Sent to you by Goose via Google Reader: WAY TOO MUCH RISK IN THE
EQUITY MARKETS via THE PRAGMATIC CAPITALIST by TPC on 9/18/09

Deep thoughts from an unswayed bear, David Rosenberg:

Never before has the S&P 500 rallied 60% from a low in such a short
time frame as six months. And never before have we seen the S&P 500
rally 60% over an interval in which there were 2.5 million job losses.
What is normal is that we see more than two million jobs being created
during a rally as large as this.

In fact, what is normal is for the market to rally 20% from the trough
to the time the recession ends. By the time we are up 60%, the economy
is typically well into the third year of recovery; we are not usually
engaged in a debate as to what month the recession ended. In other
words, we are witnessing a market event that is outside the
distribution curve.

While some pundits will boil it down to abundant liquidity, a term they
can seldom adequately defined. If it’s a case of an endless stream of
cheap money, we are reminded of Japan where rates were microscopic for
years and the Nikkei certainly did enjoy no fewer than four 50% rallies
and over 420,000 rally points in a market that is still more than 70%
lower today than it was two decades ago. Liquidity and technicals can
certainly touch off whippy tradable rallies, but they don’t take you
all the way to a sustainable bull market. Only positive economic and
balance sheet fundamentals can do that.
Another way to look at the situation is that when you hear and read
about “liquidity” driving the market, it is usually a catch-all phrase
for “we have no clue” but it sounds good. When we don’t have a
reasonable explanation for what is driving prices our strategy is to
watch from the sidelines and express whatever positive views we have in
the credit market and our other income and hedge fund strategies.

As for valuation, well let’s consider that from our lens, the S&P 500
is now priced for $83 in operating EPS (we come to that conclusion by
backing out the earnings yield that would match the current
inflation-adjusted Baa corporate bond yield). That would be nearly
double from the most recent four-quarter trend. Not only that, but the
top-down estimates on operating EPS, for 2009 are $48.00 for 2009;
$52.60 for 2010; $62.50 for 2011; and $81.00 for 2012. The bottom-up
consensus forecasts only go to 2010 and even for this usually bullish
bunch, operating EPS is seen at $73.00 for 2010, which means that
$83.00 is likely a 2011 story. Either way, the market is basically
discounting an earnings stream that even the consensus does not see for
another two to three years. In other words, this is more than just a
fully priced market at this point.
It is, in fact, deeply overvalued at this juncture. Imagine that six
months after the depressed lows we have a situation where:

• The trailing price-earnings ratio on operating EPS is 26.5x. At the
October 2007 highs, it was 18.8x. In addition, when the S&P 500 is
trading north of a 26x P/E multiple on trailing operating earnings,
history shows that at these high valuation levels, the market declines
in the coming year 60% of the time.
• The trailing price-earnings ratio on reported EPS is 184.2x. At the
October 2007 highs, it was 23.4x. In fact, just prior to the October
1987 crash, the P/E ratio was 20.3x (not intended to scare anyone).
• The price-to-dividend ratio is 53x, where it was at the 2007 highs.
Again, the market is trading as it if were at a peak for the cycle, not
any longer near a trough. Once again, and we don’t intend to sound
alarmist, the price-to-dividend ratio just prior to the 1987 crash was
12x, and at the time, the S&P 500 was viewed in many circles to be at
an extended extreme.

Bullish analysts like to dismiss the actual earnings because they are
“depressed” and include too many writeoffs, which of course will never
occur again. Fine, on one-year forward (operating) earning estimates,
the P/E ratio is now 15.7x, the highest it has been in nearly five
years. At the peak of the S&P 500 in the last cycle — October 2007 —
the forward P/E was 14.3x, and the highest it ever got in the last
cycle was 15.4x. So hello? In just six short months, we have managed to
take the multiple above the peak of the last cycle when the economic
expansion was five years old, not five weeks old (and we may be a tad
charitable on that assessment). As an aside, the forward multiple on
the eve of the 1987 stock market collapse was 14x and one of the
explanations for the steep correction was that equities were so
overvalued and overbought that it was vulnerable to any shock (in that
case, it came out of the U.S. dollar market). It certainly was not the
economy because that sharp 30% slide took place even with an economy
that was humming along at a 4.5% clip.

In other words, valuation may not be the best timing device, but it
still matters. If the S&P 500 was in a 700-750 range, de facto pricing
in zero to 1% real GDP growth, we would certainly be interested in
boosting our allocations towards equities. But at 1,060 and over 4.0%
GDP growth effectively being discounted, we will be spectators as
opposed to participants, understanding that the key to success is to
NOT buy at the peaks. So the strategy is to sit on the sidelines, be
selective in our equity choices, and wait for the correction to come or
for the fundamentals to catch up with this overvalued, overbought,
overextended market. Remember, the reason why the tortoise won the race
was because the hare got tired.

One more thing, when people look back at this period, they are very
likely going to ask themselves why it was that they never paid
attention to the volume data, which, like the bond and money market,
never confirmed the veracity of this very flashy bear market rally. We
reiterate, Japan enjoyed four of these 50% power surges in the context
of a market that is still down over 70% from its highs of two decades
ago. So remember, rallies in a bear market are to be rented; never
owned. For those that never took the opportunity to get out at the lows
today have this glorious chance to do so at much better prices, but the
question is whether greed has overtaken their long-term resolve,
especially now that Gordon Gekko is making a return to the big screen.

Source: Gluskin Sheff
* All information on this website is provided for general purposes and
should not be misconstrued as financial advice. Always consult your
financial advisor before acting on any of the information herein. You
should always assume that the author(s) could have a vested interest in
topics described and may or may not own securities and instruments
discussed.
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