no earnings. One wonders how book value will begin to be reported when
it is estimated that companies in the Wilshire Index this year will write
off $1 trillion in impaired assets off their balance sheet this year. Will
we then get pro forma book values?
This maneuvering is
similar to the “New Math” taught in many of our public schools where
2+2 = whatever you want it to be. Whatever makes you happy seems to be the
new mantra. I take that back. Whatever will make investors happy is the
new way of thinking. This reminds
me of the “double speak” in George Orwell’s 1984. Just as companies
have two separate sets of books [for many its 3-4 sets of books, one for
annual reports, one for the IRS, one for analysts, and the real numbers
for management], investors may have to become multilingual to understand
finance and economics.
Ignorance to Some May
Be Bliss
Today I heard a financial network analyst dismiss a story over Global
Crossing and Qwest inflating their sales. Essentially, it was no big deal.
Almost as if it was old news and should be ignored. The rationale for
ignoring it is that the inflated sales number represented a smaller
portion of their sales and therefore was irrelevant. One of the greatest
ways in which earnings can be manipulated is to inflate the sales numbers.
The inflated sales numbers travel directly to the bottom line. So in the
case of Global Crossing and Qwest, the inflated sales numbers may have
been a smaller portion of the top line number, but in reality, they became
a bigger part of the bottom line number. This is just another
example of how spin now controls much of what we know about economics and
the financial markets. Is it any wonder than that
investors, or for that matter the financial markets, would seemed so
surprised when an Enron or Global Crossing appear.
Krispy Kreme -- Coming
Clean on True Calories
Feeling the heat of not disclosing off-balance sheet debt, Krispy
Kreme’s chief operating officer said the company would now add $35
million in financing of a new factory on to its books. Krispy Kreme used
what is often referred to as a synthetic lease to keep the new plant
financing off its books. Many companies, including Kmart, use off-balance
sheet financing in the form of operating leases to keep debt off their
balance sheet. This is a widespread practice that can often make a company
look in better financial shape than what they really are. In Kmart’s
case, they carried $7 billion in operating leases which were kept off
their balance sheet.
Today's Market
Stock indexes rose today after the Commerce
Department reported those better-than-expected retail sales numbers.
Consumer, retail and financial stocks rose on this hypothetical better
news. With earnings news so horrific, Wall Street and their partners in
the media have now turned toward hyping the economic numbers.
Without the spin of lower interest rates and earnings, investors
have no reason to buy stocks. Now the media and Wall Street are giving
them one called a "hypothetically improving economy" and lower
priced pro forma indexes. The major indexes have risen in three out of the
past four days. Analysts at First Call have now increased first quarter
earnings losses to 8.3%. Profits have fallen 23.9% for the fourth
quarter. With no more interest rate cuts on the horizon, and with earnings
being revised downward, it may be one reason why the emphasis is now on
pro forma economic numbers.
Even with the recent
rebound in earnings, the major indexes are all down for the year. Besides
poor earnings prospects, the other major reason is distrust over
accounting irregularities. The SEC said today that it will release rules
to close insider-trading loopholes and require companies to file
comprehensive reports more quickly.
So, What's the ACTUAL
story about H-P?
In other news Hewlett-Packard’s profits rose and sales improved from the
fourth quarter as consumers bought more computers. Net income jumped to
$484 million. However, the company warned that next quarter sales will
fall modestly with expenses little changed. An examination of the
better-than-expected earnings came from a gain recognized for the early
repayment of debt and an adjustment for a change in rules about
recognizing revenue, net income in the year-earlier quarter was actually
$141 million. Actual sales fell 8.2% from $11.4 billion from $12.4
billion. Brocade reported that its first quarter profits fell 64% as sales
of its network switches fell. Maybe
this kind of news is why we need to stick to pro forma accounting and
economics. It will make us all actually feel better.
Investors flocked to
technology stocks on the basis of better numbers from HP and bullish
report coming from Applied Materials. Hardware and chip stocks rose on the
hype. In the broader market, investors bid up shares of retailers
following the pro forma retail report. Other areas doing well were
financial, oil service, and cyclical shares. On the down side were
airlines and biotech stocks. Volume picked up to 1.2 billion on the New
York Exchange and the same on the Nasdaq at 1.6
billion. Breath improved with advancers beating decliners by 20-11 on the
NYSE and by 20-15 on the Nasdaq.
Overseas Market
European stocks rose after a U. S. retail-sales report boosted
optimism that economic growth is reviving in the world's biggest economy.
The Dow Jones Stoxx 50 Index gained 28.60 points, or 0.8%, to 3544.94,
erasing a drop of as much as 0.9% and narrowing its loss in 2002 to 4.4%.
Benchmark indexes rose in seven of Europe's eight biggest share markets.
Asian markets continue to
rally over economic optimism, The Nikkei rose .91% and Hong Kong market
rose nearly 3%.
Treasury Market
Government bonds ended the session with modest losses. The 10-year
Treasury note was off 1/8 to yield 4.995% while the 30-year government
bond erased 1/32 to yield 5.455%.
© Copyright, Jim
Puplava, February 13, 2002
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PFS Group
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