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After months of optimism and growing complacency last week brought a sudden reversal of market sentiment. Optimism was replaced by worry and fear. Confidence was erased, despite a 110 billion euro EU/IMF bailout package for Greece and good US economic data; fear of a sovereign debt meltdown in Europe contributed to Tuesday’s and Wednesday’s sell-off, culminating in Thursday’s bloodbath. The Dow plunged nearly 1,000 points – the largest intraday decline on record – only to recover much of the loss minutes later. Even so, equities suffered their worst session since February 2009, with all major US indices ending the day down by more than 3%.

Escalating concerns of spreading European sovereign debt crisis, aided by images of murderous riots in Greece (casting further doubt of Greece’s ability to implement proposed austerity measures), provided the catalyst for the panic sell-off. Although some believe a trading error or technical glitch may have helped on the downside, the fact is the market was already very weak before the mid-afternoon plunge. The sell-off was, it appears, driven by good old fear.

More selling on Friday – despite better than expected US nonfarm payrolls report – reinforced the growing sense of panic. Both the Dow and the S&P 500 posted the largest weekly losses since March 2009 (DJIA fell by 5.7%, S&P was down 6.4% and the Nasdaq 8%), erasing all gains for the year. As fear spiked, so did the VIX (Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index); it jumped by 86% – the largest weekly increase ever in its 20 year history. In a flight from risky assets the yen, dollar and gold were the best performers.

The EU/IMF providing just a short-term patch for Greece and no solution for other peripherals, financial markets remained unimpressed. Spreads in European sovereigns continued to blow out; the euro sliding further. There have also been increased concerns about European banks, which (as of end of 2009) hold claims of $193 billion on Greece and more than $1 trillion on Portugal, Ireland and Spain. Libor (the interbank lending rate) rose sharply as banks became increasingly suspicious of each other’s exposure to European peripheral sovereign debt.

The slide in the euro, soaring bond yields and global markets’ reaction to the crisis finally led eurozone governments to lay out a set of measures to safeguard the financial stability of the euro area. Last weekend they vaguely committed to additional fiscal consolidation and reform of the Stability and Growth Pact to ensure fiscal sustainability in the region.

As of Monday morning European leaders agreed on providing a massive rescue package of 750 billion euros ($960 billion) to eurozone countries in an effort to stop the sovereign debt crisis and contagion. Eurozone governments pledged 440 billion euros in new loans and guarantees and 60 billion under an existing lending program, with an additional 250 billion to come from the IMF.

The most dramatic intervention came with the announcement that the ECB (European Central Bank) would buy euro area public and private debt. The dollar swap line with the Fed has also been reactivated.

Yesterday’s rescue package averted an immediate crisis and will likely buy Europe some time to allow real fiscal adjustments to take place. However, while it helps eurozone sovereigns with near term financing, it does not fix the longer term debt and solvency problems.

Ultimately, Greece’s problem is not just one of liquidity but also solvency, so the country will still likely have to resort to debt restructuring (which has now been postponed). Without the option of currency devaluation, Greece must go through severe debt deflation. Incomes and tax revenues will plunge. The vicious circle of falling nominal GDP and rising debt/GDP ratio can only be stopped when growth resumes – which will be difficult without devaluation. Solvency risks will not go away anytime soon.

The euro currency downtrend will most likely continue. We may not be far away from a point when the ECB starts printing and effectively monetizing eurozone debt. Concerns of longer term viability of the single currency will also stay as peripheral economies sink deeper into debt deflation.

European periphery facing severe austerity programs and prolonged recessions will not only kill EU’s growth for the foreseeable future but also impact global demand that will go down just as the cyclical recovery is starting to face headwinds.

Where next for the markets?

Peripheral spreads have rallied spectacularly, retracing 50-75% of their widening since the end of March within just a few hours. However, this extreme narrowing is unlikely to be sustained unless the ECB continues buying peripheral debt. European, US and global equity markets also responded positively with a huge rally yesterday.

Last week’s Greek debt fallout provided a perfect trigger for corrective action – we were certainly due for one after the steep rally off the March 2009 lows. Bullish sentiment had reached levels consistent with short term tops (Investors Intelligence survey of investment advisers – a measure of the crowd’s sentiment – reported last Wednesday that 56% of advisers were bullish – the highest level since the 2007 market peak); equities and commodities were overbought. The amount of cash as a percentage of total assets at equity mutual funds was at a record low. Insider sales were at extremely high levels compared to insider buying.

At the moment it’s premature to say whether the sell-off is over; we could be seeing a relief rally, the correction could reassert itself and last for a few weeks. However, given the strong momentum from the March 2009 lows, decent valuations and good upside breadth the cyclical bull market certainly appears to be intact. The markets are bound to remain volatile for a while though.

The following chart shows the spike and subsequent decline in the VIX – also known as Wall Street’s ‘fear index’. A few weeks ago it was at 18 month lows, indicating high investor confidence (and complacency). As we’ve moved from optimism to fear and dread last week volatility rocketed, only to fall back after Monday’s eurozone bailout news.

(The VIX is a measure of the implied volatility of S&P 500 Index options. A low value indicates expected stability in the markets; a high value means expected turmoil. So the VIX tends to exhibit a strong negative correlation with equity prices.)

S&P vs. VIX (source: indexindicators.com)

S&P vs. VIX (source: indexindicators.com)

Another sentiment indicator, the equity put/call ratio, was also very stretched by the end of April, indicating extreme bullish sentiment. As optimism turned into fear the put/call ratio spiked up.

S&P vs. put/call ratio

S&P vs. put/call ratio

A look at April breadth measures also signaled an imminent correction as over 90% of S&P500 stocks traded above 50 day moving average. We dropped to oversold territory last week, before bouncing back somewhat.

S&P vs. S&P stocks above 50d MA

S&P vs. S&P stocks above 50d MA

As risk aversion grows US equities could benefit from a flight of capital from Europe; though it will more likely continue to flow into bonds. Importantly, the US economy is improving on all metrics.

We are now seeing a starting recovery in the labor market, based on the payrolls numbers as well as Household Survey employment data. Last Friday’s US nonfarm payrolls surprised to the upside with 290,000 jobs added in April – much better than the anticipated 180,000, with the March number revised upward to 230,000. However, the unemployment rate increased to 9.9% from 9.7% due to a surge in the workforce. (Also, census hiring added 66,000 jobs to the April number.)

There is no doubt about the strong recovery in US manufacturing, as witnessed by ISM data (at 60.4% as of April). The manufacturing sector expanded for the eighth consecutive month to its highest level since July 2004. The pace of new orders was very strong and employment within the sector continued to grow.

Consumer spending has been rising (albeit at the expense of the savings rate). Retail sales rose above expectations in April, for the fifth time in the last six months.

Despite positive US data investors remain skeptical about the health of the economic expansion. At present the consensus is for subdued economic growth; that might end up proving to be too conservative.

Short term interest rates are at their multi-decade lows. Even if rates were to start rising faster than expected, the environment will stay very stimulative for a long time. Low interest rates provide a subsidy to income, profits and economic growth.

Whereas liquidity has been the main driver of the stock market rally until now, the next phase will likely be spurred by growth and profits, with performance depending on expanding economy. Low rates, strengthening business activity and strong balance sheet conditions will drive earnings growth. (Earnings have been very positive, beating expectations in most cases. Expectations of S&P 500 operating earnings are in the region of $80-84 by the end of 2010.)

If economic growth is decent and rates stay low, profits will likely keep surprising on the upside. Of course better economic growth, employment growth and improving corporate profitability will eventually see a rise in interest rates. That alone is, however, not automatically negative for stocks. It is generally only when interest rates start to exceed the nominal GDP growth that the economy slows down. The yield curve also has to become inverted for a cyclical equity bear market to be triggered. Historically, cyclical bear markets were triggered when the yield curve became inverted at a level that was higher than the nominal GDP growth. We are nowhere near that point.

The cyclical bull market has further to go, although the pace of price gains is likely to be much slower, given the steep rally off the March 2009 lows. Most retail investors have not yet moved into equities and are sitting on the sidelines. Yet there is little reason to believe that they will not do so again once confidence in the rally becomes more widespread. Optimism should increase as evidence accumulates on the strength and durability of the economic expansion.

US fundamentals look good for now: leading indicators of growth remain strong, rates are extremely low, earnings are beating expectations, valuations are reasonable.

Equities are relatively cheap on 1-2 year forward valuations (PE of 14 and 12, respectively). Global equities valuations are also attractive at 12M forward consensus earnings multiple of 13. Emerging markets trade on a 12M forward P/E of 12, although they have, over the last two decades, grown earnings at an annual rate of 22% vs. 12% in developed markets, as well as having lower leverage and higher economic growth. Equities are also cheap relative to bonds (as per dividend yield/bond yield ratio).

Retail investors have been net sellers of equities since March 2009. The total allocation to equities by the US household sector is well below long term average. Global bond funds posted inflows of $83.5 billion this year, equity funds saw inflows of only $7 billion. Since the trough of March 2009 US equity funds inflows came to $40 billion compared to bond funds inflows of $360 billion. Retail investors have so far not participated in the rally – retail equity funds saw net outflows of $82 billion since March 2009 (though in March 2010 retail have been modest net buyers). Institutional equity funds have seen modest net inflows since March 2009. (Data from EPFR Global and Credit Suisse.)

Central banks will likely continue to flood the system with liquidity whenever deemed necessary, and the Fed will keep short term rates in real terms (inflation adjusted) below zero for a very long period of time – all of which is positive for equities. And, as noted, there is plenty of cash available from investors who have missed the rally and are still sitting on the sidelines.

I believe the cyclical bull market (i.e. rally within the secular bear that started in 2000) will go on for a while, so any 10-20% corrections may be seen as a buying opportunity for select equities.

There are of course a number of medium to long term concerns.

The situation in parts of the eurozone will remain precarious. Austerity measures will plunge the periphery into a deep and prolonged recession, while bailouts will come at the expense of the productive European economies, all dragging down demand. Europe will buy less US goods, and with the euro likely close to or at parity to the dollar US companies won’t be able to compete with European exporters. This could well slow down US growth by late 2010 and 2011. (Tax hikes will also kick in next year.)

China is tightening in an attempt to slow down its economy, amidst concerns of overheating and housing bubbles. (The Shanghai Composite Index has broken below its key 200-day moving average – a possible precursor of what’s to come in other markets?) Brazil and India (and much of the rest of the developing world) are raising interest rates to fight inflation.

Concerns also remain about US regulatory changes, including financial reform.

The US housing market is a weak spot that needs monitoring. Although prices are stabilizing, the overall picture remains worrying, in particular due to the massive amount of unsold overhang remaining in the system. On the positive side, house price to income ratio is now close to a 40-year low and yields on low-end properties are, according to Credit Suisse research, over 8% – the highest on record relative to 30-year mortgage rate.

And there are still some $6.5 trillion of excess leverage in the developed economies, which will end up reducing growth. Government bond funding will also become more of a problem in the next few years, and not just in Europe. Economies won’t be able to simply grow their way out of fiscal indebtedness. In order to stabilize government debt to GDP fiscal policy will have to be tightened significantly (in the US, UK, Japan, much of the eurozone), which will be extremely challenging both politically and economically. We are still heading toward sovereign defaults a few years from now.

If we are lucky, we may have another 12-18 months before things start getting ugly again.

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3 Responses to “ From complacency to dread in three weeks… What’s next for the markets? ”

  1. goldstandard
    May 17, 2010 at 7:37 pm

    Hi Petra!
    Pleasure to read your article. I am rather simple person, so I do not pretend I understand everything. Forgive me.

    As of today, I do not believe stock is that cheap. (I use historical 10 years average P/E instead of 2 years forward). I do not believe that S&P 500 is worth more than 900 – 1000.
    But, they are getting cheaper (greedy grim in my eyes :-) , especially European stock, in dollar terms. Not necessarily in Euro terms. I made my first purchase in 2010 – just last week. (SNY @ 32.5, no secret)
    I believe it is not a big mistake to overpay a bit for a good company. As Graham said, it is only second most dangerous mistake investor can make. The first one is to buy junk at par in times of high economic activity. Surprisingly, what I can see is that the more speculative the stock is, the more it rallied during the past 12 months.

    I do not think the stock I bought will go straight up from now on. I think there are chances it will go down. Actually, I would love to see that to buy more. However, I do not think either that any paper currency is worth owning long term, at any rate. It is actually very difficult to say whether a stock of P/E 25 is expensive or cheap, because cash gives me zero. People were buying stock at S&P = 1500, as well…..

    I believe, good companies will not disappear and they will do well over time. That is all I can say about the future of the stock prices. Not much….. Well, maybe one more thing: Euro, dollar, koruna will all buy less over time.

    We have moneyprinters everywhere. That should be positive for stock, even if there are some limitations. Buffett wrote an article about that long time ago, called “How Inflation Swindles the Equity Investor.” I did not understand the details, but the outcome is clear. Do not bet that equities can save you from inflation.

    There is also one other weak point of the “money printing theory” and its positive impact on security prices, which makes me a bit nervous. Zero interest rates alone are not enough to promote spending and avoid recession. Continuing stimulus is peraps needed as well. And that might be politically difficult.

    Here is Mr. KOO´s view why this might not work as expected:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6k0_a1JS5hU

    So the question is again: will they release stimulus 2.0, 3.0, 4.0 ? No one knows, and we have to live with that. Mr. KOO made one especially interesting point: “it might be politically difficult to pass continuing stimulus in democracy DURING PEACE TIME. But, the USA are already at war (s), are they not?

    nice day to all, G.

  2. Petra
    May 20, 2010 at 6:02 am

    Thanks for sharing your views. In my opinion this decade will be much more favorable for trading or short term investing; wouldn’t be surprised if 10 year returns turned out to be quite poor again. Think we’re still in a primary bear market (but cyclical bull – for now) which could well go until the end of the decade. In the short term I’m increasingly thinking we may see something more serious than a 10-20% correction coming soon. Not much clarity at the moment, but judging by technicals, as well as intensifying funding stress (rising Libor) and uncertainties about Europe, it could get ugly for some months.

    I certainly agree with you on paper money; it will buy less over time. In the short term it is looking like we may see deflation first; of course the govt and the Fed would fight deflation at all cost, undoubtedly with more spending and money printing.

  3. goldstandard
    May 20, 2010 at 6:56 am

    Petra, thanks for sharing YOUR views, at the first place. You fill my mind with optimism. I love bear markets, because I believe I am good at waiting. My friend told me, at least. What I write might sound like a joke to some people, but I really mean it.

    Nice day, G.

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