Posted on 03/25/2002 4:07:33 PM PST by TigerLikesRooster
Market WrapUp for the Week
Monday's Stock Market WrapUp Reality Check First Quarter Results Coming This month marks the two year anniversary of the stock market peak for the S&P 500. Two years ago on March 24, 2000 the S&P 500 closed at 1,527. It hasn?t reached that plateau since. As of today, the index is down close to 26% from that level, with the index trading at close to 62 times recent earnings on a GAAP basis. The market remains overvalued by every benchmark and standard used for valuation because of bear market earnings falling faster than stock prices, leaving stock prices high by comparison. The hard part for Wall Street will be to sell investors over, hoping that the miracle in earnings materializes. Analysts are keeping their fingers crossed that companies will start giving upbeat assessments during their pre-announcements for the second half of the year. Stock prices, which have now turned negative for the major indexes with the exception of the Dow, indicate investors aren?t buying the turn-around story. If companies don?t give upbeat reports for the next quarter, stock prices will then be in for a major readjustment. The one positive element for stocks has been the Fed?s aggressive easing in interest rates. Now that positive factor is going to be taken away with the Fed talking about raising interest rates. In addition to higher interest rates, energy prices are rising again with OPEC vowing to make no change in production until prices hit the $30 a barrel mark. These are the negatives that are now influencing stock prices. However, the main threat to the stock market remains earnings. Wall Street has sold the investment public on the recovery scenario, the same recovery scenario they have been touting the last two years. If that doesn?t start to happen stocks are going to take a hit. There are already signs that equity managers are taking profits in short-term trades in fear of losing gains if the markets head south on bad news. First Call/Thompson Financial, which tracks analyst?s earnings estimates, believes analysts are still too optimistic in their profit forecasts. This could translate into analysts? revisions in the months ahead if companies don?t deliver the earnings that have been estimated. First Call thinks a 5% gain in pro forma earnings is more likely than the 10 to 17.5% estimated by Wall Street firms. Losses Reported The Perfect Financial Storm Under traditional monetary policy the Fed relies on the buying and selling of Treasury bonds to affect short-term interest rates. If that doesn?t work in the future, the Fed may consider buying any asset class to monetize. This is a rather frightening thought when one considers the implication of these comments, or the fact that they are even considered. It would be tantamount to admitting the outright failure of monetary policy. The predicted outcome could backfire on the Fed with a complete loss of confidence in the financial system and in financial paper of all varieties. Under these circumstances, we would find ourselves in "The Perfect Financial Storm." The Markets Today The price of gold is flirting with $300 an ounce despite desperate efforts by central bankers to knock the price down. The rise in gold may be signaling trouble lies ahead for the financial markets. The Fed has been dismissing gold and a weakening U.S. currency. Normally a weakening currency, a rising trade deficit, and an expanding government budget deficit is the kind of environment that drives up gold prices. During periods of monetary upheaval, gold performs well like it is doing now. This is causing central bankers to stay up late at night. Once people lose confidence in paper, which is what is happening in Japan right now, the confidence isn?t gained back easily. The Fed must be watching with horror at the financial nightmare in Japan. They could be looking at the very same scenario here in the U.S., which is why they may consider monetizing the entire financial system. The problem for the Fed is it won?t work, and it could cause the them to lose all of its creditability. Investor gullibility is the best thing the Fed has going for it. Investor optimism rose in March to 121 from 92 in February, the highest level since November of 2000. Over 71% of investors now feel it is a good time to go long on stocks. Most investors polled in the recent investor survey now believe the worst is over for the U.S. economy. Contributing to that sentiment has been the recent run-up in stock prices. The little guy is voting with his pocketbook. Trim Tabs reports that $4.1 billion flowed into stock mutual funds in the latest week ending last Thursday. The little guy is buying at a time the pros are selling as pointed out in last week?s COT graph. Volume came in at 1.05 billion on the NYSE and 1.41 billion on the Nasdaq. Market breadth was negative by a wide margin of 22 to 10 on the big board, and 22 to 13 on the Nasdaq. Treasury Market Overseas Market Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average fell to a three-week low, led by Sony and other exporters on concern the U.S. Federal Reserve may raise interest rates, curbing demand from Japan's largest market. Nikkei fell 0.7% to 11,261.09. The Topix index shed 0.3% to 1073.20, with computer-related companies the biggest decliners as a group. NEC Corp. and other computer makers slumped after a report showed weekly personal computer sales at large electronics stores in Japan fell from a year ago, extending a 10-month slide. © Copyright, Jim Puplava, March 25, 2002 Home l Broadcast l Storm Watch l Top 10 l Perspectives l Resource Center l Sitemap l About Us Archived WrapUps: Warning: Earnings l Pro Forma Economics
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What's that? You were told they increased 17%?
Welcome to the world of "seasonal adjustments," pal. If you believe these clintonian numbers, fine--knock yourself out and "buy the dips." Just don't mislead the more trusting readers here into thinking a stock market with declining profits and 40+ price to earnings is a great investing opportunity.
Over the weekend, a relative gave me more than 200 German 100-mark notes issued between 1903 and 1910. You may call this "emotion based dislike of our fiat currency." It reads like a fact to me.
When issued, they were worth just under $25 -- i.e., more than an ounce of gold. You may call this "emotion based dislike of our fiat currency." It reads like a fact to me.
I was recently apprised that they are now worth between $0 and $0.07. You may call this "emotion based dislike of our fiat currency." It reads like a fact to me.
They were demonetized following the German inflation of 1923.You may call this "emotion based dislike of our fiat currency." It reads like a fact to me.
Just on the off chance you're with me so far, where does that leave us? I posted these remarks on a stock market thread, citing to a observation that Japanese are losing confidence in paper. It's reasonable to read into my insertion of this litany of facts onto this thread a suggestion that the Japanese yen will become as worthless as (at least paper) Imperial Reichsmarks. After all, before WWI, the 5-yen coin contained nearly an eighth ounce of gold (.1205 oz). While the subsequent inflation of the yen has not constituted hyperinflation, particularly over the course of nearly 90 years, I support the concern expressed by (at least some) Japanese that their currency may well be headed the way of the Imperial Reichsmark.
Is the U.S. dollar approaching the same fate. No doubt, you are far more qualified to opine on this topic than I.
True. However, they can be misleading when entering a new regime, when the previous periods on which the adjustments are based become irrelevant.
After 12 years. Initially, it was not that high back in 1991 or so.
People are naturally afraid of waking up from sustained euphoria. They tend to look for many clever justifications for even more boom, probably proceded by short downturn. It all depends on sustaining the euphoric psychology. Instead a boom creating euphoria, euphoria is propped up by PR and credit expansion to sustain the boom.
I generally agree. They may be spread over longer period, not just 4 years.
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