Lemonjello's intermittent skullduggery
Collapse
X
-
-
I'm more like a $.02 EWer. I just pulled the count from memory of some EW material I read one time.
More interesting to me is the clear fact that the value of market peaked after the tech run up and hasn't even approached that level again despite all the cheering you hear about how well the US stock market it doing. Sure it's going up in $ terms, but what else is happening? The actual real money purchasing power of that stock is going down and has been for 6-7 years. It still seems to be in a downtrend.
Why? IMO, one of the reasons is there are Fed and Treasury machinations going on behind the scenes creating a lot of $ and the markets know this. In a previous post I noted the Fed has stopped reporting M3 as irrelevant and US gov't now uses core inflation which excludes most of the items that actual humans in the US have to purchase (and the prices have been going up).
It's a confidence game of three card monte played out on a huge scale complete with extremely well paid shills and poorly paid marks.
It would be great to see a real EW expert comment on the chart to get a more realistic count and idea of where we go from here.
Originally posted by New-born baby View PostLemon,
I don't think your count is correct. However, I am only a ten cent EWer; I will hold off additional comments until a REAL EWer can speak with authority. RUNNER!! SPIKE!! HELP!!!
Comment
-
-
ft.com
Citadel trading costs hit $5.5bn
By David Wighton, Ben White and Deborah Brewster in New York
Published: December 1 2006 22:02 | Last updated: December 1 2006 23:08
The importance to Wall Street of a handful of large hedge funds was starkly illustrated by the disclosure that Citadel Investment Group paid more than $5.5bn in interest, fees and other investment costs last year.
Although the net asset value of Citadel’s two funds is only about $13bn, its costs are high because its managers trade frequently and take on huge leverage.
More than 90 per cent of the investment expenses represent interests payments, including the cost of the roughly $100bn of net debt provided by investment and commercial banks. Citadel had gross assets at the end of August of $166bn, representing leverage of 12.5 times.
Some of the interest expense is payments to owners of securities that Citadel borrows, including other hedge funds. Citadel would not disclose how much of the interest went to banks.
The interest and fees will be spread among a large number of investment banks that act as “prime brokers” and commercial banks. Citadel also has huge interest income which in the current year is running slightly ahead of payments.
Senior Wall Street executives on Friday expressed surprise at the high interest costs and Citadel’s willingness to reveal the leverage of its funds.
Citadel was founded in 1990 by Ken Griffin, now 38, who began trading convertible bonds from his room at Harvard. Mr Griffin is estimated to be worth $1.7bn by Fortune.
The figures, disclosed in Citadel’s prospectus for a $2bn debt issue, explain why regulators are concerned that banks may be tempted to loosen their controls to win hedge fund business.
It also underlines the threat posed by the big funds’ moves to bring more of their trades in-house and raise more permanent capital, reducing their need for bank lending.
Citadel has its own in-house trading arms which are understood to account for a small part of the $5.5bn of expenses. The prospectus discloses that Citadel is considering moving some functions, “such as certain trade execution, financing and/or clearing functions” into a separate unit which may then offer the services to third parties, competing directly with investment banks.
Citadel is raising $2bn in a debt issue managed by Lehman Brothers and Goldman Sachs. Fortress Investment Group, which has $26bn in hedge fund and private equity assets, last month filed for an initial public offering that is expected to value it at about $7.5bn.
But the banks are expected to fight hard to retain hedge fund business. Sylvie Durham, a lawyer at Greenberg, Traurig who represents hedge funds, said: “They will cut spreads on deals and loosen restrictions they have on how money they lend can be used.”
Citadel’s main fund, Kensington, had $9.5bn in assets under management at October 1 this year, and has returned an average of 20.7 per cent a year since 1998, well above the long-term average of about 10 per cent over that period. In 2005 it returned 7.2 per cent, partly as a result of losses in the credit, energy and reinsurance markets, Citadel said in the document.
Citadel’s $3bn Wellington fund has returned an average of 23.6 per cent a year since 1998. In 2005 it returned 6 per cent, also as a result of the same losses.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by lemonjello View Post
Having voiced my opinion on the 20 year EW cycle I think your take on the chart is within reason and that we are in the beginning of the start of a 5th wave up on your 20 year chart. That 5th wave up should go above the top of the 3rd wave. That would put gold above 700. I own the ETF and am prejudiced in that respect but if world economic and political conditions worsen I could see that happening with gold going over 700.
Another question would be if gold continues to go up what effect would that have on individual stocks and the underlying strength in the markets in general?THE SKIRACER'S EDGE: MAKE THE EDGE IN YOUR FAVOR
Comment
-
-
I don't know whether you can predict from the chart or not. I just thought it was interesting to take a look at the "real" value of the SPX in terms of gold. It seemed to conform to certain EW type criteria.
I'm not sure what you're saying - if gold is going up in a 5th wave, most likely this chart will go down since gold in in the denominator (SPX/Gold) - unless the SPX flys.
Originally posted by skiracer View PostI've never felt that anyone could look back 20 years or so and conclude from a 20 year chart what might be expected to happen this year. And then make a call off of that or even more suspect to buy a position based on it. What's is going on now is happening from events that are taking place within the last year or two and the way the world and the USA is reacting is more related to those events than anything that happened 15/20 years ago. It's nice to try to predict the EW cycles from a 20 year chart but personally I think it's spitting in the wind. Gold and silver are both reacting to the events taking place and shape within the past 6 months if that and if you were going to make a play it should be based closer to the realtime than years into the past. The past year has been a great time to buy gold and silver and a few other precious metals.
Having voiced my opinion on the 20 year EW cycle I think your take on the chart is within reason and that we are in the beginning of the start of a 5th wave up on your 20 year chart. That 5th wave up should go above the top of the 3rd wave. That would put gold above 700. I own the ETF and am prejudiced in that respect but if world economic and political conditions worsen I could see that happening with gold going over 700.
Another question would be if gold continues to go up what effect would that have on individual stocks and the underlying strength in the markets in general?
Comment
-
-
Never woulda guessed it
Barrons.com
Hard Data Shows Soft Landing
Prudential Equity Group
THE FED RELEASED ITS Flow of Funds report at noon Thursday. The report contains a wealth of data, but I've tended to pay particular attention to the balance sheet of households (and non-profits).
According to the Fed, net worth hit a new all-time high in the third quarter, $54 trillion. Assets were $67 trillion and liabilities, $13 trillion. The assets/liabilities ratio fell slightly to 5.16 compared with 5.19 in the second quarter.
Owners' equity in real estate just barely managed a tiny increase relative to the second quarter. Basically, the value of real estate went up $200 billion and we borrowed most of that.
The gain in wealth came in financial assets, up about $750 billion from the second quarter.
Overall, I think the report shows households feeling some strain from the sharp drop in real-estate appreciation, but so far the gain in disposable income and financial assets has offset that strain.
I think the soft landing remains on track, the corporate sector continues to perform well, and equity valuations are attractive.
I'm sticking with a bullish 1600 S&P 500 close for 2007 and a 90% equity allocation versus a 60% benchmark.
-- Ed Keon, Director of Quantitative Research
Comment
-
-
The other take - or LTCM redux
smartmoney.com
Donald Luskin
IN THE FIVE-PLUS YEARS I've been writing this column, most of my market calls have been right (if I do say so myself). But there's one that I've gotten wrong, over and over and over again. Yes, I admit I've been a bear on bonds. Actually, truth be told, I've been a super-bear.
And bonds just refuse to go down.
I'm not changing my tune. I still think bonds are going down. Bonds are doomed. Bonds are toast.
They just don't know it yet.
There's not the slightest doubt in my mind that bonds are in a bubble, not unlike the Nasdaq bubble of the late 1990s.
Look at the yield curve — the difference between short-term and long-term bond yields. Ten-year Treasury bonds are yielding more than 75 basis points less than the federal-funds rate on overnight money (a so-called "inverted yield curve"). Everybody knows that long-term rates should be higher than short-term rates, because there's more risk involved. Yet, today bond investors actually want less return for more risk.
That's probably because they think the economy is going to slow down sharply, and so they expect the Federal Reserve to soon lower short-term rates. But there's no evidence that the economy is slowing in any particularly dramatic way (if at all, other than housing).
And virtually every word uttered by any Federal Reserve official in public suggests that, because of the threat of inflation and the absence of a sharp slowdown, the next rate move is more likely to by higher than lower.
And look at the amazingly lower premium that investors are demanding for taking credit risk. Today the yield difference between riskless Treasury bonds and highly risky junk bonds is near the lowest in history. Same for spreads between U.S. Treasurys and the bonds issued by impoverished third-world nations.
And don't get me started on the absurdly low prices of so-called "credit enhancement derivatives" — the market for what amounts to leveraged insurance policies against default risk. They're giving them away.
For me, there are only two ways this can go.
One: If bonds are like Nasdaq 5000 early in the year 2000, then we're right at the top and the bottom will fall out right here, right now.
Two: If bonds are like Nasdaq 4000 in 1999, then there's one more big leg up and then the bottom falls out.
It's probably number two. I say that, in part, because of what I'm hearing from my clients — a very sophisticated group of institutional investors, hedge-fund managers, and investment banks. They're saying all the same things smart investors said about the Nasdaq in 1999.
In a nutshell: "Sure, this is completely irrational. But I'd be crazy not to play along. And I know everyone else is thinking the same thing, so there's nothing to do but buy."
Comment
-
-
Good news for the workin man
Barrons.com
Labor Market Could Tighten in 2007
MKM Partners
THE NOVEMBER JOBS REPORT showed that payrolls expanded by an above-consensus 132,000 jobs based on the establishment survey and a robust 277,000 jobs based on the household survey. Construction and manufacturing shed 40,000 jobs while services -- which make up more than 80% of the U.S. economy -- showed robust growth of 172,000 jobs.
The unemployment rate ticked up slightly to 4.5%, but this was entirely due to a 383,000 surge in the labor force. The labor force participation rate, previously spotlighted by the pessimists and bears, rose to 66.3%, the highest in more than three years.
Non-managerial wages have advanced by 4.1% during the past year, well above the 3.7% average going back to 1980 and above the inflation rate anyway it's measured. We think this data, and the fact that core inflation has been running above trend (and the Federal Open Market Committee's target), tosses cold water on the idea that the Fed will be in a position to cut interest rates anytime soon.
While most economists are continuing to look for unemployment to rise and job growth to weaken, we actually believe there is a better chance that the reverse will occur as the housing drag abates. Indeed, the peak in profits as a ratio to compensation typically occurs three years before unemployment bottoms. The profits/compensation ratio just reached a post-World War II record in the third quarter, which means the best still may be yet to come for the labor market. Maybe [economist Joseph] Schumpeter really was right.
Non-farm payroll growth advanced by an above-consensus 132,000 jobs during November with net upward revisions of 42,000 jobs for the previous two months.
Job growth has been revised up for six straight months. November's slight uptick in the unemployment rate to 4.5% from 4.4% was entirely the result of a 383,000 surge in the labor force, which eclipsed the 277,000 new jobs recorded by the household survey (from which the unemployment rate is calculated).
Job losses have been concentrated in construction and manufacturing, but services job growth has been strong and steady. The goods-producing sector shed 40,000 jobs in November after a 62,000 job decline in October. However, the service sector, which constitutes 83.5% of total employment, has shown steady job growth near 175,000 jobs during the last three months.
In other words, once the drag from housing-related industries abates, payroll growth may resume at a level closer to 200,000 jobs per month, which is exactly where the household jobs survey has pegged average job growth during the last 12 months.
This pace of job growth also would keep year-to-year employment growth near 1.5% -- about the average since mid-2004 when the labor market recovery began.
There has been no slowdown in job growth in the household survey, which showed that job gains have averaged 328,300 during the last three months, the fastest three-month growth rate since June 2005. The more-stable 12-month moving average shows steady job growth of about 200,000 jobs, which translates into 2.4 million new jobs per year.
Perhaps this is why low-end wages have begun to rise faster than inflation. Non-supervisory wages rose 4.1% on a year-to-year basis, well above headline or core inflation and also above the 3.7% average annual wage gain going back to 1980.
Profits tend to be a leading indicator of employment trends; this bodes well for the labor market, wage/salary growth and consumption in 2007. The ratio of real profits to real compensation has reached a post-World War II high.
While this has created consternation for some who worry that labor is not getting its "fair share," there has been a remarkable reversion to the mean over time. This ratio tends to peak 13 quarters before unemployment tends to bottom, suggesting that the labor market should remain tight -- and may even tighten further -- in 2007!
-- Michael T. Darda, Chief Economist
Comment
-
-
lemmonjello,
LJ,
You've got alot of great ideas. Why don't you keep them all in this one place? You have a certain style that I've noticed, but sometimes when I want to research your ideas, I have to look at the various and many threads that you have started. It would be nice to be able to look at just one thread and get all the great information that you have to share...
I like the sound of "Lemonjello's Intermittent Skullduggery"
look, it is rated 5 stars, too!Hide not your talents.
They for use were made.
What's a sundial in the shade?
- Benjamin Franklin
Comment
-
-
You are right, of course. I can only attribute it to severe ADD.
Originally posted by peanuts View PostLJ,
You've got alot of great ideas. Why don't you keep them all in this one place? You have a certain style that I've noticed, but sometimes when I want to research your ideas, I have to look at the various and many threads that you have started. It would be nice to be able to look at just one thread and get all the great information that you have to share...
I like the sound of "Lemonjello's Intermittent Skullduggery"
look, it is rated 5 stars, too!
Comment
-
-
Platform companies
This reminds me of similar thinking in the late 80's early 90's about the tech economy. Are we setting up for the next wave up? Is the next wave the globalization of tech enabled systems creating massive efficiencies and world prosperity?
Lot's of economic factors are similar to the economically depressed late 80's early 90's before tech brought a huge surge in the US economy thru productivity growth. Housing, LBOs, etc. all indicated a bottom rather than a top (see my previous post on economic history).
Barrons.com
Welcome to Sizzle Inc.
By JONATHAN R. LAING
A CLOUD HANGS OVER THE U.S. ECONOMY and stock market, even though both have enjoyed a spirited recovery since 2003.
Bears worry that a serious recession lies ahead, spurred by overleveraged consumers cutting their spending in response to a collapse in home prices. Longer term, gloomsters bemoan the U.S.' huge current-account deficit, a reflection, they insist, of America's lust for consuming more than it produces and spending more than it saves. Only the kindness of strangers (mostly Chinese and other Asian central bankers buying U.S. debt securities) lets Uncle Sam continue his profligate ways.
Inevitably, all this will end in a vale of tears, the pessimists argue. They foresee an economic ice age. First, foreigners will withdraw their largess, sending the dollar plummeting and interest rates soaring. Meanwhile, all the good manufacturing jobs will have been outsourced overseas, leaving the average Joe in Dallas, Dubuque or Denver bereft of economic opportunity. Grim stuff, indeed.
But such opinions aren't shared by everyone. In fact, an international research boutique called GaveKal views these forebodings as poppycock. To the firm, the much-ballyhooed U.S. current-account deficit is largely a product of antiquated statistical measures that mainly miss the favorable impact of surging U.S. corporate cash flow and profitability. Likewise, no housing bust impends, according to GaveKal, a respected strategic adviser to some of the globe's largest financial concerns, including some of Wall Street's largest mutual funds. In fact, third-quarter federal data indicate, the consumer has never been more flush on a net-worth basis, with stock gains more than offsetting the flattening of homeowners' equity.
NOR IS WALL STREET POISED on a precipice. Stocks actually are cheap by many measures, says GaveKal. And shares of a certain type of nimble and tech-minded U.S. multinational could rise the most in coming years.
GaveKal asserts that the global economy is on the cusp of a decades-long deflationary boom that will lift America and much of the emerging world to unprecedented prosperity. In a book entitled Our Brave New World, the research outfit even invites derision by asserting that, these days, "things are indeed different."
The optimism arises from a clutch of profound economic changes that GaveKal's founders, Frenchman Charles Gave, his Hong Kong-based son, Louis-Vincent, and British financial writer Anatole Kaletsky (the firm's name is a contraction of the principals' last names) argue have been largely ignored by most commentators. GaveKal's central aperçu revolves around a business model that has evolved in advanced nations, such as the U.S., Sweden and Great Britain. They call it the "platform company."
These corporations concentrate on high-value-adding functions in which knowledge and technology are paramount. The platform company farms out to low-cost manufacturers at home and, increasingly, abroad low-return, volatile portions of its operations, including manufacturing. In essence, they are focused as much on the sizzle as the old multinationals were on the steak. "Instead of producing everywhere to sell products around the world, the platform company harnesses endemic global overcapacity and cheap information transmission to produce almost nothing directly, but sell everywhere," Charles Gave says in an interview at his loft apartment in Manhattan's trendy Soho district.
Although privately held Ikea, for example, has a worldwide presence, it largely consists of a bunch of furniture designers in Gothenburg, Sweden. Then there's Apple (ticker: AAPL), which is minting money from the development and distribution of its iPod line, while relying on Asian manufacturers to produce it. Motorola (MOT), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Dell (DELL) and tool and appliance maker Black & Decker (BDK) are among the companies that have embraced the model with signal success. Software outfits, likewise, are increasingly using low-wage Indian programmers to write codes for routine, nonproprietary portions of new programs. And IBM (IBM) is relying heavily on India to boost its outsourcing presence.
The implications of this trend are vast, according to GaveKal. For one thing, platform companies trim risk by fobbing off the most cyclical parts of their business. If sales hit an air pocket, the platform firm merely reduces its orders to, say, a Chinese supplier, rather than shoulder the financial burden of liquidating inventories, laying off workers and perhaps having to take a punishing restructuring charge on idle plants and equipment.
GaveKal partner Steven Vannelli says that companies are reluctant to discuss the scope of their platforming for public-relations and competitive reasons. Yet their financials often afford telltale indications of their embrace of the strategy. Most tend to generate more cash then they did in the past. Likewise, revenue per employee surges as plant, property and equipment on the asset side, and debt on the liability side, dwindle on corporate balance sheets.
Capital instead is poured into research and development and worker training. Working-capital requirements swoon, as the need to finance inventories disappears, and platform companies pressure their foreign suppliers to accept slower payment for goods.
The platform model seems to be behind the surge in U.S. corporate profitability in recent years, whether measured by net income or cash-flow margins. For one thing, platform companies have reduced capital-spending needs, thus slashing their debt-service burdens. Motorola has seen its capital spending fall from 80% of its cash flow in 2001 to just 12% this year. In the past decade, its net investment in property, plants and equipment has dropped from more than 30% of its assets to 5%.
At the same time, research and development spending has soared in the platform economy. It's crucial, of course, for companies outsourcing in China to stay one step ahead of the local manufacturers because theft of intellectual property is rife in the Middle Kingdom. This year, the U.S. will spend some $330 billion on research and development, versus No. 2 China's $136 billion. And the Chinese number is inflated mightily by U.S. and European multinationals, which have shifted some less critical research operations there.
FOR MANY PLATFORM companies, R&D now dwarfs capital spending. At Danaher (DHR), a maker of tools, sensors and testing equipment, research spending jumped from an amount equal to 150% of capital outlays in 2001 to one equivalent to more than 300% last year. And the ratio of R&D to capex has zoomed in the high-tech arena. At semiconductor company Analog Devices (ADI), it's now about 6-to-1, versus 1.5-to-1 in 2001.
The advent of China and other developing nations as the modern world's workshop is a Faustian bargain. In return for their new prominence, these countries are willingly importing much of the risk and cyclicality from platform economies like the U.S. Reliance on manufacturing is eminently preferable to that most risky of activities -- agriculture. Indeed, millions of unneeded farm workers are streaming into Asian cities, seeking better jobs. "In effect, China is trading job growth for the profits flowing to U.S. and other platform economies," Louis-Vincent Gave notes of a phenomenon that he has closely tracked from GaveKal's office in Hong Kong.
And this trend is in its early stages. More than 300 million agricultural workers figure to move to industrial areas on China's eastern and southern coasts over the next two decades. Similar migration patterns are evident in India, Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia.
Thus, there's little indication that Beijing will slow its prodigious spending on manufacturing and logistical infrastructure like roads, ports and industrial parks, despite huge overcapacity in many of its domestic industries. China may have more than 300 car makers and 3,000 ball-bearing outfits, but each local entrepreneur is eager to accept cheap government financing and continue to grow, regardless of profitability. Perversely, each figures he will survive the Chinese economy's inevitable shakeout only by being deemed "too big to fail," Louis-Vincent asserts. Such operators become easy pickings for the West's platform companies.
THE MASSIVE REORDERING of the global economy engendered by the platform model is an unalloyed good, according to GaveKal. Productivity is enhanced. And intellectual property and knowledge is harnessed to garner the higher returns that accrue to breakthrough products and technologies.
GaveKal developed the platform concept after noting global economic developments that seemed inexplicable on their face. Perhaps most important was a quite noticeable drop in economic volatility or swings in growth in many post-industrial Western economies. Annual swings in industrial production or non-farm employment since the 1950s have traced a telling pattern. Beginning in the early-'90s, jagged peaks and valleys begin to flatten at relatively favorable levels.
U.S. consumer delinquency rates on mortgages, credit cards and auto debt plunged from over 6% of the totals outstanding at the beginning of the '90s to 1.5% to 2.5% over the past decade, even as consumers leveraged their household balance sheets to unprecedented levels and "subprime" transactions became common.
Meanwhile, corporate earnings went on a tear. After-tax profits and cash flow as a percentage of gross domestic product are at record levels, exceeding 8.5% and 15%, respectively, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. "The platform model seemed to offer the clearest explanation as to what was happening," says Charles Gave. "We first noticed these economic changes in Sweden in the mid-'90s, but now the U.S. has embraced the change full-hilt."
High on every pessimist's list is America's yawning and growing current-account deficit, which represents mostly our negative balance of trade with the rest of the globe, supplemented by the difference in income that U.S. and other nations earn on investments in each other. The nation's current-account shortfall, which has steadily worsened since the early '90s, is expected to equal about 7% of GDP this year -- a banana-republic level.
THE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM holds that foreign central banks eventually will tire of sopping up the sea of excess dollars generated by chronic U.S. trade deficits and stop buying debt from Uncle Sam. If this happened, interest rates would soar, and the dollar would tumble. Or foreigners recycling excess dollars into American stocks and bonds would end up controlling most of the U.S. economy. Warren Buffett, for one, argues that America is well on its way to becoming a sharecropper society -- hocking its family jewels to finance insensate consumption.
To GaveKal, such doomsday prophesies are silly. For starters, even if one assumes that the current-account deficit will stay at its current level for some time, this would pose no particular peril, in the firm's view. U.S. household net worth, including stock and bond holdings, the value of private businesses and homeowner equity, stands at $54 trillion, according to the latest Federal Reserve data. This is far larger and is growing far faster than the $2.5 trillion we owe the rest of the world (in excess of U.S. asset holdings abroad).
So instead of saying that this year's expected current-account deficit of $800 billion is 7% of GDP, it's more to the point to say that it's slightly less than 1.5% of national wealth. U.S. net national wealth has risen over the past 50 years at a steady 5% to 6% per annum in nominal terms. At a current national net-wealth growth rate of about $3 trillion a year, the U.S. generates more than enough assets to cover the $800 billion it must borrow abroad. The current U.S. ratio of net foreign debt to national net worth is 4.6%. That hardly bespeaks impending doom.
According to GaveKal, quirks in international trade accounting paint a misleadingly melancholy picture. Trade measurements do a much better job of capturing the flow of physical products, which can be precisely measured by shipping manifests, than that of services, America's strong suit. Much of the latter involve the dark matter of intellectual property, such as consulting, training and financial-management services that often move electronically and are uninvoiced.
Of even greater moment is the fact that trade statistics measure dollars per sale, rather than the profits derived from sales, according to GaveKal. The sale in the U.S. of a $700 Dell computer might generate a negative trade balance of $450, representing the purchase from Asian companies of various components shipped for assembly in the U.S. Yet that same transaction might generate only a $30 profit for the Asian vendors working on slender margins, while the American companies -- Dell for its mark-up, Microsoft for its software and Intel for its microprocessor -- might realize a profit of about $250. The U.S. comes out a big winner, even though, through the prism of the trade balance, it appears to be sucking wind.
Pessimists also worry that the foreign capital flowing into the U.S. is being squandered on consumption, rather than being spent on the productive capacity necessary to make the nation competitive on the trade front. America is deemed to be eating its seed corn by wasting recycled trade surpluses from China and the like on cheap mortgages, flat-screen TVs and lids of cocaine.
GaveKal vigorously disputes this notion. In fact, much U.S. consumption goes toward health care (an investment in human capital, according to the firm) and education. "Who can calculate in a knowledge economy the importance of the U.S.' superior university system, for example?" asks Charles Gave. "Not when you realize that important global enterprises like Google, Cisco and Sun Microsystems literally emerged from the dormitories and labs at Stanford University."
Likewise, Corporate America's world-leading spending on research and development -- the aforementioned $330 billion a year -- counts as consumption, not investment, under generally accepted accounting principles. R&D is treated as an intermediate cost and expensed annually, rather than as a capital item to be written down over several years. Yet research can yield revenue for years to come.
THERE'S LITTLE WONDER why foreign nations are willing to finance the U.S. trade deficit. America boasts cutting-edge technology, high-margin companies and enviable productivity growth, plus liquid financial markets, political stability and strong private-property protection.
A platform economy is inherently less volatile than a developing one like China's, which is high in both growth and risk. That's a big plus for wealthy investors. Only severe capital controls in nations like China, which force businessmen to remit their excess trade dollars to central banks, keep even more private investment capital from streaming into the U.S.
"The big risk is not that foreigners will lose their appetite for U.S. assets, but that Americans will refuse to sell assets to foreigners," Charles Gave notes acidly. The greenback was pummeled this year after Congress wouldn't permit Dubai to keep a controlling stake in a company managing key U.S. seaports and when a Vietnam trade-normalization bill was delayed. Currency markets abhor impediments to the free flow of investment capital.
Yet GaveKal foresees no impending collapse for the buck. In fact, it expects the dollar to strengthen over the next year or so. The greenback, after all, is the basic medium of exchange and font of liquidity for the global economy, and promises to remain so for years because of Washington's political, military and economic might.
In fact, it was the large U.S. current- account deficits of the past decade or so that permitted the global economy to emerge relatively unscathed despite the 1995 Mexican peso collapse, the 1997 Asian financial meltdown, the 1998 Russian ruble crisis, the 2001 tech meltdown and the recent surge in commodity prices.
The Telltale Charts: Over the past few decades, U.S. corporate profitability and cash flow have risen sharply, while gyrations in industrial output have moderated and swings in non-farm payrolls have plunged. Meanwhile, the credit-delinquency rate has plummeted, despite a rise in subprime loans. The cause, according to the GaveKal research firm: the rise of a new kind of business model that bodes well for the future.
As GaveKal's Anatole Kaletsky has observed, while U.S. trade deficits have consistently grown over the past 20 years, the global economy has enjoyed unprecedented stability and growth. And the U.S., Britain and other chronic trade-deficit lands have significantly outpaced Japan, Germany, Saudi Arabia and some other nations with surpluses.
THE RESEARCH HOUSE also thinks that U.S. stocks are still dramatically underpriced, despite their recovery since the 2000-2002 bear market. A key to this is the stability that platform companies have injected into the economy and which shows up in corporate earnings and the financial markets themselves. An indication is seen in the collapse in yield spreads between low- and high-risk bonds. Or take a gander at the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index. The VIX closed around 10 Thursday -- less than half its level three years ago.
This new stability alone would argue for a jump in price-to-earnings ratios from the current level around 16 for the S&P 500. When risk premiums fall, stocks rise. GaveKal also contends that the recent jump in corporate profit margins and returns on invested capital isn't yet fully reflected in stock prices. And, the firm argues, the growing adoption of platform strategies in the U.S. argue against a serious reversion to the mean.
In addition, the supply of common stock in the U.S. is beginning to shrink as a result of heavy corporate share buybacks and a frenzy of leveraged buyouts. This development is hardly surprising to GaveKal. Platform companies require far less capital because they concentrate on product development and sales, leaving to parties abroad the heavy financial lifting entailed by manufacturing.
Meanwhile, a huge global pool of capital has developed from rising corporate cash generation and the prodigious savings rates in China and elsewhere in the developing world. "It's thus no mystery," Charles Gave maintains, "why buyouts are escalating when folks can borrow at 6% and buy S&P companies that earn an average of around 9% on their cash flow divided by their market price. That's a 50% return on your money. That alone argues for a melt-up in U.S. stock prices."
A MELTDOWN IN U.S. housing prices could play hob with such a scenario by crushing consumer demand. GaveKal doubts that housing prices will fall much, however.
For one thing, the U.S. consumer is no more levered with mortgage debt than households in, say, Great Britain, Australia and the Netherlands. For another, over the past eight years, real housing price growth in Ireland, the U.K., Spain, Sweden, France, Australia and the Netherlands have all outpaced that of the U.S. Nor has the housing markets in Britain or Australia suffered any major ills, even though the central banks in both countries tightened earlier and more aggressively than the Fed, causing more of an economic slowdown than the U.S. has yet experienced.
Housing bears tend to ignore the favorable impact of the increased stability that platform economics have brought to the U.S. True, America has lost manufacturing jobs as a result of outsourcing abroad. But blue-collar workers -- the employees most at risk in an economic downturn -- now make up just 9% of the workforce.
U.S. jobs are still increasing nicely, particularly in higher-paying managerial, administrative and professional categories. More workers now are ensconced in the recession-resistant service economy and have the additional security of a working spouse and the prospect of parental financial assistance in a pinch. This, perhaps, explains why consumer delinquencies have dropped so drastically.
CHARLES GAVE DOESN'T deny that his Brave New World platform economy could come a cropper. The biggest risk is protectionism, fanned by demagogic politicians bemoaning the U.S. loss of jobs to China and other countries. A large tax boost or monetary-policy mistake could threaten GaveKal's scenario, too. And, of course, a major war could imperil the huge U.S. global asset base so painfully accumulated since World War II.
Optimism is often a tougher sell than bearishness. But, based on the trends of the past half-century, GaveKal's argument looks like one worth buying.
Comment
-
-
Cramer pulls back the curtain on hedgies
This is a must watch before they pull it -
http://tinyurl.com/yxluuz
Comment
-
-
And the curtains on Cramer's brain
You've heard of Cramer before, right?
It's interesting to hear that what was suspected (and quasi illegal) is really happening on a regular basis. He must have had too much eggnog before that interview or he's feeling safe with his buddy Spitzer as NY governor elect.
Now, if he would go into the offshore hedge funds a bit...
Originally posted by spikefader View Post.....unless conceitedness and moral perversion are things you don't want to witness at Christmas time.
Comment
-
Comment