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Dec. 5, 2008
I've turned bearish on stocks.
I wasn't struck by lightning. I didn't have an epiphany. Just the steady
drip, drip, drip of bad news has turned me from my longstanding
optimistic view on U.S. markets to a much more sober outlook for the
next several years, an evolution that readers of this column may have
observed over recent months.
We're in a global recession that has gathered momentum over the last
couple of months and will likely get worse. The financial crisis will
suck up resources for months, maybe years. Consumers are retrenching big
time in the U.S., and that has cut global growth. And government
involvement in markets has increased dramatically and is likely to ramp
up even more.
It all suggests several years of underperformance for stocks, punctuated
by bear market rallies, but I don't see anything in the economy that
will drive global equity markets back to their all-time highs of last
October until well into the next decade.
Adjustments in order
That probably will require some adjustments in your investment strategy,
which I'll get into next week, along with some analysis of sentiment and
market valuations.
But first, let's look at the grim economic picture.
The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) has just officially
declared that we've been in a recession since December 2007.
But lately we've seen a cascade of bad economic news (both here and
abroad, as in the U.K.) that suggests the economy is in a downward
spiral, with no bottom in sight.
Gross domestic product growth actually went negative in the third
quarter, layoffs are rising, payrolls plunged 533,000 in November, and
the jobless rate stood at 6.7%.
But more critically, consumer spending has just fallen out of bed.
Forget about initial reports of good sales increases on Black Friday and
Cyber Monday -- much of that was due to opportunistic bargain hunters.
Consumers are likely to be much more tight-fisted in the three weeks
before the holidays, resulting in a dismal selling season. And what will
drive sales in 2009?
As for durable goods, just witness the desperate groveling by chief
executives of the Big Three U.S. auto makers before Congress for a piece
of the bailout pie as auto sales -- not just for them, but for everybody
-- have plummeted.
Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley, writing in the Financial Times, points
out that real personal consumption expenditures may tumble by 3.5% in
the second half of 2008. "Never before has there been such extraordinary
capitulation by the American consumer," he wrote.
That's not surprising, given the financial crisis and the massive
deleveraging that's burning through the economy like a wildfire in
Malibu Canyon. Analyst Meredith Whitney of Oppenheimer & Co., who was
correctly bearish on financial stocks early on, estimates that "more
than $3 trillion of available credit has been expunged from the markets
and therefore corporate and consumer borrowers so far this year." That
money, she says, "has gone to plug holes and not stabilize the effects
of shrinking liquidity."
It's no surprise, then, that she concludes: "I am more bearish today
than I have been in the past 18 months."
Trial and error
The problem is that after a year of trying everything and committing
trillions of dollars to a massive rescue of the financial system,
central bankers and heads of state still don't know if their proposed
solutions will work.
Exhibit A: Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr., who can't seem to
decide whether the $700-billion Trouble Assets Relief Plan (TARP) should
be used to shore up banks' capital, buy actual toxic assets, or help
struggling homeowners refinance their mortgages. Not exactly a
confidence-inspiring performance. Maybe Barack Obama's administration
will at least be able to get its story straight.
But I don't know if it can do a lot more than that. With estimates of
bad debt on the books of financial institutions running into the
trillions, it's unclear whether all the governments in the world have
enough money to fill this gigantic hole -- even if they kept the
printing presses rolling from now until the 2010 Super Bowl.
While we're on the subject of the government: Will the prospect of $1
trillion annual U.S. deficits; some increases in top marginal tax rates
and maybe dividend and capital gains taxes, and tighter regulation and
greater government involvement in the economy really inspire investors
to step up and buy stocks?
You've got to believe that's highly unlikely, no matter whom you voted
for.
So, where does that leave us? I contacted A. Gary Shilling, the veteran
economist and editor of Insight, who has been as prescient on this
crisis as media superstar Nouriel Roubini.
Shilling predicted the housing bust years ago; said last year that the
economy would enter recession in late 2007, and has advocated shorting
stocks and buying long-dated US Treasury bonds. Bingo on all counts. See
list of 13 recommendations Shilling made in early 2008.
When I spoke to him this week, he sounded vindicated but hardly
cheerful. He still expects the recession to last until the end of 2009,
unless the financial problems are even worse than they appear -- in
which case it could extend "into 2010 and beyond."
He looks for GDP to drop by 5% annually early next year and for
unemployment to peak at 8% or so. All in all, he expects this to be "the
most severe recession in the post-World War II era."
And he thinks housing prices aren't close to a bottom. The S&P/Case-Shiller
Home Price index is down 21% from its 2006 peak. But with at least 1.6
million unsold homes still sitting on the market from the bubble,
Shilling thinks prices can fall by another 20% nationwide. "We're about
halfway through," he says, and he looks for the housing bust to end by
the fourth quarter of 2010. Ouch.
But most importantly, Shilling says we're just beginning the long,
painful deleveraging of the American consumer, who as we all know went
on a decades-long, debt-financed buying binge, driving household debt to
117% of personal income and knocking the official savings rate into
negative territory.
As credit dries up and consumers have no choice but to rebuild their
battered household balance sheets, Shilling looks for the savings rate
to rise by one percentage point a year for the next decade until it
reaches about 10%, where it stood in the early 1980s.
The new frugality, he believes, will depress consumer spending, the
engine of the U.S. and much of the world's economy, now at 70% of GDP.
It, and other effects of the crisis, could cause GDP growth to drop to
2% a year from the 3% average -- a dramatic decline.
So, that's the grim economic backdrop I see for the markets in the years
ahead. But isn't it a little late in the game to be turning bearish,
after stocks are down more than 40%? Could my "surrender" be part of the
capitulation that signals a market bottom? And how should investors
position their portfolios for the months or years ahead?
I'll try to answer those questions next time.
Howard R. Gold is executive editor of MoneyShow.com. The opinions
expressed here are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of
InterShow or MoneyShow.com
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