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« on: June 08, 2008, 04:32:01 AM » |
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Only a year ago, the stock market was like a laid-back surfer, cruising the shallow dips and peaks. Having become increasingly erratic since the summer of 2007; it has now morphed into a full-fledged, wild-eyed base jumper. Currently, the Price-Earnings Ratio, one of the most basic parameters of equity valuation, is at its lowest level in many years for many of the leading markets.
I believe that the fair value of the Dow currently is around 14,000 (based on current earnings, which have been slaughtered for some important Dow components), and it is trading at about a 10 per cent discount to fair value. Using a 9 per cent cost of equity, the recent correction in the Dow may be more than fundamentals should allow. I believe that it needs to play catch-up and reach its fair value of 18,000 (increasing earnings is easier on a low base) by end-May 2009.
Financial companies have just absorbed huge write-downs and after some more bloodshed over the months to August 2008, a powerful Fall 2008 rally (commencing September 2008) in Dow components appears to be on the cards.
When we compound the Dow's closing value of 12,400 on April 14, 2008, by an 8 per cent annualised price return ; after accounting for the correction and the sharp rise expected in the earnings numbers from here, we arrive at an index level of 18,000 for the Dow by May 2009. During this period, we are likely to see an across-the-board global rally in stocks with most sectors participating. Here are a few reasons that back this prediction:
*Oil money*: Even if we take a conservative $100 as the average price for crude oil, we are talking of $2 trillion worth of foreign exchange reserves being generated this year for oil producing countries. A maximum 10 per cent of this can be invested in the local economies, if they have to achieve a GDP growth rate of 10 per cent without over-heating their respective economies.
This means that $1.8 trillion worth of additional liquidity is expected to be generated in the world over the next year or so. By all estimates, whatever the losses of US sub-prime mess (which some say will be in the neighbourhood of $3 to 4.5 billion — equivalent to about three months of oil selling), the incremental liquidity of $1.8 trillion should flow into world markets.
The rush of liquidity could be positive for equity, may help it regain favour. The failure of a big Wall Street institution often signals a market bottom. That was broadly true of Continental Illinois in 1984; Drexel Burnham Lambert in 1990, Kidder Peabody in 1994 and Long-Term Capital Management in 1998. According to JP Morgan, the S&P was up an average of 17 per cent in the 12 months after these events. *Credit crisis will not be cataclysmic:* By beginning fall of 2008, the very low federal funds rate will bring down 10-year rates, helping mortgage refinancing take off.
The resultant steeper yield curve will boost the profitability of banks. Also, I believe the US Treasury will shortly begin defending the dollar in an almost 1985-like situation where yen had climbed up to 85 to a dollar. Paul Vocker, then Fed Chairman, had let some shorts build up, and even with small US treasury intervention, the dollar climbed, as knockout options got triggered.
There is also the argument that a great unwinding of the commodities bubble is in the offing over the next six months. *Greenback to recoup*: America's return to a solid rate of growth with acceptable inflation and low interest rates will cause a dollar rise. Unwinding of carry-trades is also expected. Speculators have been making money borrowing dollar at low rates, buying pounds and investing them at higher rates. A reversal of this trend will cause speculators to sell Euros and pounds and rush to buy dollars in order to repay their dollar loans, thus boosting the US dollar and US stock market values. An increase in Cross-Border Mergers and Acquisitions, as various companies in the emerging economies find American companies available at distress sale prices, could also stoke a rush for US dollars. *
Equity yields 50 per cent higher than bond yields: There is no credit crunch for large companies. Triple-A-rated companies can borrow at lower rates than they could a year ago. Both US and non-US public companies will continue to borrow money to buy their own shares, or to take over weaker competitors, thus enhancing global asset and stock prices. Though there is indeed less credit available for speculators, I do not believe there is a 'credit crisis' in the strict sense of the word. But arms are open for companies with sensible business propositions and sound investment plans. It is surprising to see that even at the sub-prime end, debt rated AAA, the yield is down from 5.18 per cent to 4.63 per cent. If this was a real credit crisis, the rates would have shot through the roof. We are not witnessing a 'negative feedback loop' in which tighter liquidity conditions, lower asset prices, impaired capital resources and reduced credit supply prevail; because the US Fed is pumping liquidity into the system.
Now for the argument that China will slow down if a recession strikes in the US, because more than half of China's GDP consists of exports. I would like to point that China and India have embarked on a high growth path of infrastructure development and after the de-leveraging in the commodities arena is over, we will once again witness good demand for commodities from these two growth engines.
Since there is a gestation period before the monetary stimulus of the central banks generates inflation, inflation may return by summer-2009, with a Goldilocks scenario until then. If the powers that be do forestall deflation or a bad recession, the cost is likely to be inflation. Expect a downfall
A movement in financial markets from over-exuberance to excess pessimism always creates great investment opportunities, just as in the present stock market scene.
The Dow, along with other world equity markets, has retraced substantial lost ground during March-April 2008. A mid-way turbulence during June 2008 through August 2008 is expected. In this period, surviving banks will have experienced a chastening shock and will continue to give priority to restoring their credit buffers, so credit will be restricted till August 2008.
The near-term risk-reward trade-off for equities has deteriorated. Emerging market equity valuations have also returned close to long-term averages, during the rebound. Earnings revisions have deteriorated, suggesting moderate downside risk to consensus earnings expectations for 2008. All this points to a painful summer on Wall Street (June-August 2008). Powerful Fall equity rally round the corner
Thereafter, I expect a strong fall rally beginning September 2008 which should take the Dow right up to 18,000 as the uncertainty over the US Presidential election ends and the effects of the monetary policy easing by Ben Bernanke and his team begin to translate into higher growth numbers.
Most stock market analysts will be busy downgrading their earnings estimates for companies for most of 2008. Yet, I expect a powerful stock market rally to emerge from September 2008 since at previous inflection points in global equity markets, stocks often rallied six months before analysts were done with the downgrading process.
Re-emergence of Goldilocks scenario: September 2008-May 2009
I anticipate a V-shaped earnings growth chart in 2008, a sharp drop followed by a vigorous bounce back in the Fall of 2008 and extending right up to end-May 2009, as the good effects of Fed easing start getting reflected in headline numbers. Eventually, the rise in the Dow will lead to a favourable investment environment across the globe. Whether or not China and India have decoupled from the developed world from an economic standpoint, there is little doubt that the world of finance is very much coupled, and as Wall Street catapults into new unchartered territory; so will Canary Wharf and Dalal Street, as well as the rest of the world!
(The author is CEO, Sunil Kewalramani Global Capital Advisors and can be reached at globalequity@sunilkewalramani. com. Views expressed are personal.)
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