With Stocks, It's Not the
Economy<http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,2005849,00.html>
By Zachary Karabell



>From the beginning of May until late June, stock markets worldwide declined
sharply, with losses surpassing 10%. The first weeks of July brought only
marginal relief. Ominous voices began to warn that the weakness of stocks
was a direct response to the stalling of an economic recovery that has
lasted barely a year. Anxiety over debt-laden European countries — most
notably Greece — combined with stubbornly high unemployment in the U.S. to
create a toxic but fertile mix that allowed concern to blossom into
full-bloom fear.

The most common refrain was that stocks are weak because global economic
activity is sagging. A July 12 report by investment bank Credit Suisse was
titled *Are the Markets Forecasting Recession?* With no more stimulus
spending on the horizon in the U.S., Europeans on austerity budgets and
consumer sentiment best characterized as surly, the sell-off in stocks was
explained as a simple response to an economy on the ropes. (See pictures of
TIME's Wall Street
covers.)<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1842526_1769050,00.html>

It's a good story and a logical one. But it distorts reality. Stocks are no
longer mirrors of national economies; they are not — as is so commonly said
— magical forecasting mechanisms. They are small slices of ownership in
specific companies, and today, those companies have less connection to any
one national economy than ever before.

As a result, stocks are not proxies for the U.S. economy, or that of the
European Union or China, and markets are deeply unreliable gauges of
anything but the underlying strength of the companies they represent and the
schizophrenic mind-set of the traders who buy and sell the shares. There has
always been a question about just how much of a forecasting mechanism
markets are. Hence the saying that stocks have correctly predicted 15 of the
past nine recessions. At times, stocks soar as the economy sours (in 1975,
for instance) or sour when the economy soars (as with China's stock market,
the Shanghai stock exchange, in the past year).

At other times, stocks have tracked or even anticipated a nation's economic
strength — but that happened in an era when a strong relationship existed
between the companies that traded on a particular exchange (American
companies on the New York Stock Exchange, British companies in London) and
the country in which they traded. For many years, American companies did
most of their business in the U.S., so their results could be expected to
parallel the larger economy.

But since the turn of the millennium, business and capital have gone truly
global. The companies of the S&P 500 now make about half of their sales
outside the U.S., and if you remove geography-bound utilities and railroads,
regional banks and a fair number of retailers, the percentage is higher.
Tech and industrial firms such as 3M, Hewlett-Packard and Intel derive
two-thirds or more of their sales beyond the U.S. That means that even if
the U.S. economy is a total wash, they can access other markets to maintain
their growth. The same might be said of a German conglomerate like Siemens,
a Dutch powerhouse like Philips or a Korean company like Samsung. (See
pictures of the global financial
crisis.)<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1845923_1774401,00.html>

This is known within companies, though CEOs are often susceptible to the
false story — which makes some sense, given that most CEOs are older than 50
and once operated in a world where what was good for GM was indeed good for
America. But look at the actual balance sheets of thousands of global
companies, large and small, and you'll find that their fortunes have
diverged from those of their national economies.

Over the past two years, as unemployment in the U.S. has soared and GDP has
stumbled, companies have been minting money. Tons of it. The Shaw Group, an
engineering firm that makes things like nuclear power plants in Saudi
Arabia, trades at about $32 a share and has $19 per share in cash. It would
be as if you owned outright a $500,000 home and had $300,000 in the bank.
That is the case for most companies. Their position is almost the opposite
of governments' and consumers': lots of growth, little debt and mounds of
money.

They have amassed that hoard of cash, and are now growing on average 20% a
year, at a time when the economies of Europe, the U.S. and Japan are flat.
But you'd never know that from the continued drumbeat about how markets
reflect economies. Every time Apple unveils a new product and millions rush
to buy it, we should pause for a moment and wonder which jobs report — the
one released by the U.S. government every month or the Steve Jobs report on
Apple's health — tells us more about the world.

As companies report their earnings for the second quarter of 2010, it will
be harder than ever to escape the fact that corporations now inhabit their
own thriving economy, unencumbered by many of the ills of nation-states.
That may be exhilarating (if you're an investor) or troubling (if you're a
citizen), but either way, it's time to let go of the false belief that as
goes the economy, so go companies and their stocks.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"
Blog: http://fuzylogix.blogspot.com/

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