Posted on 09/25/2002 4:32:32 PM PDT by rohry
Market WrapUp for the Week The Week in Graphs Storm Watch Geopolitical News Energy Resource Page Precious Metals Raw Materials Wednesday, September 25, 2002 Market WrapUp The Daily Drivel Most company earnings are suffering because of three factors:
If you leave out all of these factors, then you get down to the pro forma numbers, which are rising but at a slower pace than estimated. The reason pro forma numbers are going up is due to cost cutting, especially payroll cuts. Revenue growth at most companies has been sluggish. So for the markets to make a big deal out of GEs numbers, it is really no big deal. It is simply noise and nothing more. Markets are driven in the short-term by news, and todays announcement by GE doesnt make a trend. So, Why DID The Markets Rally? Wall Street is hoping to keep the little guy fully invested so you hear stories about the market being up 20% by the end of the year. That is not going to happen unless the government starts buying stocks like what is now happening in Japan. To go from a 27% deficit as we now have on the S&P 500, to a 20% gain by year-end is simply drivel. Most, if not all, analysts and strategists have been consistently wrong these past three years. I dont see anything on the horizon that is going to give us our miracle recovery. Maybe well start trading on pro forma sales numbers next. Forget the expenses. Why not go with sales and exclude everything else? The mantra that stocks are cheap will be addressed in the final installment of Bubble Troubles. If stocks were cheap, the big boys would be buying, and there is no evidence that this is happening at the moment. What is most evident with all that is said in print or the broadcast media is that investors are still bullish. Every word spoken reinforces the equity cult with standard clichés such as stocks are cheap, or, you have to stay invested for the long-term, or the economy is in good shape, and we are oversold. Nobody talks about P/E ratios at historical levels or that dividend yields are extremely low. Everyone is carrying on as if these last few years have been a correction in an otherwise long-term bull market. I hate to tell these bubbleheads, but the bull market ended in the first quarter of 2000. If they want to maintain their customer base or their listening audience, they better start talking about the bear market and how they can keep their client portfolio losses to a minimum. Telling investors to buy tech stocks or to stay fully invested in stocks because they are a bargain is going to lose their clients' money. This is also going to cause them to lose their customer base. This Bear Growls and He is Still on the Prowl In case anybody hasnt noticed, the Dow has lost 13.4% since its August 22 high of 9053.64. Weve lost over 1,200 points in the last month. A slowing economy, declining profits, a retrenching consumer, a Brazilian debt default, another default by Argentina, a derivative mishap, and an oncoming war is what awaits the financial markets in the months ahead. That is why September and October are usually foul weather months. The realities of forecasts made at the beginning of the year get adjusted in September and October. These readjustments to reality have an impact on the markets and there are still a lot of readjustments that need to be done to re-price stocks from a second-half recovery to a second-half economic and financial relapse. Three companies out of four have cut their third quarter estimates, according to a recent Bloomberg survey. If the profit recovery were going to take place, you wouldnt be getting these kinds of warnings. Fund managers could also contribute much of todays rally to quarter-end window dressing. Institutions may be driving up stocks prior to a quarterly close. Usually at the end of each quarter, fund managers dress up their portfolios in order to look better to shareholders. This year has been the third year of negative returns for most mutual fund companies, so shareholders arent too happy right now. The market remains weak technically with declining momentum, sentiment and other trend indicators showing no support for a sustainable rally. This is, in technical terms, simply a rally from oversold conditions and nothing more. Volume came in at 1.64 billion on the NYSE and 1.68 billion on the Nasdaq. Market breadth was positive by 23 to 10 on the NYSE and by 22 to 12 on the Nasdaq. Overseas Markets Asian stocks fell after a U.S. industry report showed consumer confidence dropped, signaling weakening demand for exports from the region's largest overseas market. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average shed 1.7% to 9165.41. South Korea's Kospi index fell to a nine-month low, and Taiwan's TWSE Index to a 10-month low. Treasury Markets Wednesday's sole economic report revealed an unexpected 1.7% drop in August existing home sales to a 5.28 million rate, less than expectations for a 5.40 million rate. Thursday will see several reports including weekly initial claims, August durable goods orders, expected to have decreased 2.7%, and August new home sales, seen coming in at 980,000. © Copyright Jim Puplava, September 25, 2002 |
Ya have to love this market. Never a dull moment.
Richard W.
Most company earnings are suffering because of three factors:
Restructuring and goodwill impairment charges.
Accelerated depreciation charges due to short-lived technology investments.
Rising interest costs as a result of added debt.
Do 1 and 2 really matter, since they're non-cash charges? The money's already gone.
IMO, 3 is the one to keep an eye on because it affects cash available for future growth.
Opinions?
The simple answer;
Gold Off $3.60 @323.60/Oz
Greenspan is in GB to be knighted. There is no way that those who are so dependent on keeping him looking good and happy are going to let the market tank and embarrass Sir Alan. That's the real short answer.
Richard W.
.....IMHO a lot of that debt is a by-product of CEO self-enrichment...they borrowed money to drive up the share price so their options would be worth more...I expect when they write the market history of the 90s, it's going to all come down to two words: greed & options...
Good luck to everybody!
Stonewalls
I also agree that the markets were oversold. Like by about 2,000.
However, the international scene breaks all in favor of the U.S. as oil prices drop; exports to newly-freed countries increase; anti-Americanism falls in the Arab world as they see raw power (which is all they respect); and there is a small stimulus from a defense buildup.
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