Saturday, February 21, 2009

Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and equities generally not going into bullish mode - just in case anyone "missed the memo"

For anyone out there who doesn't quite understand or trust technical analysis - or even just "missed the memo" that the equities indices like the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and the broad equities markets generally are not going into bullish mode anytime soon - here's another assessment explaining why equities are down and in bearish mode. The chart below is part of an article, Vitaliy Katsenelson: The pain of mean reversion (GreenLightAdvisor Views, 2/20/09) . It's along the lines of the articles we looked at last weekend, demonstrating that equities are rightly down because p/e ratios are still rich, as earnings have fallen sharply. This article takes the analysis another step, by showing that the earnings decline itself appears to be a function of reversion to the mean. Take a look at how Katsenelson displays the concept on the chart, then check out the quote from his article (below):



A few quotes from Katsenelson's article:
If you were to look at the recent history of the 2001 recession, earnings dropped 54% from their highs to their lows. If S&P 500 reported earnings were to drop by the same amount this time around they’d be at about $39. We are already below that level, 2008 estimates for S&P 500 were revised down again, now to $28. However, this is where Twain’s rhyming thinking becomes important - note that in 2001 earnings went only 18% above the “average case” line; in 2007 they were 31% above that line. If we were to follow the higher they climb the harder (deeper) they fall logic, this would lead us to believe that earnings will drop further this time, estimates for early 2009 earnings indicate that.

When will we see average earnings?
The good news is S&P “average case” earnings are about high $70s to low $80s a share (see big red squares in yellow shaded area) - which would make the market cheap (with a PE of about 10). But here is the bad news (don’t shoot the messenger please) - we just won’t see those “average case” numbers for a while.

The Earnings recovery will likely take longer than many expect, therefore, there is a very high possibility that the “average case” earnings growth going forward will be below the historical average of 6%

Are we about to embark on a secular bull market?
The market is a discounting mechanism - stocks will rise in the anticipation of a future earnings rebound, before the rebound. Similar to the stock market forecasting ten out of the last three recessions, it will discount a few recoveries before the real one takes hold.

What does this mean? We’ll likely have a few “fake” head starts and disappointments before the actual earnings recovery takes place.

As I argued in my book Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound Markets, we are very likely in the midst of a secular range-bound (trendless, volatile but going nowhere) market that started in early 2000. Historically, range-bound markets started at the end of the secular bull market when P/Es were above average. They ended when P/Es stopped declining (mean reverting), after a visit to below average territory (around 10-11 or less). The current range-bound market started at much above average valuation and will likely rhyme with the past finish at below average valuation as well.

Based on the Pain of mean reversion chart we are trading somewhere between 30 and 10 times earnings. However, neither number is very meaningful. Let me explain:

2008 estimates of $28, the “E” in P/E of 30, are distorted by massive charge offs.

The “average case,” the “E” ($80) that went into P/E of 10, lies in a far away land that … well, let me put it this way, you and I will get to grow sick of presidential campaign advertisements at least once or maybe even twice before that “E” is in sight.

Even based on 2010 “E” estimates ($40) stocks in the S&P 500 are trading at 21 times earnings.

Despite the decline, the market is still not cheap. Sorry, we are not likely to embark onto the new secular bull market anytime soon. History and data suggest that the choppy markets that we have seen since 2000 will likely continue. Owning a broad market index will not pave a road to prosperity. It comes down to not just owning stocks but owning the right stocks.

P.S. As a side note I believe significant earnings write-offs will continue well into next year as financial stocks will pass their write-off torch to companies in energy, materials and industrial sectors - stuff stocks - that will be writing off the investments they’ve made over the last five years.

By the time, I finished putting these thoughts together, which on and off took about two weeks, 2008, 2009 and 2010 estimates were taken down by about 20-25%.
Note, the article also appears at SeekingAlpha, as S&P 500 Earnings: 'The Pain of Mean Reversion' by Vitaliy Katsenelson.

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