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Storm Watch Update |
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The reason for this optimism is historically low interest rates, tax cuts, firming business sentiment and improving economic numbers. In the latest survey of Wall Street pros, very few bears walk the Street. There may be a few closet bears, but if they exist, they are keeping remarkably quiet about their views. One of the few bears out there is Merrill’s Richard Bernstein. Bernstein believes that reported earnings aren’t what they are cracked up to be, a view that this author shares and will illustrate in just a few moments. "No Problem" Market Priced for Perfection Currently the bulls are firmly in charge of the markets and John Q. has been drawn back into stocks. Public sentiment at all levels is decidedly bullish. It doesn’t matter what negative events transpire as the market just seems to shrug them off. Interest rates rise sharply—no problem. Violence in the Middle East and in Iraq—no problem. Aggressive earnings forecast and the return of shady to corporate accounting—no problem. The continuing saga of financial scandals is completely ignored as if they don’t exist. Not a week goes by without another scandal surfacing. This is a no problem stock market priced for perfection. On the surface it all looks perfect. In my view it is the set up for The Perfect Financial Storm. I believe—both fundamentally and technically—that the markets are being set up for distribution.
Digging Below The Surface Stocks have risen this year on the basis that the economy and earnings are improving. This makes sense on the surface. If the economy is getting stronger, then profits would be expected to rise along with improving economic conditions. Yet we see that the employment rate remains high as businesses continue to shed jobs each month, unemployment claims hover over 400,000 typical of a recession, and capital spending by business along with business sentiment remains weak. The reason for this apparent anomaly between an economy that continues to shed jobs with the lack of capex spending by business and a rising stock market is all due to statistical illusions and creative accounting. In real terms, there has been very little improvement in the economy or corporate profits. Things have gotten better, but not to the extent that would justify today’s overly optimistic valuations for stocks. The simple truth is that economic growth is overstated along with productivity, unemployment is underreported, inflation is running much higher than official estimates and profits are grossly overstated. I begin my case for distribution with the economy. Defense
Spending Pumped GDP Statistical
Massaging Kurt Richebächer has done a great job of tracking these statistical anomalies in his monthly newsletter, The Richebächer Letter. According to his recent newsletter, real economic growth during the second quarter was only $26 billion, a growth rate of 0.27% or 1.04 annualized.[1] That number is a far cry from the widely reported and revised 3.1% growth rates trumpeted by Wall Street and the financial press. The statistical massaging doesn’t stop with hedonic indexing. The government can inflate the GDP numbers in other ways. For example, GDP is measured in dollars then the government subtracts the inflation numbers to arrive at real economic growth minus inflation. In the first quarter, the annualized inflation rate was 2.4%. Then in the second quarter, the inflation rate miraculously dropped to 0.8%. Does anybody really believe that the inflation rate dropped by two-thirds in one quarter?—a time when oil prices hovered above $30 a barrel for almost the entire quarter, a time when natural gas prices remained stubbornly above $4, when insurance premiums are jumping double digits, and food prices are escalating? By lowering the inflation rate, the government was able to make the GDP numbers look better. Remember, the inflation rate is subtracted from the GDP numbers. A higher inflation rate reduces GDP. Want a higher GDP number? Just lower the inflation rate. This kind of statistical tinkering made the jump in last November and December’s oil and gas prices come in as reduction in energy prices rather than an increase. This is the kind of statistical wizardry that is starting to make U.S. economic numbers as untrustworthy as corporate profits. The smart money doesn’t believe these numbers, nor should you. Government
Fiscal Stimulus and Shortfalls Unfunded
Government Obligations If the general public really knew the real, unfunded story about entitlements, there would be an outcry for reform of the entitlement process. Left uncorrected it is going to bankrupt the federal government by the end of this decade when the baby boom generation crosses over into retirement and begins drawing on and using Social Security and Medicare benefits. Instead of telling the public the truth, our dear public servants have been promising more cookies and lollypops to the voters. The recent debate over a new prescription benefit program is a prime example of this. With both Social Security and Medicare grossly underfunded in regards to future obligations, our elected government servants are promising us even larger entitlements. This is not only irresponsible and fiscally reckless, but is also financially insane. At some point in the not too distant future, there is going to be a fiscal train wreck between government’s insatiable urge to spend money and its ability to raise revenue and print new money. We are not there yet, but that day is getting closer. Employment
Numbers Always Revised Investors will notice this revisionary trend. If they begin to look for these revised numbers each month, they will find them usually buried in the back pages; while the new monthly numbers—which are much lower—become headlines on the front page. There are a few experts such as Martin Weiss of the Safe Money Report who believe that the real unemployment rate is closer to 10%. Weiss points out that the only unemployed workers the government keeps track of are those workers currently receiving unemployment benefits. Workers who lose their job and don’t apply for benefits, workers whose unemployment benefits expire, college students who can’t find a job upon graduation are not counted in the monthly unemployment report.
I don’t expect this picture will improve in the short run especially as corporate America appears to be in the process of transferring much of our highly paid service sector jobs overseas. The financial services sector, one of the few bright spots in this last recession is now in the process of transferring over 20 percent of its workforce overseas from call center employees to highly paid financial analysts. A call center employee costs a company $20-25,000 here in the States compared to $2,500 in India. A high caliber Wall Street analyst commands a salary of $250,000 in New York compared to $25,000 in Bombay. The jobs that have been leaving our shores in manufacturing and now the service sector over this last decade are not coming back. It is one more reason why this recovery will continue to remain a jobless one.
Depreciation
Schedules Changed The bottom line is that there has been very little improvement in the actual operations of most businesses. Outside one-time improvements from layoffs and improvements made from comparisons to previous write downs, (there were a lot of those in Q3 & Q4 of last year) most improvements made to earnings have been achieved by a stroke of a pen by the company accountant. That is why there has been such a wide gulf between GAAP and CRAP earnings and between reported profits and national account profits. What Can We Conclude? 1.
Reported Numbers are Mainly Fictional Getting back to the mystery of the lack of capex spending, the dearth in new jobs on the corporate front and the current record of insider selling, all can be explained by the reality of fictional numbers and the current bubbles that proliferate everywhere in the economy and the financial markets. When a company isn’t experiencing a real improvement in its operating numbers and when the profits it reports to the public are fictional, it is unlikely to spend money on new capital equipment or to hire new workers. You can’t pay for new plant and equipment or pay the salaries of new workers with pro forma profits. New plant and equipment and new workers require real profits and real cash flow from operations.
However, if what you actually see is a tough operating environment of rising labor and raw material costs, rising regulatory burdens and stiff competition from imports, this allows for very little room in pricing power. You know that the profit picture can not improve. One-time adjustments are just that—they are nothing more than a temporary boost. Talk to most corporate execs in every kind of business and they will tell you they can’t raise prices. This lack of pricing power is killing the bottom line. So companies have had to resort to one-time adjustments or to old accounting tricks to meet Wall Street expectations. Brand power isn’t what it used to be. In the Information Age, pricing power has been reduced by the Internet. Pricing power is still out there. It just isn’t as prevalent as it used to be. 3.
Sales Aren't Consistent
The economy is still plagued by a plethora of excesses and imbalances leftover from the 90’s, which have yet to work themselves off. Furthermore, the Fed has been fueling these excesses by its policy of flooding the markets and the economy with liquidity. All that it has managed to do is create additional bubbles in real estate, mortgages, the bond market and consumer consumption. Instead of creating healthy and balanced growth in the economy, it has created more imbalances and bubbles in the financial markets. This will not only prolong the recovery process, but also make it more severe when it inevitably corrects. The risks these imbalances pose to the economy will be covered in next week's Storm Update. 5.
Ok, But Not Robust 6.
Fewer Bubble Options Available There are far too many imbalances and risks out there that threaten the various bubbles the Fed has created. It remains only a question as to which bubble is the next to burst. My guess is that it begins with the dollar, then moves to the bond market, next the stock market and finally real estate in that order. Next week's essay will explain my reasons why we’ll see a series of storms in the financial markets this fall and winter. For now the economy remains okay as long as we don’t experience any unexpected rogue waves that could topple the markets and spill over into the economy. As I have already alluded to in this missive, the economic and financial numbers bandied about in the press are more of a financial illusion then they are reality. They are a statistical and accounting mirage created by company accountants and government statisticians. The economic numbers and the profits numbers are determined beforehand and then the accountants and the stats department back into them. In Washington policymakers come up with an economic number that policymakers think the economy should be growing at, then the statistical department tweaks the numbers to come up with the number. On the corporate front, it is the same story. Analysts and company execs come up with an earnings number then the company accountant gets creative with the numbers to reach the goals. Like the central planning that was done in the former Soviet Union, today’s economy and financial markets are centrally planned. The only problem is that just like the five-year plan in the Soviet Union, the economic and the earnings numbers are all an illusion. When you begin to realize this, then what appears in the papers each month makes more sense. You then begin to realize why companies aren’t hiring more workers or building new plants. That is why companies continue to slash payrolls and why job growth has been nonexistent. It is same reason that capital spending by business has been so anemic. Phony profits and trumped up economic numbers also explains why insider selling is now at a record. You can’t grow profits in an economy that isn’t really growing nor can you hire new workers or order new equipment with pro forma profits. The economic and profit numbers the experts point to as a sign the long awaited economic recovery has arrived is all an illusion. It remains only a question of time before investors wake up and discover this deception. When they do, the second phase of the bear market will begin and enter its most deadly phase. The insiders already know of this deception, which is why they are selling. When the captain and crew have already jettisoned from the plane, isn’t it time you think of putting on your parachute too? ~ JP Endnotes Part 1 The 'OK' [unless something happens] Economy l Past Storm Watch Updates
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