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NOLTE NOTES
Sublime to
Sub-prime
by Paul J.
Nolte, CFA
July 24, 2007
The
market focus has begun to move from the sublime to sub-prime. Housing
was to be well contained, earnings growth (although slowing) was to
march inexorably higher and investors mergers and acquisitions were
going to (eventually!) remove every stock from the markets. Then Friday
happened. Earnings warnings from Caterpillar and a miss by internet
giant Google cast doubt about the overall strength of earnings for the
quarter. A combination of sub-prime worries (it is not contained, may
permanently impair Bear Sterns etc) and yet another hiking of interest
rates by China served notice to the markets that all is not well at the
corner of Wall & Broad. While earnings from the financial sector
were decent, the worries over the effect of sub-prime lending and the
disappearance of two of Bear Sterns hedge funds have many firms
increasing loan loss reserves and talking down next quarter’s
earnings. The first pass at economic growth for the second quarter will
be released this week and is not likely to be market moving unless it
wildly misses the current estimates of roughly 3%. A focus in the report
will be the inflation component, however given the relatively benign
reports on both consumer and producer prices last week; we would expect
confirmation of modest inflation.
The
big question after Friday’s decline – did the market breakout of the
two-month trading range or merely fake out investors into believing a
new leg up is ahead? Comparing the “breakout” day with Friday might
give a bit of insight. The number of declining stocks on Friday was
higher than the advancing stocks on 7/12, total volume was higher on
Friday and too the total declining volume was a higher multiple of
advancing volume than was advancing over declining on 7/12. So, it looks
on paper as though Friday’s decline trumps the breakout day by most
technical measures, meaning that we would define the breakout as nothing
more than a fake out and the next likely test will be the bottom of the
range 2-3% below Friday’s close. If indeed that test is a failure,
then the characteristic of the market will have changed and we will, at
that time, begin moving more to the sidelines. What we are seeing over
the past couple of months is a shift in the market participants, from
small cap and even value stocks toward large cap and growth. Depending
upon how the markets unfold over the next couple of weeks, we too will
shift more to a large cap growth strategy for the first time in seven
years.
The
sub-prime “issue” has been a benefit to the treasury market, as
investors begin to shun higher risk investments and move to the safety
of the treasury markets. As a result, the 10-year bond broke the 5%
level after touching 5.25% just a few short weeks ago. The curve that
was once steepening, indicating a recovering economy, has once again
begun to flatten, as short-term bonds are less than 10 basis points
(100ths of a percentage point) away from those of the 30 year bond.
However, all the excitement in the bond market has done little for our
model, as it remains at a “2” reading (still negative) indicating
that rates are still likely to rise in the future. The testimony from
Chairman Bernanke also indicated that the Fed is not likely to be active
in the yield market and will leave interest rates right where they are
for the foreseeable future.

© 2007 Paul J. Nolte, CFA
Editorial
Archive
The
opinions expressed in the Investment Newsletter are those of the author
and are based upon information that is believed to be accurate and
reliable, but are opinions and do not constitute a guarantee of present
or future financial market conditions.
CONTACT
INFORMATION Paul J. Nolte, CFA
Director Investments
Hinsdale Associates
630-325-7100
Email
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