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AGGRESSIVELY THROWING
CAUTION TO THE WIND
by Brady Willett
FallStreet.com
October 6, 2006
Some
steadfast bears are reiterating that the U.S. stock markets are
rigged, that the Dow is only making new highs because of timely
component changes, and that any new highs in stocks are
insignificant when adjusted for inflation. Before joining in the
fun, it should, at minimum, be conceded that bearish forecasts
have not gone according to plan. Rather, nearly 7-years
after the market bust began the combined value of all U.S. stocks
hit an new all-time high last week and the Dow is closing at
record highs this week. Those that have cried wolf since 2000
claiming a repeat of 1990s Japan could be in the offing, myself
included, were mistaken.
With that out of the way, here is why the Dow is rising even as
the U.S. economy shows signs of slowing down: liquidity.
But how can the equity markets continue to find more liquidity
when the yield curve is inverted and the Fed just finished hiking
interest rates for the 17th time in a row? Here is how:
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“…that
too much money has floated assets that might otherwise be
shipwrecked is not really in
question. Which asset class will benefit when one or more asset
classes go bust is…welcome to the financial world where hedge
funds are an ever widening force, and where central banks
inadvertently condone widespread speculation via telegraphed rate
movements.”
2Q06 Wish List
So, some money previously reserved for wild real estate activities
is riding high in blue chips, hedge funds have de-leveraged
commodity positions to scoop up underperforming (compared to small
caps) large caps, and some stubborn bears that tried to time the
markets short have turned into buyers to cover. Are these the only
reasons why U.S. stocks are rallying? Not exactly – there have
been some other drivers as well:
U.S. corporate bonds just capped off their biggest gain since
the second quarter of 2003, S&P says corporate defaults hit a
record low of 1.44% in August, and, on average corporate balance
sheets are as sturdy as they have been in decades.
I don’t necessarily buy into the idea that the corporate
debt markets are behaving rationally, or that default rates are at
not about to spike higher, or that stronger debt/equity readings
mean that corporate America will not suffer crushing blow-ups if
the U.S. economy continues to slow. Nevertheless, with many
markets pricing in the continuation of corporate bliss and,
broadly speaking, corporate balance sheets showing little signs of
stress as the profits-train keeps climbing, it is difficult to cry
wolf with a loud and timely voice.
Yes, people in America still treat potentially risky investment
instruments as a savings account, and the money managers in
control of these accounts still chase performance irregardless of
valuation concerns. But no, it is not worth screaming that
as the U.S. economy continues to slow the perfectly priced
financial markets are doing little more than walking down the
plank. Why not warn investors of the troubles ahead?
Because, quite frankly, no one wants to listen: those that cry
wolf be damned - a repeat of 1990s Japan didn’t happen!
In short, the unspoken hope is that stock market delusions can,
somehow someway, dictate tomorrow’s economic reality. This
dynamic worked well for a brief period during the late
1990s…until it didn’t. And yes, a major stock market bust from
March 2000 to October 2002 did happen.

© 2006 Brady Willett
Editorial Archive

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FallStreet.com
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