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"Stock prices have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau. I do not
feel there will be soon if ever a 50 or 60 point break from present levels, such
as they have predicted. I expect to see the stock market a good deal higher
within a few months." - Dr. Irving Fisher, Professor of Economics at Yale
University, one of the most important US economists of his day, speaking on
October 17, 1929, a few weeks before the Great Crash.
"What," more than a few readers ask, "do you think of the new highs on the Dow?
Don't you have to admit we are not in a secular bear market? Can't you just
enjoy the new bull?" If it were a matter of just admitting I'm wrong, that would
be the easy part. I have been wrong lots of times and will be wrong again. But
the data keeps telling me that there is more to the story. This week we look at
earnings and investor expectations. In the man bites dog category, we visit with
a very mainstream analyst who says earnings will fall next year. But companies
are going to trumpet much higher earnings. There is a coming dissonance that
suggests a problem in future valuations.
Cycles Are About Valuation and Not Price
First, let's define what I mean by secular bull and bear markets. I think that
looking at secular market cycles in terms of price is not the most useful. In
Bull's-Eye Investing, I spent the first part of the book making the case that
one should look at cycles in terms of valuation. To understand this, let's look
at some of the charts from the book from Crestmont Research (run by my good
friend Ed Easterling.)
What we find is that markets go from high valuations to low valuations back to
high valuations. Looking over the cycles of the last century, we find that this
process is repeated time and again. The full cycle can last as long as 40 years
or as short as 8.
You can have powerful bull and bear markets (in terms of price) within these
long term secular valuation cycles. But you always go from high to low to high
valuations. There has never been a time when valuations go to some mid-point and
then turn around to make new highs or lows. You can see the actual cycles at
http://www.crestmontresearch.com/pdfs/Stock%20Secular%20Chart.pdf.

You can get a graphic picture of what the cycles look like by going to
http://www.2000wave.com/graphs.asp.
What you will find is a chart that shows you what
your annualized returns would have been starting from any year in the last
century and going forward 5, 10 or 50 years, year by year.
For instance, starting in 1929 and going forward for 50 years, you would have
averaged 2% after inflation and taxes. Not what you need for a happy retirement.
But if you start in 1950 and go forward for 50 years, you get 7% after inflation
and taxes. Now that is a good return. What is the difference?
Valuations. What the chart shows is that your long term returns heavily depend
on the valuation of the market at the time you invest.
Unless things are different this time, we should expect to see lower P/E
valuations (Price to Earnings) in the future. Now this can happen in one of two
ways. Either earnings increase as the market stays flat, or the market drops, or
a combination of both.
You can go to the S&P web site and look at the earnings for the S&P 500, both
historic and projected. Going back ten years to the second quarter of 1996, we
have seen reported earnings rise from $9.26 to $20.11, which is a little more
than double. That is roughly 7% compound earnings. The S&P at that time was 670,
a little less than half of where it is today.
(http://www2.standardandpoors.com/spf/xls/index/SP500EPSEST.XLS)
I fully expect earnings for the S&P 500 to double over the next 10-12 years.
That is in the 6-7% compound return range and is in line with historic growth
over the last century. (As an aside, part of the growth in earnings from the S&P
500 is because they replace lagging companies in the index with newer, faster
growing firms. Over time, this is a significant factor in S&P earnings growth.)
If the market was flat over that time (something I do not think will happen),
P/E ratios would be in the single digits.
What are valuations at today? On the tables in the link above, the trailing 12
month core P/E as of June 30 was 18. The market is up 5% since that time, but
earnings are rising as well, so the core P/E will probably in that range as well
when all the numbers for the third quarter are in. 18 is at the upper end of the
historic P/E range. 12 month forward P/E ratios are in the 16 range.
Historically, no long term bull market ever started with P/E ratios this high.
So, why is the market rising? Because as we will see, investors now expect that
growth we have seen in the last three years to continue for the next three
years. We take the past and extrapolate those returns into the future. More on
that later, but first let's return to the S&P earnings tables.
S&P makes estimates for future earnings. They track operating earnings, reported
earnings and core earnings. Reported earnings are based on GAAP, or generally
accepted accounting principles. Operating earnings are what companies and bulls
like to use. Operating earnings are of what I like to call EBBS - Earnings
Before Bad Stuff or Earnings Before BS. To get higher operating earnings, a
company simply states that certain items are one time charges and shouldn't
really count, therefore operating earnings are nearly always higher than
reported earnings.
This used to be really bad in the late '90s and early part of this decade. My
favorite item of what management can decide to call a one-time charge is
when Waste Management decided that painting its garbage trucks was a one-time
expense. It gave a whole new meaning to garbage accounting.
Recently, with the new rules, the divergence between reported and real earnings
has been rather small. A few years ago, S&P started giving us what they call
core earnings. This is earnings deducting for options and true pension costs.
S&P should be applauded for introducing this. And as new accounting rules make
businesses account for options and true pension costs, reported and core
earnings are starting to get closer.
Analysts Project Earnings to Fall
You read that right. S&P is projecting reported earnings to fall in 2007. Let's
look at the following numbers copied off the S&P earnings table. These are the
actual operating and reported earnings for the last three quarters and the
estimated earnings for the next six. Remember what I said about operating and
reported earnings getting closer to each other? If S&P projections are right,
that trend is about to end.
Today the difference is about 3%, which is not unreasonable. But starting next
quarter and then accelerating in the second quarter of next year, the projected
difference is quite large. They suggest that operating earnings will be 36%
higher than reported earnings. Operating earnings are projected to rise by
almost 14% from the end of 2006 to the end of 2007. 2007 doesn't sound like a
bad year, does it?
But that's not the whole story. S&P think that reported earnings will be lower
in the 3rd and 4th quarters of 2007 than they are in the same respective quarters
of this year, by as much as 6%! That's a 20% difference. Let's look at the
numbers and then do some analysis.

I talked to Howard Silverblatt of S&P, who was very helpful on a Friday evening.
I asked why are reported earnings projected to go down? Basically, S&P analysts
are expecting a lot of write-offs and other expenses to crop up later next year.
These will be put forth as EBBS, so therefore CEOs are going to suggest that you
should ignore those pesky write-offs.
Thus the divergence between operating and reported earnings. But there is more
to the story. Howard did a study which shows that the further down the food
chain (in terms of size) you go, the more glaring the divergence, both within
the S&P 500 and in the entire universe of stocks. It seems there is more
pressure on smaller companies to make their numbers look better than there is on
the larger company. It speaks to the whole corporate governance issue.
As an aside, Howard noted that 42 S&P 500 companies have been served notice by
either the SEC or the Department of Justice. That is a lot of management time
focused on non-productive matters.
So, even without a recession or an economic slowdown, earnings are likely to
disappoint next year. And when the expectations of investors are disappointed,
it creates problem for stock valuations. Let's revisit a study I cited about
three years ago which speaks to that very point.
The Evidence for Investor Overreaction
The problem with earning disappointments is forcefully born out by a study
produced in 2000 by David Dreman (one of the brightest lights in investment
analysis) and Eric Lufkin. The work, entitled "Investor Overreaction: Evidence
That Its Basis is Psychological" is a well written analysis of investor behavior
which illustrates that perceptions are more important than the fundamentals.
Let's look at that study in detail. Stay with me. This is important.
In any given year, there are stocks which are in favor, as evidenced by high
valuations and rising prices. There are also stocks which are just the opposite.
Dreman and Lufkin (or DL for the rest of this letter) look at a database for
4,721 companies from 1973 through 1998. Each year, they divide the database up
into five parts, or quintiles, based upon their perceived market valuations.
They separately study Price to Book Value (P/BV), Price to Cash Flow (P/CF) and
the traditional Price to Earnings (P/E). This creates three separate ways to
analyze stocks by value for any given year, so as to remove the bias that might
occur from just using one measure of valuation.
The top and bottom quintile become stock investment "portfolios" for all three
valuation measures. You might think of them as a mutual fund created to buy just
these stocks. They then look ten years back and five years forward for these
portfolios. There is enough data to create 85 such portfolios or funds. They
first analyze these portfolios as how they do relative to the market or the
average of all the stocks. They then analyze these portfolios in terms of five
basic investment fundamentals: Cash Flow Growth, Sales Growth, Earnings Growth,
Return on Equity and Profit Margin. They do this latter test to see if you can
discern a fundamental reason for the price action of the stock.
I wish Dreman would make these tables available for free - hint, hint - on his
website. It would be a good reason to visit. But let me describe what I think
are the more pertinent facts which leap out as we go through their presentation.
First, both the "out-performance" and "under-performance" of these stocks
happens in the ten years leading up to the formation of the portfolio. Almost
immediately upon creating the portfolio, the price performance comparisons
change, and change dramatically. The "in-favor" stocks underperform the market
for the next five years, and the out-of-favor (value) stocks outperform the
market.
I should point out that other studies, which Dreman does not cite, seem to
indicate that the actual experience of many investors is more like these static
portfolios than one might first think. That is because investors tend to chase
price performance. In fact, the higher the price and more rapid the movement,
the more new investors there are who jump in. The Dalbar study, among many
others, shows us that investors do not actually make what the mutual funds make
because they chase the hottest funds, buying high and selling low when the funds
do not live up to their expectations. The key word, as we will see later, is
expectations. Other studies document that investors tend to chase the latest hot
stock and shun those which are lagging in price performance. Thus, forming a
portfolio of the highest performing quintiles is an uncanny mirror to what
happens in the real world.
Why does this "chasing the hot stock" happen? DL tells us it is because
investors become over-confident that the trends of the fundamentals in the first
ten years will repeat forever, "...thereby carrying the prices of stocks that
appear to have the 'best' and 'worst' prospects. Investors are likely to
forecast a future not very different from the recent past, i.e., continuing
improving fundamentals for favorites and deteriorating fundamentals for
out-of-favor issues. Such forecasts result in favorites being overpriced, while
out-of-favor issues are priced at a substantial discount to the real worth. The
extrapolation of past results well into the future and the high confidence in
the precise forecast is one of the most common errors made in finance."
In other letters, I have highlighted the research that shows the more we learn
about a stock, the more we think we are competent to analyze it and the more
convinced we are of the correctness of our judgment.
Since you are not looking at the graphs, let me describe them for you.
Predictably, the fundamentals improve quite steadily for the first ten years for
the favorite stocks in comparison to the entire universe of stocks. But the
price performance rises at very high rates, far faster than the fundamentals,
particularly in the latter years. It clearly accelerates. It seems the longer a
stock does well the more confident investors are that it will continue to do
well and thereby award it with higher and higher multiples. The exact opposite
is true of the out-of-favor stocks. Even though many of the fundamentals were
actually slowly improving, in relationship to the market as a whole, they were
lagging and the market punished them with ever lower relative prices.
At five years prior to the formation of a portfolio, the trends of each group
were set in place. The next five years just reinforced these trends. This
reinforces the perceptions about these stocks and increases the level of
confidence about the future. Again, past (and accumulated and reinforced over
time) perception creates future price action.
Never mind that it is impossible for Dell to grow 50% a year or GE to compound
earnings at 15% forever. As many times as we say it, investors continue to
ignore the old saw "Past performance is not indicative of future results."
How much better did the good performing stocks do than the bad performing stocks
in the ten years prior to creating the portfolios? The highest P/BV (Price to
Book Value) stocks outperformed the market by 187%. The lowest stocks
underperformed the market by -79% for a differential of 266%! If you look at the
P/CF (Price to Cash Flow) the differential between the two is 172%.
Yet in the next five years, the hot stocks underperformed the market by a
negative -26% on a P/BV basis, and -30% on a P/CF basis. The out of favor stocks
did 33% and 22% better than the market, respectively. This is a HUGE reversal of
trend.
So, what happened? Did the trends stop? Did the former outcasts finally get
their act together and start to show better fundamentals than the all-stars? The
answer is a very curious "no."
"...there is no reversal in fundamentals to match the reversal in returns. That
is, as favored stocks go from outperforming the market, their fundamentals do
not deteriorate significantly, in some case they actually improve.... The
fundamentals of the 'worst' stocks are weaker than both those of the market and
of the 'best' stocks in both periods."
In some cases, the trends of the worst stocks actually got worse. Even as the
out-of-favor stocks improved in relative performance in the last five years,
their cash flow growth actually fell from 14.6% to 6.6%. While cash flow growth
for the best performing stocks did drop by 6%, it was still almost 2.5 times
that of the lower group. Read the following carefully:
"Thus, while there is a marked transition in the return profiles [share price],
with value stocks underperforming growth in the prior period and outperforming
growth stocks in the measurement period, this is not true for fundamentals. In
nearly every panel [areas in which they made measurements], fundamentals for
growth stocks are better than those for value stocks both before and after
portfolio formation."
"Although there is a major reversal in the returns [prices] to the best and
worst stocks, there is no corresponding reversal in the fundamentals." In fact,
in many cases the fundamentals continue to improve for the growth stocks and
deteriorate for the value stocks. The data and the graphs clearly show the
fundamentals for the growth stocks clearly beat those of the value stocks even
for the five years after portfolio formation. And yet, there is a very stark
reversal in price. Why, if not based upon the fundamentals?
DL goes to another research paper which shows (Dreman and Berry - DB) "...that
even a small earnings surprise can initiate a reversal in returns that lasts
many years. They demonstrate that negative surprises on favorite stocks result
in significant underperformance of this group not only in the year of the
surprise but for at least four years following the initial event. They also show
that positive surprises on out-of-favor stocks resulted in significant
outperformance in the year of the surprise, and again for at least the four
years following the initial event. DB attributes these results to major changes
in investor expectations following the surprise."
So where was the overreaction? Was it in the years leading up to the surprise
which resulted in a very high or low priced stock (relative to the
fundamentals), or was it in the immediate reaction to the surprise?
Other studies show analysts (as opposed to investors) are too slow to react to
earnings surprises by being too slow to adjust earnings. Even nine months later,
analysts expectations are too high.
That Permanently High Plateau
Investor expectations are clearly high. Money is pouring into US mutual funds.
Last month saw $2.2 billion, the second highest month of inflows this year. And
so far this month, we have seen $2.6 billion, says Trimtabs. Since gold
disappointed, investors started to bail last month. They took out $214 million
last month in mutual funds that invest in gold and precious metals, as opposed
to the previous six months which saw an average of $129 million in additions. Of
course, gold is back above $600 as the hot money runs for the exits.
Investors are acting like stocks are at a permanently high plateau. They are
projecting 15% increases in earnings out a very long time. Never mind that
this is double the historical rate of growth, and far faster than the economy is
growing. Yes, some of that "excess" growth can be explained by share buybacks
and some of it can be explained by profits from international operations in
countries where growth is higher. But it is unrealistic to expect earnings to
grow at the rate they have been. Stocks are getting priced to perfection once
again.
The Wall Street Journal today has a headline that says: "Short Interest Inches
to Record On the Big Board." That means, the bulls will tell us, that an
explosive short covering rally is just around the corner. Possibly.
But let me give you two quotes from an earlier edition of the Wall Street
Journal, sent to me be good friend Chris Cooper which he found in an old Joe
Granville letter:
"Because of the big short interest, it is the growing view that a good technical
recovery is in prospect...and that the internal market structure is probably
stronger than in some time." 16-Sep-1929
"Of course, the operations for a rally were aided by the technical position of
the market which had become oversold in many directions by the bears, with the
short interest larger than in some time." 9-Oct-1929
Much of the recent rise in the Dow 30 has been from less than ten of the
components. Caterpillar has counted for 500 points by itself since the low.
Richard Russell notes that the Dow Transports are not confirming a new bull.
Where are the new highs on the other indexes? Given the inverted yield curve,
the continued problems in the critical housing markets and the rest of the
forward looking themes I have discussed over the past few months, I still
believe we are going to get to buy this market at much lower prices and better
valuations.
By the way, among other things, I suggested buying bonds six years ago when I
forecast a recession. You would have been far better off than with an index of
the S&P 500. Maybe I will be wrong this time, but you still have to go with the
data, until it becomes really clear that this time it is different.
We live in interesting times.
Birthdays and What are the Odds?
It is time to hit the send button. I have kids in from college this weekend and
want to get home to see them. All the kids (7 of them) and significant others
and friends will be gathering tomorrow night for a joint birthday party for me
and #2 son. I have just had mine and his is in two weeks. It will make for a fun
weekend, and then dinner with more friends Sunday night.
I have had several reasons lately to ponder my mortality. It is something I
normally try to avoid. Riding in the car yesterday, I heard this report on CNN
and was reminded yet again. We have all heard of the very sad death of Steve
Irwin being stung through the heart by a stingray. But he was down in the water
with the stingray.
82 year old James Bertakis, of Lighthouse Point, Fla., was boating on the
inter-coastal water way with his granddaughter and a friend Wednesday when a
spotted eagle stingray flopped onto the boat and stung Bertakis in the chest as
he tried to brush it off, driving part of the barb into his heart. The women
steered the boat to shore and called 911.
Bertakis has evidently survived surgery, thankfully. But what are the odds? Not
of surviving, mind you, but of sitting in your boat and having a bottom dwelling
stingray leap in and stab you in the heart?
A number of things of late have made me realize how all too ephemeral our hold
on life is. It is the grace of God that we survive driving while talking on cell
phones, let alone the outside the box risk of a stingray leaping into your boat.
It makes me appreciate the good times with my family and friends all the more.
If you are looking for good value, more time with family and friends is
certainly one place to find it.
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Your always looking for good values analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
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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.
Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.
Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. 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 FINRA
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. Millennium Wave Investments
cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings
with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return
Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor's services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.
PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.
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