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Storm Watch Update |
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Stocks are cheap and it's time to buy! On Wall Street, the mantra has always been, "It is a good time to be buying." Everything from the standard cliché of “Own stocks for the long-run.” and “Rate cuts will bring a second-half recovery.” to “Stocks are a bargain.” are touted to the investment masses to keep them fully invested. Since the beginning of the year (and the standard argument for the last three years running) we've heard that there will be a second-half recovery. Now that this scenario has been dismissed, the new mantra is “Stocks are cheap.” The summer rally was predicated on the premise of the Fed lowering interest rates. They didn't. The Fed will lower rates during the next financial crisis. And believe me, there are many potential crises in the wings. Today the Fed confronts many challenges: falling stock prices, a slumping US economy, financial derivatives, Latin American debt defaults, an upcoming war, and trouble brewing in the banking and lending sector. Government regulators are now monitoring Fannie Mae’s portfolio daily rather than monthly. So, the Fed will keep its last remaining bullets for the next crisis when it emerges. After they fire off the next round of interest rate cuts, the next step could well be one of desperation. If rate cuts don’t do the trick, the FOMC would be forced to take drastic measures which might include lowering bank reserves or monetizing debt and other financial assets such as is being done in Japan. Are Stocks Cheap? Even with this knowledge of looming crises, Wall Street and the media are reverting to their “stocks are cheap” mantra. On what basis are stocks cheap? If we take standard measures of value: dividend yields, price/earnings ratios, and price/book-value ratios, this market is still grossly over-valued. On what argument does the “stocks are cheap” mantra rest? Well, investors are actually given several compelling arguments. Stock prices have fallen three-years in a row, so they are bound to rally is one reason. Another is that the major indexes have fallen so much, they are now a bargain. They do have a point. The major indexes have dropped significantly as shown below.
On the basis of this rationale, stocks are most certainly cheaper today than they were at the peak of the bull market in 2000. The fact that the NASDAQ has lost over 76%, however, does not make it cheap. Why? The NASDAQ doesn't have earnings. Companies that make up the Index are still losing money. The largest companies in the index, the NASDAQ 100 are currently selling at 37 times earnings, hardly a compelling bargain.
The table below taken from last weekend’s Barron’s shows the standard measures of value for the Dow and the S&P 500.
Stocks AREN'T Cheap .... Yet Questionable Earnings -
Questionable Bottom Line Problematic Fed Model
The simple fact is that after a boom and a bubble bursts, it can take years before markets recover as shown in this graph from Barron’s below.
Forecasted Earnings
Unreliable "In forty-four years of Wall Street experience and study I have never seen dependable calculations made about common-stock values, or related investment policies that went beyond simple arithmetic or the most elementary algebra. Whenever calculus is brought in, or higher algebra, you could take it as a warning signal that the operator was trying to substitute theory for experience, and usually also to give to speculation the deceptive guise of investment.” 1 In fact, towards the end of his 82-year life, Graham considered his last book “The Intelligent Investor” to be more useful to investors than his acclaimed book “Security Analysis” written in 1934. Security Analysis became the bible of the securities industry. Much of the analytical techniques used today were based on Graham’s work back in 1934. Yet towards the end of his life and career, Graham had simplified his knowledge and work into “The Intelligent Investor” which he felt would be more useful to security analysts. In the last and fourth edition to the book, Graham’s famous student, Warren Buffett, wrote the preface to the book. Buffett remarks, “I read the first edition of this book in 1950 when I was nineteen. I thought then it was the best book about investing ever written. I still think it is.” 2 A Margin of Safety What Graham gave investors was a framework for making investment decisions. He developed his now famous concept of “Margin of Safety.” Graham felt that stocks should be bought like groceries and not like perfume. Stocks should be purchased for less than they were worth. This discount to net worth gave investors their margin of safety. Measures such as dividend yield, price/book ratio and price/earnings ratios were the yardsticks used to measure value. By buying things cheaply, an investor could be expected to achieve better returns and avoid costly mistakes. Investment decisions based on value didn’t mean that investors could avoid all risks or that their investments would not fluctuate. What Graham hoped is that by following value principles, investors would experience less risk in their portfolios and over time, achieve superior returns. The best investment managers of the last century, from Warren Buffett and John Neff to Bill Miller, have all followed or built their success on many of Graham's value principles. With Graham’s principles of value in mind, let's look at today's stock market in terms of price/earnings ratios, dividend yield, and price/book-value ratios to determine whether stocks are cheap. I’m going to ignore all of the hype of pro forma estimates for this year or next year as irrelevant. Wall Street earnings estimates are not based on GAAP earnings and even if they were, their track record for forecasting profits has been dismal. These are the same people who have been forecasting a second-half recovery for the last three years. These are the same people who downgraded Enron after it collapsed and the same people that recommended investors buy; while internally they were saying, "Sell." The difficulty of forecasting earnings has already been covered. What we can work with is the here and now and how things really are today. Value Principle #1 Price/Earnings Ratio To begin with, price/earnings ratios are still historically high -- as high if not higher than they were in 1929. A current price-earnings multiple of 22 on the Dow, 33 on the S&P 500, and 37 on the NASDAQ 100 (the NASDAQ has no P/E ratio since it has negative earnings) would hardly be considered a bargain. Historically, the major stock indexes have sold at 12-14 times earnings throughout the last century. At bear market bottoms, they have gotten as low as 7-10 times earnings. In the last decade investors were told that the US economy and financial markets were experiencing a new paradigm. This new paradigm theory was used to justify the mania in stock prices. Investors who believed in this nonsense have now paid a painful price in losses for ever believing the cliché, “This time it is different." What investors are now finding is that there never was a “new era.” The “new era" earnings long hailed as justification for higher stock prices was the product of creative accounting, financial engineering, and deceit on the part of many companies. This deceit and bogus fiction is now being investigated. Each week we get new revelations of one company after another that is restating revenues, earnings or both as political and legal pressure is put on companies to come clean. Wall Street firms are also under investigation for their conflicts of interest and their tainted calls on many of their stock recommendations. Jiggering the "E"
(Earnings) I mentioned earlier that the major indexes were selling at high historical P/E ratios when compared to markets in the past. However, you often hear many analysts mention that companies are cheap based on pro forma projections. It might be useful to examine the income statement taken from an earlier Storm Update, Let the 2002 Goodwill Games Begin! below.
The number often quoted when referring to pro forma numbers could be any of the five asterisk numbers listed in the table on the left. Essentially, there are now five variations of earnings, so you never know if what you hear is the real number. The real number is contained in the 10-Q report filed with the SEC 45 days after the earnings press conference. P/E Reciprocal: The Earnings Yield The real issue here is the quality of earnings and what high P/E multiples really mean. The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is the earnings yield. It converts the P/E multiple into a percentage return. If we take the current P/E on the three major averages, the Dow is offering investors a 4.6% return. The S&P 500 is offering a return of 3% and the Nasdaq 100 earnings yield is 2.7%. These returns are not commensurate with the risk involved in investing in today’s volatile and high-risk market. There is hardly any room for a risk premium in these returns and that is what is missing from today’s P/E numbers. There are no compensatory returns being offered for poor earnings quality, economic and financial risks, or geopolitical risks. What we can safely assume in looking at today’s markets is that stocks aren’t cheap, contrary to what you are now being told. From a value investing point of view, since stocks aren’t cheap, this bear market has a long way to go before they become bargains again. Value Principle #2 The Dividend Yield
Therefore, they offered a higher return to compensate for that risk. This is not the case today as illustrated in this graph. Today’s yield of 2.26% on the Dow, 1.77% on the S&P 500, and 0.11% on the NASDAQ 100 means an investor has to pay $44 for every $1 dollar he receives on the Dow, $56 for every dollar on the S&P 500, and $900 for every dollar received on the NASDAQ. The importance of dividends can’t be overestimated. In their book Triumph of the Optimists, Elroy Dimson, Paul Marsh, and Mike Staunton documented the superior returns of dividends. Dividends are a critical element in the long run gains achieved in investment portfolios in accumulating wealth. “Over the course of the last 101 years, a portfolio of US equities with dividends reinvested would have grown to 85 times the value it would have attained if dividends had been squandered.” 3 The authors document that dividend yields as shown in the graph above are at a 101 year low. Various reasons have been given for this occurrence noted as the ubiquitous explosion of smaller companies (which seldom pay dividends), the exploding IPO market in the 90’s stock market bubble and stock buybacks. You often hear the reason dividends are so low is because companies choose to invest profits to expand the business instead of paying shareholders in the form of a dividend. This may have been true, but the next question should be, How well did management reinvest your money? Given the amount of impaired risk charges that will be taken, estimated to be $1 trillion over this and next year, shareholders would have been better off receiving the dividends. Instead, profits were squandered in mergers, stock buybacks and option schemes for top executives that fleeced the shareholders. This practice still goes on today. Dividends Can't Be Fudged Backed by Reality Bankable Returns Useful Market Monitor In my opinion, we are destined to travel that road again as governments burn their currency. The deflation that is coming will occur in the investment markets with stocks and bonds, in real estate and with credit-related consumer goods such as autos and other big ticket items and luxury goods. Elsewhere, we will experience inflation. Deflation in asset prices as it pertains to stocks will mean lower prices and higher dividend yields. In relation to the current bond market bubble, yes, I said "bubble," it will mean higher interest rates. With a current dividend of $187.46 on the Dow and $15.75 for the S&P 500, this bear market has much further to travel before we get to fair value, much less undervalue. The following table illustrates hypothetical values for both major indexes assuming, and that is a big if, the current dividend holds.
The value to the right reflects where the index would have to fall in order to get to undervalue. When I began my career, the average stock carried a dividend yield of 7-8%. As stock prices continue to fall in the continuation of a bear market, equity risk premiums should rise along with dividend yields as investors price-in greater risks for owning stocks. I believe the numbers reflected above will become more realistic as risk levels rise along with inflation and interest rates. The second phase of this bear market should take us to fair value and below for both the Dow and the S&P 500. Value Principle #4 Price-to-Book Ratio and Price-to-Sales Ratio The final measure of value is the price-to-book ratio. Book value is the same as the net asset value of a company. It is computed by taking the company’s total assets and subtracting current and long-term liabilities, intangible assets such as goodwill and equity issues with a prior claim. Book value is the bare bones value of a company. It is what a company would be worth if it was liquidated. Book value was one of Ben Graham’s favorite valuation yardsticks used to find value in the stock market. One of Graham’s favorite rewards criteria (listed in appendix) was to find companies whose stock price was selling at two-thirds of tangible book value per share. This figure can easily found in Value Line. Graham advised investors to focus their attention on buying stocks at less than their book value. It was part of his margin of safety principle. As the graph of book value (or Price/Book) shows, the stock market is still overpriced. Most shares sell at 3-4 times book value. Very few high quality companies sell at discounts to book value. The good news is that this list keeps growing as stock prices continue to fall. Another measure of value is price-to-sales, which measures how many times sales a stock is selling for. This measure is falling, but still remains high.
Source: Sharefin www.sharelynx.net We're Still in a Stock Market Bubble If we take all of the standard measures of value of P/E multiples, price-to-book ratios, dividend yield and price-to-sales ratios, this market is hardly a bargain. It is only a bargain if you ignore standard measures of value and other tried and true investment principles. Stocks are cheap only if you think there are other idiots out there willing to pay you even a higher price for the stock you just bought. This “Greater Fool Theory” is what led investors to overpay for tech and Internet stocks based on new valuation measures that were manufactured by Wall Street to pitch overpriced stocks to ignorant investors. Outside of energy, food, tobacco, maritime, power producers, semiconductors, drug, utilities, and metals & mining, there are very few companies that offer value. In a recent screen I did of the Value Line Index, I found only 20 candidates out of 1700 that meet all five of my valuation measures. That is up from only 7 just four months ago. Things are improving, but we aren’t there yet. We still need a washout, gut wrenching, sell-off period to bring stock prices down to fair value. When Do We Bottom Out? When your investment club requires fellow members to bring a brown bag to meetings when you discuss the portfolio, you will know we’re close. When your neighbor tells you he or she bailed out of their mutual funds, and when mutual fund liquidations start making front page news, we will be getting closer. That will mean the second phase of this bear market will be close to over. Then we will get a recovery. Stock prices will rally, as they did during 1933-34, when the government and the Fed pulled out all stops to rescue the markets and the economy. Deflation in asset values scare governments. It means unhappy voters and less tax revenues as declining asset values follow a declining economy. Their efforts will give us a temporary reprieve, but in the end the market will have its way. It has always been so. In the end, the markets always win despite the best efforts of government to thwart it. Investors should stay out of stocks other than necessities and issues that provide value. That value should be based on the measures discussed above. If you don’t understand fundamental investment value, I would recommend reading Graham’s “The Intelligent Investor.” This book belongs in every investor’s library. I have made it a habit to read it once a year. It reminds me of what is essential and it provides an intellectual framework for investing. It has enabled me to avoid most of the storms over the last decade and especially the last three years. You can be a good chart reader, but if you don’t understand the basic fundamentals of the financial markets, those charts won’t warn you of a sudden tsunami, white squall or a ten-sigma event. If they could, LTCM would still be a large hedge fund. The stock market bubble of the last century is still with us. The trouble is... most investors and professionals just don't see it. ~ JP BENJAMIN GRAHAM'S STOCK SELECTION CRITERIA REWARD
CRITERIA RISK
CRITERIA Endnotes 1 Graham, Benjamin,
The
Intelligent Investor: A Book of Practical Counsel, Harper Collins, 1985, p.
321.
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