[Mb-civic] Buttonwood Whither equities?

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Jul 13 11:38:27 PDT 2005



Economist.com      
    

    
About sponsorship

Buttonwood

Whither equities?

Jul 12th 2005
>From The Economist Global Agenda


Stockmarkets have more to fear from a spike in the oil price than from a
terrorist attack


AFTER last Thursday¹s blasts, it is business as usual in London this week‹or
so we are pretending. For those who lost family or friends, things will
never be ³usual² again. Buttonwood for once found a reason to be glad that
her teenaged daughters sleep the morning away during the holidays. When the
bombs went off, they had yet to put a foot out of doors.

But what is business as usual in today¹s markets? After the initial skid, as
investors retreated into traditional havens such as gold and Treasury bonds,
share prices showed rude good health. London¹s FTSE 100 index took a day to
recover, as did most European shares. Wall Street stumbled and caught itself
within the day. By close of play on Monday July 11th, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average had gained about 350 points from its post-London low;
NASDAQ hit a six-month high; and the Russell 2000, which tracks small-cap
shares, closed at its highest level ever.

This resilience was unexpected only in its ebullience. Unlike Madrid, which
took the hit in 2004, London knew that it would eventually be a target. And,
once a terrorist event does happen, stockmarkets recover more quickly than
they used to anyway. A number of academic studies suggest why.

Take, for example, the 2004 work by Andrew Chen of the Cox School of
Business at Southern Methodist University and Thomas Siems of the Dallas
Federal Reserve. Looking at 14 acts of terrorism or military attack,
beginning with the torpedoing of the Lusitania in 1915, they found that over
time fewer trading days were needed to return the Dow to its level before
the event. When Hitler invaded France, the Dow took 795 trading days to
recover. After the attack on the World Trade Centre on September 11th 2001,
it took just 40. For that, thank a healthy financial system, a central bank
that was quick off the mark in supplying liquidity, and improved technology
that had expanded the flow of information, brought more participants into
the market and increased its efficiency.

But there is weirdness at work these days. However stiff the upper lip, no
reminder that global terrorism is alive and kicking can be good news. Yet
now the market mood seems almost euphoric, whereas before the attack it was
one of muted gloom. In a year coruscating with conundrums, the direction of
the economy‹and corporate profits‹has rarely been so disputed. Is the ³soft
patch² history, or are we teetering on the edge of the abyss?

The flattening yield curve, high oil prices, the string of flat or negative
leading indicators from the OECD and competition from China all suggest that
things will get worse for America and Europe, and it¹s just a question of
how much worse. Yet the slowdown is mostly concentrated in manufacturing;
service sectors are reasonably upbeat. Consumer spending has slowed in
Britain but not in America. Unemployment in the United States is a mere 5%.
Companies have ample access to capital. Many expect American GDP growth of
between 3.25% and 3.5% this year, down from 4.4% in 2004 but far from
horrible.

Against this disputed background, dwindling corporate profits are the issue
du jour, as the reporting of second-quarter results begins in earnest. For
the past year and a half, America¹s stockmarket, though soggier than many in
Europe and the developing world, has been driven by surging earnings.
Company profits were growing at rates of 20% and more year-on-year, but they
are no longer. In the first quarter of 2005, profits increased by about 14%.
Analysts reckon they will grow by only about 7.5% this quarter, says Thomson
Financial. It doesn¹t do to take this guidance too seriously: company bosses
prefer to surprise on the upside and have been doing so in aggregate since
2003. But the go-go years would appear to be over. Does that mean that share
prices are set to crash?

Not necessarily, says Richard Batty, global investment strategist at
Standard Life Investment, a fund manager. Earnings and the stockmarket are
moderately correlated. In America that relationship has sometimes been
overridden by particular situations: the second world war, for example, and
inflation from the mid-1960s to the mid-1990s. For the past ten years,
however, corporate earnings have again been an important driver of the
market.

To the normal ebb and flow of profits over the business cycle must be added
other factors that influence earnings: most recently, oil¹s sharp spike
upward and the dollar¹s stealthy rise against the euro, which reduces the
value of American companies¹ earnings in the single currency. Mr Batty
models the sensitivity of operating earnings in 2005 and 2006 to an
immediate 50% increase in oil prices and a 10% decrease in the dollar (old
habits die hard), along with plausible monetary policy that these changes
would be likely to provoke. The Japanese stockmarket takes the greatest hit
from both changes in both years; Britain¹s takes the smallest, because
global energy firms are a big component of the FTSE. America benefits from
the weaker dollar only in the first year, before the Fed raises rates to
boost the currency.

Mr Batty then looks at the impact different real GDP growth rates in 2006
might have on earnings. If the American economy were to return to 4% growth,
the year-on-year increase in operating earnings would fall from roughly 15%
in the first quarter of 2005 to 5% by the end of 2006, thanks to slower
growth this year and the lagged effect of oil prices and the dollar¹s recent
appreciation. If the economy grows steadily at 3%, earnings perform about
the same, but for different reasons. And if GDP were actually to shrink,
operating earnings would collapse.

Something to bear in mind is that investors seem to be remarkably tolerant
of weak spells. Even if operating earnings grow by only 5%, well below the
S&P 500¹s trend of 8.3% since 1945, shares will increase in value‹and by
more if earnings growth is on an upward trend. Only if earnings actually
fall do investors hammer the shares. With almost all European equities
looking cheap relative to bonds, investors are pricing stocks for minimal
earnings growth. Not so in America, where only hyper-low bond yields can
make equities look a reasonable buy at current valuations.

What all this suggests is that while investors may be able to throw off
risks that they have no way of quantifying (ie, that of terrorist attack),
they are, in fact, reasonably clear-eyed about the likely impact of tangible
things like sharply dearer oil. Where oil spikes and repeated acts of
terrorism coincide, however‹other than in the Middle East‹is in tending to
produce slower economic growth. And that is one thing that even brave
London¹s spirit of endurance can do nothing to fix.

Send comments on this article to Buttonwood (Please state whether you are
happy for your comments to be published)

Read more Buttonwood columns at www.economist.com/buttonwood


Copyright © 2005 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All rights
reserved.





More information about the Mb-civic mailing list