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The
market, we keep hearing and reading, is telling us that there is recovery
around the corner. And pundits point to data that seems to suggest the worst is
behind us. The leading economic indicators, while still down significantly,
seem to be in the process of bottoming. There is a large amount of stimulus in
the pipeline. Mark-to-market has been modified. Housing seems to be finding a
bottom, if you look at the rise in sales from January. And so on. In this week's letter, we look at
what past recoveries have looked like in terms of corporate earnings; and we
look at the continued slide in earnings on the S&P 500, which has a
negative price-to-earnings ratio looming in future months (yes, that is not a
typo, we have an unprecedented earnings multiple). We take a peek at housing
and foreclosures. There is just so much bad news out there (like continued
unemployment) that it just has to get better, doesn't it? This should make for
an interesting letter. Is That Recovery We See? This
week the market seemed to like financial stocks and was buoyed on news that
Pulte Homes would buy Centex to create the largest US homebuilder. And with
banks having some room to adjust their writedowns as mark-to-market is
modified, the market saw significant increases in the financial sector.
Everywhere I keep hearing the old saw that the market predicts a recovery about
six months out, so won't we see a recovery in the fourth quarter of 2009? If
you look at earnings estimates for 2009, that is what is suggested. Bloomberg
reports that profits at S&P 500 companies probably fell 38% on average in
the first quarter. The stretch of quarterly declines is the longest since at
least the Great Depression, data compiled by S&P and Bloomberg show. Earnings may drop 31% in the second
quarter and 18% in the next before gaining 74% in the last three months of the
year, analysts predict. Banks are projected to account for all of the rebound in the
final quarter. Without financial companies, the gain turns into a 5%
decline, the data show. The above estimates are based on
operating earnings, not as-reported earnings. Long-time readers know that
operating earnings are actually earnings before interest and Bad Stuff. As-reported
earnings are what companies actually report on their tax reports, and as a
gauge of profitability they are much more reliable. Before the mid-'90s the
difference between operating and as-reported earnings was typically quite small.
Then companies found they could play the market if they played games with their
operating earnings. Operating earnings typically do not
take into account one-time, nonrecurring events. The number of items which get
classified as "nonrecurring" has mushroomed to the point where projected
operating earnings for 2009 are more than double the estimates of as-reported
earnings. Operating earnings for 2008 were almost three times actual, or as-reported,
earnings. We certainly seem to have entered an era of really bad one-time
events, which just keep on coming and coming. As recently as 2006, there was
less than a 10% difference between the two. In some quarters it was only 5%. A
far cry from today's 100%-plus. Those Wild and Crazy Analysts Analysts, who as a group have been
egregiously bad at predicting earnings of financial stocks for the last two
years, would have us believe they are due for a large rise in the 4th
quarter. Let's visit those assumptions for a few minutes. They contend that much of the bad
news in the subprime-loan and housing market has been written off. And one
would have to admit that a lot has been; and with the relaxation of
mark-to-market, there may indeed be some truth to that suggestion. But there
are still some issues that remain for housing. Take a look at the graph below.
(Not sure where it is from, as it was sent to me, but I have seen the same data
elsewhere.) Notice that monthly mortgage-rate resets declined markedly in 2009
from 2008, but are expected to rise again in 2010 and 2011. There is still some
heartburn in the mortgage market. 
The Shadow Inventory of Homes And foreclosures keep climbing, though some point to that
fact that they seem to be leveling off. However, a strange thing is happening.
We are seeing what is being called a "shadow inventory" of foreclosed homes. "We believe there are in the
neighborhood of 600,000 properties nationwide that banks have repossessed but
not put on the market," said Rick Sharga, vice president of RealtyTrac, which
compiles nationwide statistics on foreclosures. "California probably represents
80,000 of those homes. It could be disastrous if the banks suddenly flooded the
market with those distressed properties. You'd have further depreciation and
carnage." (San Francisco Chronicle) A Realty Trac survey found that
only 30% of foreclosures were listed for sale in real estate listings like the
MLS (Multiple Listing Service). Add in homes that people would like to sell but
simply can't find buyers for, and must either hold or rent, and the unsold
inventory numbers that are public are likely far below actual available homes. Might some homes in foreclosure be
held off the market because banks eventually want to negotiate with the
homeowner? Possibly, but other surveys show that anywhere from 30-40% of homes
in the foreclosure process in many areas are actually already vacant. There is
no one with whom to negotiate. Typically a foreclosed home sells
within a few weeks, as banks take the first "reasonable" offer. But it normally
takes about three months from foreclosure to when the home is put on the market
-- it takes a few months to get a home
ready. But surveys show it is taking a lot longer now, and many homes have not
made it onto the market, even as more homes are being foreclosed each month. The Chronicle suggests
several factors may be at work. First, there is the "pig-in-the-python"
problem. There are just so many homes that it is hard to get them onto the
market and sold. Normally there are about 160,000 homes a year in foreclosure
sales. We are now seeing 80,000 a month, or six times normal levels, and
rising. Second, lenders could be deferring sales
to put off having to acknowledge the actual extent of their losses. "With
banks in the stress they're in, I don't think they're anxious to show losses in
assets on their balance sheets," one observer said. Finally, banks may not want to
flood the market with foreclosures, driving prices down even more. They are
simply managing their assets so as to recover the most capital they can. Given that the graph above says there
will be more mortgage misery as large numbers of mortgages reset in the next
two years, and given the unknowable nature of the losses, it is somewhat
optimistic to think financial profits will rise by 74% in the fourth quarter.
But it gets worse. Commercial Real Estate Starts a Long, Slow Slide We are now starting to see some
real deterioration in traditional bank lending. Delinquencies on home equity
loans are rising rapidly. The American Banking
Association released a composite index of eight different types of consumer
loans, and the delinquency rate on this 35-year-old composite jumped to a
record high of 3.22%. The
above reflects 4th-quarter data. As unemployment is up 2% since then
and is rising, it is more than reasonable to assume that we will see another
record rise in delinquencies this quarter. With unemployment headed to over 10%
and maybe 11% from today's 8.5%, delinquencies are likely to continue to rise
for the entire year. David
Rosenberg reports that "The National Federation of Independent Business found
in a poll that 28% of small firms said they had a line of credit or credit card
limit cut back in the second half of last year; 69% stated they are facing
worse terms. A new FICO study found that 11% of US consumers -- 22
million people -- have had their credit lines cut or accounts closed even
though they have been paying their bills on time and retain a solid rating."
This is certainly not good news for those who expect a positive 4th
quarter. Cutting credit to small business, the engine of job growth in the US,
is hardly a prescription for a growing economy. Commercial
mortgages are in trouble. S&P has warned they may cut ratings on $97
billion in commercial-mortgage asset-backed debt. The country's 10
biggest banks have $327.6 billion in commercial mortgages, according to
regulatory filings. A projected tripling in the default rate would result in
losses of about 7% of total unpaid balances, according to estimates from
analysts at research firm Reis Inc. (Bloomberg) I think, given the track record of
the analysts who project a 74% rise in earnings for financial stocks in the 4th
quarter of this year, that we should remain a tad skeptical. And speaking of
earnings, let's go to the S&P web site and see how things are progressing. But first, let's look at just how
badly analysts blew it in estimating 2008 earnings. In the table below we see
that as recently as October 15 they were estimating AS-REPORTED earnings to be
$54, down from $92 when I first saw the 2008 estimates. There were only two
months to go in 2008. So, what are the actual 2008 earnings? Down to $14.88!!! 
Not exactly a record to inspire
confidence. So, how are we doing in 2009? We see the same pattern. There is a
clear deterioration in earnings estimates. Yet, even with the ever lower estimates,
they are still projecting nearly a doubling from 2008. Care to make a wager as
to what the estimates will look like in a few quarters? Think we will see
earnings rise? 
P/E Ratios Go Negative! When we last visited the S&P
web site a few weeks ago, the P/E ratio for the quarter ending September 30 was
around 181. I must confess that when I looked at it today, as jaded as I am, I
was shocked. You can see the numbers for yourself at http://www2.standardandpoors.com/spf/xls/index/SP500EPSEST.XLS?GXHC_gx_session_id_=5350992f205e73e4&. The P/E ratio for the end of the
second quarter is 1944 (not a typo). The losses of the 4th quarter wipe
out almost all earnings for the 12 months ending June 30. But by the end of the
3rd quarter, the estimated P/E ratio has dropped to a (negative)
-467. That has never happened. We have never seen negative earnings over a 12-month
period since WWII. (I don't have data for the Depression era.) Then as the negative earnings of
the 4th quarter of 2008 drop off, we see the estimated P/E ratio
rise back to 30, which is quite high. However, if actual earnings come in
lower, as I think they will, the P/E ratio will rise and/or the market will
fall as negative earnings surprises just keep on coming. The Effect of Earnings Surprises As William Hester of Hussman Funds
writes in a recent article, the rise and fall of the stock market closely
correlates with earnings surprises. Look at the following chart. (You can see
the whole article at http://www.hussmanfunds.com/rsi/econsurprises.htm.
I highly recommend it.) As Hester writes, "To track the
trends in economic performance, we keep an ongoing tally of how data is
announced relative to expectations -- a method of analysis originally
inspired by Bridgewater Advisors. Economic
data that surpasses expectations gets added to a 3-month running total. Data
that comes in weaker than expected gets subtracted. A rising line means that
economic data is generally coming in above expectations, while a falling line
means that the data has disappointed. A descending line could be the result of
an economy that is not expanding as quickly as economists predict or --
like in 2008 -- it could be the result of an economy that is contracting
at a faster rate than expected. 
"... Much of the excitement in the
stock market -- at least that is related to the current performance of the
economy -- seems to be centered on an economy that is performing less
badly than expected. The risks here seem to be that if the trends in data surprises
change, so could investors' attitudes toward stocks that are currently
overbought on a number of measures. "... If the high correlation between
stock prices and data surprises holds, the recent rally in stocks might be
tested. Even if the economy has bottomed, it's very likely that the eventual
recovery will prove to be uneven, causing the flow of positive surprises to be
uneven. During these periods, the risks to stocks will be greatest when the
market is overbought and investors have priced in high expectations of positive
data surprises continuing." The projections of many market
analysts assume that we will have something that will look like a normal
recovery. I have objected that that could be a very bad assumption, since we
are not having a normal recession. This is already a very lengthy recession,
and is just going to get longer. As I will note below, there are reasons to
think we could see a mild recovery late this year, only to dip back into
recession next year. Corporate Earnings and Recovery in Recessions Next, let's look at a very
interesting chart sent to me by one of my readers, Chad Starliper of Rather and
Kittrell in Knoxville, Tennessee. It shows all the cumulative drops in earnings
from major peaks, along with the recovery paths. What is interesting is the
divergence between the pre- and post-WWII periods. Our experience since 1945 is
one of rather quick recoveries, averaging about 3-4 years until earnings rise
above the old highs. The thicker black line shows a drop
of 69.2% from peak earnings since 2007. Prior to World War II, it took 12-20
years for earnings to recover. Earnings are still dropping. As I will point out
in the next few e-letters, we live in a world (not just the US) that is in a
deep recession. There is massive deleveraging and deflation. The recovery is
going to be quite slow, and that portends a slow recovery in earnings, which
suggests protracted churning in the stock market. (By the way, for those of you
who print out this letter, the next graph will be hard to read if it is not in
color.) 
Even
ignoring the disastrous 4th quarter of 2008, what if earnings drop
by 80% or more, which is quite possible? That means they have to rise by 400%
to get back to new highs. That could take some time. Even if they could rise at
an unlikely 24% a year, it would take six years to see new highs. Look at what
a mountain corporate earnings must climb. Consumers are retrenching, and
savings rates are likely to rise for at least 3-4 years, back to 7% or more, leaving
consumer spending not at 70% of US GDP but closer to 63%. That will be a rather
large adjustment, and will mean that a lot of productive capacity will have to
be closed or allowed to lie in disuse for a long time. We just built too many
strip malls and car factories and restaurants. It is going to take some
adjustments. Further, the Democratic Congress
and the Obama administration are going to enact the largest tax increase in
history in 2010, just as the economy is barely recovering. The Bush tax cuts go
away, because the Republicans could not make them permanent when they had the
chance. We are going to pay for that with a likely dip back into a recession in
2010, or at the very least a prolonged weak economy. The Implosion in Social Security And then there is the last piece of
data I want to bring to your attention, which is the most troubling of all.
Everyone knows that the government spends the Social Security surpluses on
current needs, "borrowing" the money and putting it into a "Social Security
Trust Fund," which is basically just US debt we owe to the trust fund. In other
words, there is no trust fund with anything other than paper debt. It is
accounting legerdemain. Everyone assumed that the real problem
would come sometime later next decade, when there would no longer be surpluses.
In 2008, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected there would be $703
billion in surpluses from 2009-18. Recently, the CBO has revised those
estimates downward. It now projects surpluses to be only $83 billion. Here is a
table that was sent to me from a blog by Chris Martensen.
(http://www.chrismartenson.com) 
Writes
Chris, "In the projections for the table above, the CBO has assumed no cost of
living adjustments (COLAs) in 2010, 2011, or 2012 and a return to
economic growth next year. If either of those assumptions proves wrong, the
table above gets smoked to the downside." Losing
$700 billion (and likely a lot more) out of your budget projections is a huge
blow to the US taxpayer. That money is going to have to be borrowed, or
spending reduced. But the plans are for huge increases in spending. In
one of the great ironies, the Democrats and the Obama administration are going
to have to deal with the Social Security crisis, and soon. Bush tried to do so,
and he got torpedoed from both sides of the aisle. Politicians just do not want
to be seen doing anything to SS. Given the massive, multi-trillion-dollar
deficits that are projected, the US is going to face some difficulty in
borrowing to meet those deficits in the not-too-distant future. Is it 3 years?
4? 5? No one can say for certain, but that day is coming and it now appears much
closer. Let's
say that US consumers do save 7%. That's almost a trillion a year. The trade
deficit dropped to $26 billion last month, as imports continued to drop. That's
another $300 billion that foreign central banks could recycle. The Fed could
print a few trillion here or there without really pushing up inflation in
today's deflationary world. But
there is a limit to continued $2-trillion deficits without the appreciable rise
in interest rates that will be needed to attract buyers of Treasury bonds,
which of course would increase interest-rate payments on the national debt,
while also crowding out corporate and personal borrowing. This is not going to
end well, and the end game is getting a lot closer. All in all, the next few years are
going to be a very difficult environment for corporate earnings. To think we
are headed back to the halcyon years of 2004-06 is not very realistic. And if
you expect a major bull market to develop in this climate, you are not paying
attention. The original question was "Is that
recovery we see?" I think the answer is no. Copenhagen, London, Newport Beach, etc. Last
week's Strategic Investment Conference was the best we have ever had. Many
attendees said it was the best investment conference they had ever attended. We
are transcribing speeches and will make some of them available over time. The Richard Russell Tribute Dinner
was a great success. We had video crews there as well as photographers, and
intend to allow those who wish they could have been there to see part of the
evening. It was a very emotional evening, and I want to thank the roughly 450
people who came from all over the world just to pay tribute to one of the true
wonders of the investment-writing world. I leave Monday evening for
Copenhagen, where I will meet with Tom Fischer of Jyske Bank, and then day-long,
back-to-back board meetings with Niels Jensen of Absolute Return Partners, and
back to London Wednesday night for more meetings. I get back Friday in time to write
the letter, then off the next Thursday to Orange County, where I will attend
Rob Arnott's annual conference. More on that later. Back on Sunday, and then
out Monday to the Charter Financial Analyst conference in Orlando, where I
speak on the "state of the union" of the alternative investment world. Then I
am home for awhile, and gladly. We had 300 people in for the
Strategic Investment Conference, and the staff of my partners and co-hosts,
Altegris Investments, did a magnificent job making everything go smoothly.
There were so many friends there, the only disappointment was that I did not
have all the time I wanted to meet with everyone. It was like drinking from a
fire hose for three days, but it was fun. It's time to hit the send button,
as all my kids are in town and most of us are going to have some dinner and
then see the Dallas Mavericks play. Brunch on Easter, of course, with family
and friends, and then the final day of the Masters to round out a perfect
weekend. I have been watching some of it on ESPN, and seeing Augusta on high-definition
TV is truly spectacular. I hope your weekend will be as good
as mine. Spend time with family and friends if you can. That time is an
investment that will pay dividends forever, and doesn't run up the national
debt. Well, a little bit, if you have to buy the tickets and pay for brunch for
about 16. But that's what Dads are for. Your starting to think about the end game more analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
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