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A sharp sell off in
oil, a massive bond market rally, a Fed pause, or a plunge in the US
dollar that, somehow-someway, neatly unifies global central bank
interests. Yes, there are many events that could spark a massive relief
rally in the stock markets. Yet for all of the potential rallying
points, one point can not be easily dismissed: stocks are not cheap. To
be sure, on a GAAP basis the Dow is trading at 20-times earnings, the
average dividend yield on the S&P 500 is only 1.76%, and the average
REIT is yielding less than the 10-year Treasury bond. As for the forward
looking earnings estimates, they remain simply that: If you know what
the GAAP earnings on the S&P 500 are going to be in the coming
12-months - or if you know what will constitute GAAP earnings 12-months
from now for that matter - you know a great deal more than most.
What is known is that following one of the longest streaks of double
digit profit increases in US history, and even after the most recent
correction, the price to earnings multiple on the S&P 500 is 17.41
GAAP (or more than 18.5 at the core, est.). The long-term average since
1935 is 15.68.
Bargain: Something offered or acquired at a price advantageous to
the buyer.
Unless you conclude the earnings party is set to continue or you are
willing to gamble on expanding market multiples because you feel good,
US stock prices are hardly a bargain at current levels.
How Overvaluation Spread It’s Wings
If you threw a dart at any quality REIT in 2000 and held it
you made big money. If you selected any small cap stock trading near
book value in 2001 and held it you made even bigger money. If you picked
up anything that offered a reliable dividend/distribution in 2002/03 you
made big (and safe) money. But as the easy money days faded away –
yes, making money buying what was unpopular was easy during the
2000-2003 bear – value investors went into hibernation.
Although recent market turbulence has awakened many value investors, it
has done little to promote widespread undervaluation. Rather, since
March 2003 stocks have seen very few corrections as a steady influx of
money has been dispersed into every possible crevice of the markets.
This fanning of capital has tapped any hint of undervaluation, and
convinced nearly everyone that a new bull market has been born
(incidentally, it is difficult to agree that a sustainable bull is in
the works with energy and precious metals two of the industries recently
leading the charge).
Needless to say, for market bears and value investors the last three
years have been exceptionally brutal on the mind, although not
necessarily on returns. The lesson since 2003 has been that even during
secular bear markets stock prices can rally strongly.
Plots Thicken
Lichtenstein has been joined by Pirate Capital and together
they are pushing for change at Angelica. Although a little sloppy on the
balance sheet side of things, if natural gas prices behave Angelica is
worth monitoring on weakness leading into October. A weaker greenback
helps make Hawaiian Macadamia nuts more competitive and Mauna Loa is
making distribution advances. This could bode well for ML Macadamia
Orchards LP in the long-term. Sturm, Ruger & Co., a potential
turnaround candidate, may not necessarily be negatively impacted by
slumping US economy. Rather, take away a few of the company’s
smaller private competitors and rid the company of its casting business
segment and RGR could perform well. Lack of growth doesn’t take
away from the fact that TC Pipelines remains a yield target on weakness
(be aware of the unconsolidated balance sheet).
Suffice to say, thanks to recent market weakness these and other
potential undervaluation stories (from the Watch
List) are cropping up on a daily basis. Similar hopes for
falling stock prices have been dashed before, but, to borrow a Wall
Street axiom, this time things really could be different. The US
housing ATM machine is closing down, the threats of peak oil and peak
earnings (especially in tech) are casting an ominous shadow, the US
dollar is threatening to decline in a disorderly manner, and liquidity
is getting tighter. If this coalescence of negative forces were
not enough, the bond market is no longer paying attention to stock
market weakness, precious metals are not convinced that inflation and/or
a financial crisis can be avoided, and the biggest carry trade of
all-time (Yen) is threatening to shut.
Decline Already!
Volatility in the global financial markets can oftentimes
presage a financial crisis. nd while another LTCM or Asian-style
crisis would not be welcomed news to the majority of investors, it would
serve to speed up the purging process in the markets and stimulate
bargain hunters. It is always a good idea for the bargain hunter to be
prepared for the possibility of a sharp decline.
Failing an unexpected financial crisis, it may be prudent to stay cash
heavy until fund redemptions, economic recession, and/or more attractive
valuations arrive. While you wait research and be ready to invest in
companies you understand and believe will be successful in the
long-term. Two big caps with a global reach worth consideration are
Microsoft and Coca-Cola. Although not screaming undervaluation on any
level, a lot of shareholders have watched MSFT and KO shares do
absolutely nothing for six and nine years respectively. Prices could
become attractive if these investors start throwing in the towel.
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In short, another month like May and the stock stories and large cap
losers could be worth pecking at. Then again, another month or two like
May and some real bargains may finally arrive. Given that the US
consumer has not had to tighten their purse strings for 15-years, no one
can be certain how ugly things will get for the US economy and financial
markets. What can be said is that with no longer-term market worries as
yet resolved, May 2006 is unlikely to mark any type of bottom for the
markets.


© 2006 Brady Willett
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