Monday, March 30, 2009

Rally Not Sustainable Without Bank Recovery

The U.S. stock markets rallied for a third week. The S&P 500 index was up 6.2% last week. Stocks have now rallied approximately 25% up from their lows of less than three weeks ago. The rally has pushed the S&P 500 index into single digit losses for the year (down 9%) and for a few days moved the Nasdaq briefly into positive territory until it fell on Friday.

The market loved all the positive economic news it received last week starting with the 5.1% increase in existing home sales followed by a 4.7% increase in new home sales. Durable goods orders rebounded 3.4% and consumer spending rose 0.2%. All these indicators came in at better-than-expected levels. These could be signs that the economic recession may be moving past its peak but it is still too early to tell.

The market also rose last week because investors enthusiastically embraced the Obama’s Administration bank recapitalization plan. The Treasury Department outlined the Public-Private Investment Plan (PPIP) which gives banks the means to remove toxic assets from their books freeing up capital to make new loans. This plan should help the banks and the credit markets to recover and begin lending. Nonetheless, these market rallies cannot be sustained over the long run until the banks are on sound footing. This is not to say that the success of the PPIP is guaranteed. There are numerous details and glitches that need to still be worked out if the PPIP is to be successful. There are, however, numerous reasons to be optimistic about the prospects of this program. The PPIP combined with all the government fiscal programs should eventually bring about a resolution to the credit crisis.

The recent rallies have been encouraging from a technical perspective. Trading volume has been increasing on upward moves and declining on pullbacks. This is crucial to building a bottom, but it creates painful volatility as the markets over shoot on the latest news. There is still much negative news out there, including high levels of unemployment, a very troubled auto industry and an extremely fragile financial system that could still be subject to negative shocks. A market like this will create exciting rallies and sickening declines. These market gyrations are an important part of the bottom building process as the market challenges asset pricing over and over again. So it is important for investors to keep a long term perspective despite the excessive level of volatility.


Monday, March 23, 2009

Forget the Sideshow: Just Resuscitate the Credit Markets

For the second week in a row, equities managed to post a positive gain despite heavy profit-taking at the end of the week. The S&P 500 gained 1.6% to close at 769. From the early March lows the market is up 20%.

The big news is the Federal Reserve’s announcement to institute a program to buy $1 trillion worth of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities in an effort to boost economic growth. The market for mortgage-backed securities has been frozen for months. The Feds attempt to thaw this market has been well received. The move is designed to lower mortgage rates so many homeowners (that are not under water and have jobs) can refinance. This should increase homeowners' cash flow and reduce foreclosures. In addition, this may induce prospective buyers to begin purchasing homes, thus bolstering the battered housing market.

Unfortunately while the Fed is doing its best to prop up the markets, save the banks and jump start the economy, Washington is too busy with its own sideshows. This one comes complete with a freak show of politicians berating AIG bonus recipients. While the outrage engendered by these bonuses is understandable, the grandstanding and legislative response is not productive.

If this proposed tax on bonuses received by TARP recipients is enacted, it will surely hurt the Fed's efforts to prop up the banking system. The bonuses are egregious but it is more important to get the economy jump started than to pursue a witch hunt. Stabilizing the banks should be our first and last priority. If we cannot stabilize the banks the economy will get much worse and the credit markets will freeze up further. Stabilizing the banks and greasing the gears of the credit markets should remain the government’s focus, not sideshows and witch hunts. Punishing these bonus recipients isn’t necessary because in the end the markets will extract its own retribution in the form of reduced pay or no job at all. Sooner or later these kings of finance will find that their industry has changed and the pickings are slim to none.

I anticipate the markets will be a little choppy but the rally will continue at a slow pace. If you are not in the stock market, I highly recommend that you start dollar cost averaging back in.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Turnaround or Bounce? Look To The Banks

Last week’s positive move in the stock market was overdue, but it is unclear whether this is the beginning of a turnaround or merely a bounce from oversold conditions. There is some evidence that market conditions are improving. Last week’s rally was broad-based and volume was heavy, which are strong technical factors. Additionally, lower-quality stocks have been outperforming, which typically happens as markets turn around. However, it is very possible that we are still bottoming-out.

There was good economic news last week. Retail sales figures were surprisingly positive. January’s data was revised to show that sales actually rose, and February’s numbers were down only slightly. All told, it appears possible that overall first-quarter retail sales growth will net out to around zero, a much better scenario than was widely anticipated only a few weeks ago.

Today more good news. An unexpected rise in housing starts and a more moderate increase in wholesale prices point toward a brighter economic outlook. Another plus, the market appears to have leveled off before the recently passed stimulus package has started to have any effect.

That said, the overall economic environment remains troubled, and as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said last week, “Until we stabilize the financial system, a sustainable economic recovery will remain out of reach. In particular, the continued viability of systemically important financial institutions is vital to this effort.” The banking system needs to stabilize before we see a full recovery.