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HOVZ Stock Market Forecasts
October 26, 2008
We can't wait for October to end!
All HOVZ Archived Commentary
Links to Other Stock Market Indicators .
We certainly were wrong last week in thinking that the stock market was turning around! Instead of a rally the market seems intent on making it into the history books as the Crash of 2008. Following a largely unexplained pattern this has also been a late-October event. Stock Market Crash of 1929 (October 24 - October 29) Crash of 1987 (October 19). With stock market futures around the world pointing to a terrible open on Monday, it appears that this coming week could well be the climax.
We are sticking with our rosy thought that in 6 months stock prices will have rebounded significantly. But, this coming week? Who knows!
Stocks are cheap: Stocks have fallen so far so fast that many great companies are at incredible sale prices. Morningstar.Com Market Valuation graph says stocks are 39% undervalued.
Another service, Value Line has a similar market valuation tool. It's Value Line Median Appreciation Potential VLMAP, as discussed in this Mark Hulbert MarketWatch article also points to the best valuation potential since 1982. Can prices fall more? Of course.
Capitulation achieved?: The decades-high volatility of the past two weeks could easily mark a significant market capitulation. Investors aren't just scared, they have thrown in the towel and are despondent. Of course, that's what we thought last week before things really turned bad!
Federal Intervention is incredible: Federal interest rates have been slashed and likely will be cut to just 1% next week. That amounts to interest free loans. The total scale of the financial interventions that have been anounced and are just starting to get underway are absolutely incredible. It is equally clear that governments around the world are prepared to do more if necessary. There is no alternative course of action.
It's almost Halloween: The Halloween Indicator -- weird but incredibly reliable -- is turning positive. The "Sell in May, Buy Back on All Saints Day" market timing strategy has been around for a long time and sounds too simple and mechanical to be any good. Our research and the work of many others, however, shows that it does have validity. This MarketWatch column is an interesting variant on the approach that has been put forward and tested for years by Sy Harding of Street Smart Report.
The election appears settled: The presidential election now looks to be over so half of the population is relieved and the other half is at least glad to soon be rid of Bush. Here is Mark Hulbert's take from MarketWatch.com suggesting that election year anxiety tends to put a bit of extra spin on market gyrations in September and October.
Financial panic easing? The infamous TED Spread which tracks inter-bank lending has edged down possibly indicating the start of a thaw in credit markets. This Jon Markman column at MSN Money Central, however, says: "I hate to be the one to break the news, but here it is: Despite everything
you've heard about how massive infusions of hot new money printed by the Federal
Reserve and other central banks have thawed the chill in interbank lending,
veteran credit analyst Brian Reynolds says credit markets have just experienced
their worst two weeks of all time and show no signs of improvement. None."
Buffet says so: Forget all the other signs if you wish. Warren Buffet now says that it is time to buy! Looking back from several years in the future the odds are very good that current prices will be seen as real buying opportunities.
It's not that any of the bad news has gone away.
There is near-complete agreement on the nature of the huge economic problem: the housing price and commodities bubbles have popped. Now that people realize that the days of rapidly rising prices are kaput, house prices and commodity prices will revert back to normal. Commodities have responded fast, but house prices take years to fully adjust. Until house prices have fallen to traditional valuation levels the economic picture will remain bleak..
Financial markets have been decimated over the past year, but the 'real economy' (with the big exception of construction) kept rolling along anyway. Now, though, the real economy is getting slammed -- unemployment rising, foreclosures and bankruptcies soaring, sales figures for just about everything slumping, new orders way down, construction in the sewer, transportation costs and demand well below normal, commodity prices for just about everything crashing. Not only has the financial system locked up in panic (TED Spread is still near an incredible high); consumer sentiment is gripped by panic; economists expect more recession (Anxious Index ), and the U.S. Leading Economic Indicator points down. All of these are unmistakable signs of a severe and extended recession.
But, the stock market reflects anticipation, not the current status of the economy. To us and many market gurus signs are now pointing to a significant bear market rally that could last perhaps for 6 months. Things are so bad it seems like then can only get better from here.
Bottom line: With 'blood in the streets' and normal stock market seasonality coming into play we are soon coming to an important decision point. Our hunch is that we are at the edge of a several-month market rebound. We started buying two weeks ago, but obviously that was too early!
(This column is not investment advice, YOU need to figure out what's best for you.)
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A Few Stock Market Indicators
Morningstar.Com Market Valuation graph (Shows market to be 39% a NEW ALL-TIME LOW . There may huge economic bubble in real estate -- but it isn't in the bulk of U.S. stocks that Morningstar tracks. Or, at least THEY don't think so. We read this graph as saying that stocks are at 'super-sale' prices. On the other hand, there is no sign this chart is trending up. ) This graph is a fundamental financial analysis / accounting calculation based on long-term projected returns for the 1,800 stocks Morningstar tracks. Typically in the past couple of years the trend has gone from undervalued to somewhat overvalued. Click on the 'Maximum' tab for the best view of the Morningstar chart.
% Stocks Trading Above 200-Day Moving Average (The current value is shown at the very bottom of the link page. ) Only 4% of stocks are above their 200-day average. This is WAY BELOW a typical bottom. This indicator is in buying territory. But, the knife may still be falling! As a general rule, when a stock's price is above its 200-day moving average, the stock is in a long-term price rise. So, an increasing percentage of stocks priced above their 200-day moving average is generally a good sign. However, when 80% to 90% of stocks are trading above their averages it is usually a signal that euphoria has gotten out of hand and a market correction is due. Similarly, when only 20% to 30% of stocks are trading above average (like now), a sharp bullish upswing becomes very likely. For someone with a long term perspective, the market is in buying territory. For someone with a short term perspective it sure looks like the sky is falling. How low will it go?.
NYSE New Highs & New Lows If 'blood in the streets' is a good sign, then it is time for buying. There have not been this many new lows for at least 6 years! Of course, next week there might be plenty more. The graph of new lows tracks fairly closely with our HOVZ Market Enthusiasm Indicator. A 'Buy' indicator occurs when the number of Low values falls from a peak and a 'Sell' indicator occurs near when the number of new Highs peaks. www .InvestmentTools.com.
Long Treasury Bond versus Discount Rate The Fed has dramatically lowered short term lending rates creating a major stimulus to try to pump up the economy. The difference between the short and long rates is seldom greater than it is now. The futures markets rate an additional half percent rate cut next week as a certainty.. (MarketWatch.com forecast, bottom of linked page). Unfortunately, the flip side of this is that low rates like this are a direct statement that the Fed is really worried about the economy. It takes time for the stimulus of low rates to start working through the real economy and there is a major concern that moving rates too low could cause the value of the U.S. dollar to go into free fall. (Hey HOVZ, what do you mean,
"could cause?" -- The dollar already has been in an extended slide for years. Recent dollar strength is unlikely to last.)
The rate inversion that existed during most of last year ended up being a good predictor of the extended market troubles we are feeling now.
TED Spread (Bloomberg) NEGATIVE This indicator tracks the difference between the 3-month Treasury rate and the 3-month LIBOR -- the interest rate at which banks loan to one another. Two weeks ago, the TED spread had never higher. There has been some recent improvement but interbank lending rates remain incredibly high by historic standards.
Short Interest Ratio (from InvestmentTools.com) This number derived from NYSE data is the dollar value of total outstanding short positions divided by the value of an average day of trading -- essentially, how many days would it take to close all short positions. Watch the moving average of this indicator for a very broad look at the anxiety level of the stock market. Since the market has already fallen off a cliff, many speculators have closed their short positions, pocketed their winnings, and are waiting for the next round to begin.
Margin Debt Dropped significantly in August giving another sign of market fear. Deleveraging as discussed in this Robert Samuelson article at WashingtonPost.com is possibly the best sign of a persistent bear market. Margin levels still are well below where they were last year, and the rate of change is down at recession levels.
This chart from www.InvestmentTools.com shows that for the past few years was a period of strongly rising margin. Deleveraging now is underway. Here is the NYSE data link.
Building Permits and Housing Starts (Major negative factor seldom worse than it is right now. It takes an optimist to take heart that things seldom appear to have been worse than now.). Housing related activity -- not just construction, but including all factors such as new appliances -- constitutes roughly 20% to 25% of the U.S. economy, so it is much too big to ignore. These linked charts from the St. Louis Federal Reserve provide a way to watch the slow moving collapse unfold. Housing tends to lead the stock market by approximately one year. If so, that is very bad news.
U.S. Leading Economic Indicator Slid down in September after rising in August. (See graph at bottom of link page.) The eLEI did well in April and May, but jumped off a cliff in June! A competing and better known indicator, the Conference Board Leading Economic Indicator reports a modest increase in September -- the first rise in 6 months..
Anxious Index (xls file) (Negative. This indicator is about as bad as it gets.) This article by David Leonhardt in the NY Times a couple of months ago said the Index pointed toward an economic recession. He noted this Survey of Professional Forecasters maintained by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve hasn't missed calling a recession or called a false positive in the years since 1968 when it was started. Updated quarterly.
U.S. Federal Deficit (from St. Louis Federal Reserve) With the recession slamming the economy no one really cares about the deficit. Now, who knows! The U.S. Dollar had been falling for years. It has spiked recently, but that could well be less a sign of strength and more one of international financial panic. As long at the U.S. balance of payments is so terrible, and the spending faucet has been turned on full, we just can't believe that the Dollar will jump up too high. Bloomberg appears to agree. Of course, for the last month of so we have been dead wrong.
Effective Federal Funds Rate and Target Interest Rate (from St. Louis Federal Reserve) Negative in the short-term, but soon because of lag times it will become a positive factor. The Fed has rushed like it never has before to drop short-term rates. The Fed now charges less interest than the rate of inflation. They are paying banks to borrow! Eventually rate cuts will stimulate the economy. But, because of lag times, for now it is a major contrary signal showing just how worried they are at the Fed. The current MarketWatch.com forecast of interest rates anticipates another half point cut on October 29 to just 1%.)
Price / Earnings Ratio of the SP-500 (Rising P/E because of falling profits is bad news.) The P/E ratio has spiked up in recent months, a sign of earnings going down sharply, especially in the previously profitable financial sector. This is a sign of bad economic news. The way a graph is drawn makes a huge difference in the story it tells. First take a look at the graph linked at the start of this paragraph, then look at this longer term graph of the P/E of the SP-500 presented in the NY Times by David Leonhardt. Regardless of the view, I don't see all that much value in this as a short-term market indicator.
Halloween Indicator: Negative But, VERY NEAR A TURNING POINT The old saying "Sell in May and go away" and buy back after Halloween turns out to have statistical validity. This MarketWatch column by Sy Harding summarizes his variant on the approach. The adage was certainly right this year! Anyway, this one says to stay out of stocks until November 1 -- unless the market turns up a couple of weeks earlier. Hmm.. right near the presidential election. Hmm..Here is Mark Hulbert's take of the market timing impact of the presidential election.
Baltic Dry Index Graph at middle of the page. (Terribly Negative.) OK, be the only kid on your block who follows this one! The Baltic Dry Index (Wikipedia) , The Best Economic Indicator You've Never Heard Of tracks the cost of moving materials by sea. A higher value indicates rising shipping levels and therefore points to economic expansion. The Dow Jones Transportation Index (click to the 5-year view) lagged the Baltic Dry Index for a while, but has now jumped off the same cliff.
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