At a time when many pundits or "investors" are grasping at
straws to justify the market's run, I'm seeing an increasing
number of buds of "irrational exuberance" (in the words of
the maestro bubble-blower Alan Greenspan). It's as if the
crisis was a sharp but fleeting pain that investors wish to
relegate to the status of a bad memory. To give a jolt to our
market nervous system, here are my top five signs that
exuberance is returning to the market at an alarming
rate:
1.
Stocks are overpriced. This is the most
direct observation of exuberance. At 19 times cyclically
adjusted earnings (average inflation-adjusted earnings over
the prior 10 years) against a long-term historical average
of 16.3, there is simply no getting around the fact that
the S&P 500 is overvalued. At a 17% premium, we
aren't in bubble territory yet, but any premium looks
inconsistent with an environment of high (and growing)
unemployment, spare productive capacity, low wage growth,
and lower consumption in favor of saving.
2.
Junk has run. Bond markets have rallied to
pre-Lehman levels, with the riskiest segment -- high-yield
("junk") bonds -- up 49% in the year through September.
Junk-bond yields globally are near their 52-week lows
(remember that bond prices and yields are inversely
related).
Is that any cause for concern? When he was asked in an
interview last week to name the best trade in the bond
markets, Mohamed El-Erian, the CEO of bond giant PIMCO,
replied: "The best trade now is to reduce risk, keep your
ammunition dry [and] wait for a better time. A lot of
people are chasing risk assets at this point for all sorts
of reasons, but I think the long-term investor can be
patient because the economy is likely to face headwinds in
2010."
3. Â
The VIX is cheap. Labeled Wall Street's
"fear gauge," the VIX is derived from the prices of options
on the S&P 500 index. During periods of financial
turmoil, investors are willing to pay up for protection
against price declines, pushing the VIX up. Conversely, as
investor fear recedes, option prices, and, hence,
the VIX, tend to decline. Yesterday, the VIX closed at
its lowest value since Sept. 8, 2008 -- one week before the
failure of Lehman Brothers.
4. Â
The carry trade is back. A favorite of
hedge funds, here's how it works: You borrow money in a
low-interest-rate currency (the yen is always popular) and
invest the funds in higher-yielding assets in a different
currency (the Brazilian real, for example). It might sound
like free money, but it is a risk-seeking trade, the
ultimate success of which depends on a low-volatility
environment in interest and currency rates. When the carry
trade gains in popularity, it suggests that traders believe
there is smooth sailing ahead.
5. Â
A smart guy said so. Last week, Nobel
prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz told Bloomberg
Television: "There's a lot of risk going ahead of some big
bumps ... There's a very big risk that markets have been
irrationally exuberant." Academic brilliance doesn't always
translate into practical judgment, but this ivory-tower
denizen was warning as early as 2006 that the U.S. housing
bubble would end in a credit crisis and recession.
Put these clues together and we have a case for a market
that is at the very least complacent, if not exuberant. What
is the proper course of action when all about you appear to
be losing their heads? Although El-Erian was referring
specifically to the bond market, I can think of no better
advice for equity investors than to adopt a long-term outlook
and "keep your ammunition dry" for better prices.
"... focus on high-grade companies"
In the same interview, El-Erian recommended another
action that applies to bond and equity investors: "I would
focus on
high-grade companies, companies that have their
financials and operating leverage under control." Not only
are such companies better positioned in case the recovery
stutters, they're also relatively underpriced right now. All
but one of the stocks in the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial
Average are valued at a cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings
ratio below that of the S&P 500 (the exception being
Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO)). That includes some
extraordinary companies:
Company/ Ticker
Cyclically Adjusted Price-to-Earnings
(CAPE) Multiple*
3M (NYSE: MMM)
12.7
ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM)
8.3
IBM (NYSE: IBM)
14.6 Continued... |