Was It a Sucker's Rally?
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124208415028908497.html> You can have a
jobless recovery but you can't have a profitless one. By ANDY
KESSLER<http://mail.google.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=ANDY+KESSLER&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>

The Dow Jones Industrial Average has bounced an astounding 30% from its
March 9 low of 6547. Is this the dawn of a new era? Are we off to the races
again?

I'm not so sure. Only a fool predicts the stock market, so here I go. This
sure smells to me like a sucker's rally. That's because there aren't
sustainable, fundamental reasons for the market's continued rise. Here are
three explanations for the short-term upswing:

*- Armageddon is off the table*. It has been clear for some time that the
funds available from the federal government's Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) were not going to be enough to shore up bank balance sheets laced
with toxic assets.

On Feb. 10, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner rolled out another, much
hyped bank rescue plan. It was judged incomplete -- and the market sold off
382 points in disgust.

Citigroup stock flirted with $1 on March 9. Nationalizations seemed
inevitable as bears had their day.

Still, the Treasury bought time by announcing on the same day as Mr.
Geithner's underwhelming rescue plan that it would conduct "stress tests" of
19 large U.S. banks. It also implied, over time, that no bank would fail the
test (which was more a negotiation than an audit). And when White House
Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel clearly stated on April 19 that nationalization
was "not the goal" of the administration, it became safe to own financial
stocks again.

It doesn't matter if financial institution losses are $2 trillion or the
pessimists' $3.6 trillion. "No more failures" is policy. While the U.S.
government may end up owning maybe a third of the equity of Citi and Bank of
America and a few others, none will be nationalized. And even though future
bank profits will be held back by constant write downs of "legacy" assets
(we don't call them toxic anymore), the bears have backed off and the market
rallied -- Citi is now $4.

- *Zero yields.* The Federal Reserve, by driving short-term rates to almost
zero, has messed up asset allocation formulas. Money always seeks its
highest risk-adjusted return. Thus in normal markets if bond yields rise
they become more attractive than risky stocks, so money shifts. And vice
versa. Well, have you looked at your bank statement lately?

Savings accounts pay a whopping 0.2% interest rate -- 20 basis points. Even
seven-day commercial paper money-market funds are paying under 50 basis
points. So money has shifted to stocks, some of it automatically, as bond
returns are puny compared to potential stock returns. Meanwhile, both mutual
funds and hedge funds that missed the market pop are playing catch-up --
rushing to buy stocks.

*- Bernanke's printing press*. On March 18, the Federal Reserve announced it
would purchase up to $300 billion of long-term bonds as well as $750 billion
of mortgage-backed securities. Of all the Fed's moves, this "quantitative
easing" gets money into the economy the fastest -- basically by cranking the
handle of the printing press and flooding the market with dollars (in
reality, with additional bank credit). Since these dollars are not going
into home building, coal-fired electric plants or auto factories, they end
up in the stock market.

A rising market means that banks are able to raise much-needed equity from
private money funds instead of from the feds. And last Thursday,
accompanying this flood of new money, came the reassuring results of the
bank stress tests.

The next day Morgan Stanley raised $4 billion by selling stock at $24 in an
oversubscribed deal. Wells Fargo also raised $8.6 billion that day by
selling stock at $22 a share, up from $8 two months ago. And Bank of America
registered 1.25 billion shares to sell this week. Citi is next. It's almost
as if someone engineered a stock-market rally to entice private investors to
fund the banks rather than taxpayers.

Can you see why I believe this is a sucker's rally?

The stock market still has big hurdles to clear. You can have a jobless
recovery, but you can't have a profitless recovery. Consider: Earnings are
subpar, Treasury's last auction was a bust because of weak demand, the
dollar is suspect, the stimulus is pork, the latest budget projects a $1.84
trillion deficit, the administration is berating investment firms and hedge
funds saying "I don't stand with them," California is dead broke, health
care may be nationalized, cap and trade will bump electric bills by 30% . .
. Shall I go on?

Until these issues are resolved, I don't see the stock market going much
higher. I'm not disagreeing with the Fed's policies -- but I won't buy into
a rising stock market based on them. I'm bullish when I see productivity
driving wealth.

For now, the market appears dependent on a hand cranking out dollars to help
fund banks. I'd rather see rising expectations for corporate profits.

*Mr. Kessler, a former hedge-fund manager, is the author of "How We Got
Here" (Collins, 2005). *

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