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Are we in a bull, a bear, or a cowardly lion market? As we will see, the answer
can make a huge difference in your investment portfolio. This week I am at
my Strategic Investment conference in La Jolla. About four times a year I take
a break from writing the letter and bring in a guest writer. This week Thoughts
from the Frontline will have the very distinguished analyst and author Vitaliy
Katsenelson.
In his recent book, Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound
Markets (Wiley, 2007), he exhorted investors to fasten their seat belts
and lower expectations for the next decade or so. He also provided a strategy
for improving returns in this environment, what he calls range-bound or cowardly
lion markets. Long-time readers will recognize some themes consistent with
my own research, but Vitaliy adds some very interesting twists that I believe
will make you think. In today's letter, Vitaliy runs through his analysis
of what will happen and provides an overview of how investors can make money
in what will otherwise be an ocean of stagnant returns. Warning: the letter
will print long, but that is because there are a lot of great charts.
Let me also highly recommend Vitaliy's book, Active Value Investing. I
think as you read today's letter, you will get a sense of why I am so enthusiastic
about his work. You can get you copy at Amazon.com.
Bull,
Bear, and Cowardly Lion Markets
By Vitaliy Katsenelson
For the next dozen years or so the US broad stock markets will be a wild roller-coaster
ride. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 index will go up
and down (and in the process will set all-time highs and multiyear lows), stagnate,
and trade in a tight range. At some point during the ride, index investors
and buy and hold stock collectors will realize that their portfolios aren't
showing much of a return.
I know this prediction has a mild sci-fi feel to it. After all, how could
I possibly know what the market will do, especially that far into the future?
Though I'll explain in more detail in just a second why I have the audacity
to make this prediction, let me offer you a little factoid: over the last 200
years, every full-blown, long-lasting (secular) bull market (and we just had
a supersized one from 1982 to 2000) was followed by a range-bound market that
lasted about 15 years. Yes, this happened every time, with the exception of
the Great Depression, over the last two centuries.
Though we tend to think about market cycles in binary terms - bull (rising)
or bear (declining) - in the long run markets spend a lot more time in bull
or range-bound (sideways) states, roughly half in each, and visit a bear cage
a lot less often then we think. This distinction between bear and range-bound
markets is extremely important, as you'd invest very differently in one versus
the other.
Are bull markets driven by superfast economic growth? Are range-bound markets
caused by subpar economic growth? Could the subpar market performance be
related to high or low inflation?
The answer to all these questions is undoubtedly - "no." Though it is hard
to observe in the everyday noise of the stock market, in the long run stock
prices are driven by two factors: earnings growth (or decline) and/or price-to-earnings
expansion (or contraction).
As is apparent from Exhibits 1 & 2, either by a decade at a time or a
market cycle at a time, it is difficult to find a link between stock performance
and the economy (e.g., GDP, corporate earnings growth, or inflation). The connection
does exist, but periods of disconnect appear to last for decades at a time.
Exhibit 1

Exhibit 2

What about interest rates? Exhibit 3 shows P/Es for the S&P 500
(based on one-year trailing earnings) and inverse long-term bond yields - the
implied P/E - the famous Fed Model. This model, despite its name, is NOT endorsed
by the Fed; it indicates the existence of a tight relationship between (inverse
of) long-term Treasury bonds and P/Es of the S&P 500.
Exhibit 3

By taking a look at the last full 1966-2000 range-bound/bull market cycle
(see Exhibit 3), we can see that the Fed Model perfectly predicted the direction
of equities in relation to interest rates (okay, assuming you could predict
interest rates). Long-term interest rates were rising from 1966 to 1982, while
implied and actual P/Es were falling. Whereas from 1982 to 2000 interest rates
were dropping, and implied and actual P/Es were rising. Intellectually that
makes sense, because stocks and bonds compete for investors' capital, and thus
higher interest rates make equities less attractive and vice versa.
However, it is hard to find ANY relationship between interest rates and the
animal with its name on the secular market if you look at the first 66 years
of the 20th century. None!
It is difficult to dismiss the role interest rates play in stock valuations,
but they seem to be a second fiddle in the orchestra conducted by economic
growth and valuation. If the Fed Model worked flawlessly, how could we explain
declining P/Es of Japanese stocks in the last decade of the 20th century, when
interest rates declined and were scratching zero levels?
It is valuation! If earnings growth in the long run remains consistent
with the past, P/E is the wild card that is responsible for future returns.
Though continued economic growth appears to be a wildly optimistic assumption
given the meltdown of the housing industry in particular, and job layoffs,
it is not particularly unrealistic to predict that we will see economic growth
overall. With the exception of the Great Depression (see Exhibits 1 & 2),
though it had its ups and downs, economic growth was fairly stable throughout
the 20th century. Earnings, though more volatile than real GDP, grew consistently
decade after decade, paying no attention to the animal (bull, bear ... or cowardly
lion - my pet name for range-bound markets, whose bursts of occasional bravery
lead to stock appreciation, but which are ultimately overrun by fear that leads
to a subsequent descent) lending its name to the stock market.
Though economic fluctuations were responsible for short-term (cyclical) market
volatility, as long as economic performance was not far from the average, long-term
market cycles were either bull or range-bound. Valuation - the change in price
to earnings, its expansion or contraction - was the wild card that was mainly
responsible for markets being in a bull or range-bound state.
Market Cycle Math
So let's examine the stock market math for secular bull, range-bound, and
bear markets. The following Exhibit 4 shows sources of price appreciation in
past bull, range-bound, and bear markets.
Exhibit 4


During bull markets, a vibrant, peaceful combination of P/E expansion (a staple
of bull markets, a great source of return) and earnings growth brings outsize
returns to jubilant investors. Prolonged bull markets start with below- and
end with above-average P/Es.

P/Es are some of the most mean-reverting creatures, and range-bound markets
act as clean-up guys: they rid us of the mess (i.e., deflate high P/Es) caused
by bull markets, taking them down towards and actually below the mean. P/E
compression wipes out most if not all earnings growth, resulting in zero (or
nearly) price appreciation plus dividends.

Bear markets are range-bound markets' cousins; they share half of their DNA:
high starting valuations. However, where in cowardly lion markets economic
growth helps to soften the blow caused by P/E compression, during secular bear
markets the economy is not there to help. Economic blues (runaway inflation,
severe deflation, subpar or negative economic or earnings growth) add oil to
the fire (started by high valuations) and bring devastating returns to investors.
A true secular bear market has not really taken place in the US, but one has
occurred across the pond in Japan. The market decline caused by the Great Depression,
though referred to as the greatest decline in US stocks in the 20th century,
only lasted three years and thus doesn't really fit the traditional "secular" requirement
of lasting more than five years. Japan's Nikkei 225 suffered (see Exhibit 5)
through a true secular bear market: stock prices declined over 80 percent from
their 1989-1991 highs until they bottomed in 2003 (the market seems to be coming
back now). For more than a decade the country struggled with deflation caused
by its banking system coming to a near halt on the heels of a collapsing real
estate market and the bad loans that came with it. Of course, all this took
place on the heels of a huge bull market, and thus very high valuations.
Exhibit 5

A unique aspect that contributed to the severity and longevity of the Japanese
deflation was a cultural issue: the Japanese government intervened and did
not allow structurally defunct companies to go bankrupt, thus tampering with
the nucleus of capitalism (and Darwinism as well), creative destruction. I
must admit, it seems that lately we've been importing a lot more from Japan
than their cars and flat-screen TVs, as the US government steps in to "fix" our
troubled financial firms. (In the following articles I argue against government
bailing out homeowners and against
the Fed bailing out the economy).
Where Are We Today?
Today stocks may appear cheap at first glance, at least if you look at valuations
of the late 1990s. They are not! To minimize the impact of cyclical profit
volatility, let's first take a look at stock market historical and current
valuations, based on 10-year trailing earnings, as shown in Exhibit 6. This
way we capture a full economic cycle.
Exhibit 6

The conclusions we can draw are:
- Secular bull markets end at P/Es much above average. The 1982-2000 bull
market ended at the highest valuations ever!
- Secular range-bound markets ended when P/Es were below average.
- Markets spent very little time at what is known to be a "fairly valued" state
of 15 times 12-month trailing earnings. Historically, stocks only saw average
valuations on the way from one extreme to the other. From 1900 to 2006 the
S&P 500 spent less than 27% of the time between P/Es of 13 and 17.
- Today, after eight years of plentiful volatility and no returns, what the
WSJ called a "lost decade," stocks are not cheap. If you look at ten-year
trailing earnings, they are still at levels where previous range-bound markets
started. In other words, based on 10-year trailing earnings, stocks are still
at 64% above their average stated valuations.
Now, if you look at historical valuations where P/Es are computed based on
one-year trailing earnings (see Exhibit 7), the picture is not that exciting
but less grim. At about 18 times trailing earnings, US stocks don't appear
that expensive.
Exhibit 7

Unfortunately, the cheapness argument falls on its face once you realize that
(pretax) profit margins are hovering at an all-time high of 11.5%, about 35%
above their historical (since 1980) average of 8.5%. Similarly to P/Es, profit
margins are extremely mean-reverting. As companies start to earn above-average
economic profits, new competition waltzes in and competes these excess profits
away - arrivederci fat profit margins. Once this happens, the "E" in
the "P/E" equation will decline as well, and P/Es will rise from 18 to 22.
An additional point: as you see in Exhibit 8, margins don't have to revert
and stop at the mean; historically they've gone below the mean - that is how
the mean is created. (In the February
4th, 2008 issue of Barron's I rebuffed common arguments against profit-margin
mean reversion.)
Exhibit 8

As a side note: The bulk of excesses in overall profit margins, 54.5% to be
exact (see Exhibit 9), were in "stuff" stocks (i.e., energy, materials, and
industrials). Profit margins will deflate when the global economy slows down.
This goes far beyond oil and commodities. Companies that make "stuff," which
historically have been very cyclical (today is no different) have benefitted
from tremendous operational leverage that contributed to considerable improvement
in margins. However, leverage works both ways: lower sales and high fixed costs
will push margins to the other extreme.
Exhibit 9

Financials were responsible for 22% of the excess in margins, as they benefitted
from tremendous liquidity hosed down by the Fed over recent years; now they
are drowning in it. Their margins are compressing at a faster rate than you
can read this.
Finally, the "new" economy stocks are responsible for 17% of the excess.
However, I'd argue that these industries have transformed substantially since
1988, so that higher-margin software and services now account for a much larger
portion of technology and telecom sales. It is kind of like Microsoft (ironically
the "new" economy) vs. IBM in 1988: the hardware company (the old economy)
vs. the new. Of course IBM of today is lot more of a software and service company
than the hardware company it was in the 1980s. Thus the "new" economy stocks
should have higher margins than they did in 1988, but by how much? I don't
know, but they likely will face a lower margin compression than "stuff" and
financials.
The bottom line: Remember those long-term double-digit returns you
were promised by stock market gurus during the last bull market? Well, an average
passive buy-and-hold investor will be lucky to have very low single-digit returns
for the long term. In fact, during the last 1966-1982 range-bound market, investors
received almost zero real total returns.
Analyze and Strategize
Fairly depressing stuff, and it sounds like the investor is going to have
to eat lower returns. However, there are strategies to improve portfolio performance
so that one can do well, even in a trading range. Whether you are a buy-and-hold
or stalwart value investor, there are opportunities that don't require you
to day trade stocks. You don't have to change your investment philosophy, but
you have to tweak your stock analysis and strategy a little to adapt it to
range-bound markets.
Modify your analysis: To clarify, I created an analytical framework
where stock analysis is broken down into three dimensions: Quality, Valuation,
and Growth.
Quality. Though often it is in the eye of the beholder, in my book I clarify
what constitutes a quality company (i.e., sustainable competitive advantage,
strong balance sheet, great management, high return on capital, and a lot more).
But the lesson here is, you want to compromise as little as possible on this
dimension, because it is very difficult to recover from significant losses
in the range-bound market. Stick to quality.
Growth. This dimension consists of earnings (cash flows), growth, and dividends.
When you own companies that grow earnings, time is on your side. Dividends
are extremely important in range-bound markets, in fact 90% of the returns
in past range-bound markets came from dividends, vs. less than 20% in past
bull markets. Also, today an average stock (i.e., S&P 500 index) yields
only 1.7%. Do you really want 1.7% to be 90% of your total return?
Valuation. This dimension requires the most modification: the valuations that
we saw in the 1982-2000 bull market are not coming back anytime soon, but don't
step into what I call the relative valuation trap. Don't buy stocks based solely
on their relative cheapness to their prices in the past, but rather based on
what their future cash flows will bring. To combat a constant P/E compression,
in the range-bound market increase your required margin of safety.
That value (i.e., low P/E stocks) beats growth (high-valuation stocks that
have high expectations built in) has been historically documented by numerous
studies. After doing extensive study of the 1966-1982 range-bound market, I
found that value kills growth. Cheaper stocks had a lower P/E compression and
generated bull-market-like returns, plus they had a natural advantage: their
lower P/Es led to higher dividend yields. Stock selection matters in the range-bound
market. Blindly throwing money at market indices - a strategy that did wonders
in the past bull market - will bring market-like returns, which likely will
not pay for your dream house or fund your retirement.
Strategize: Once you have determined, based on the Quality, Valuation,
and Growth framework, what stocks are to be bought and at what prices, you
can start applying a range-bound market strategy.
A long-lasting secular range-bound market consists of many mini (months to
several years long) cycles. For instance, the last 1966-1982 range-bound market
consisted of five mini bull, five bear, and one range-bound market (See Exhibit
10).
Exhibit 10

Successful investing is a lonely place, as it requires an independent thought
process that often goes contrary to the herd mentality. In the range-bound
market, a contrarian mindset comes in especially handy, as you'll be selling
when everyone else is buying. Your stocks will be hitting their fair value,
and you'll be buying when everyone else is selling - during the mini bear markets.
This is not to suggest that you need to be a market timer, not at all. Market
timing only looks easy with the benefit of hindsight, and it is very difficult
to do on a consistent basis. Instead, time (price) individual stocks, one at
a time. Buy when they are undervalued and sell when they are fairly valued,
and repeat the process over and over again. In other words, instead of focusing
on the bowling alley (the market) focus on the ball (individual stocks).
Selling is looked upon as a four-letter word, and therefore a sin, in a bull
market. A buy-and-hold strategy (which is often just buy and forget to sell)
is rewarded richly in secular bull markets - every time you made a "don't sell" decision,
stocks go higher. And though buy and hold is not dead but in a coma (waiting
for the next bull market), it takes investors to a place of no returns. Forgive
yourself the "sin" of selling and become a buy-and-sell investor.
The almighty US constitutes 4% of the world population, but its stock market
capitalization represents more than a third of the world's wealth. It has been
comfortable for us to buy US stocks; it felt safe. However, by solely focusing
on US stocks we are insulating ourselves from a greater pool of stocks to choose
from. You don't need to become an Indiana Jones of international investing
by venturing into fourth-world countries like South Paragama or Liberania (ok,
I made those up, didn't want to offend folks in Turkmenistan or
some other places heading towards the stone age), but there are plenty of countries
that have a stable political regime and the rule of law.
I could be wrong but I doubt it
What if I am wrong and the range-bound market I describe is not in the cards?
After all, history is prolific about the past but mute about the future. What
if they find life on Venus and our economy starts growing at double digits
and the secular bull market thunders upon us? Or the current credit market
problems spill into a Japanese-like prolonged recession, causing a bear market?
Every strategy should be evaluated not just on a "benefit of being right" basis,
but at least as importantly on a "cost of being wrong" basis. An active value-investing
strategy has the lowest cost of being wrong in comparison to other investment
strategies, as you'll see in Exhibit 11.
Exhibit 11

Switzerland, Planes
I was one of 300,000 people who had their American Airline flights cancelled
this week. I got to San Diego from Dallas on Southwest with a mere three stops,
and am grateful I could get here, although I did miss dinner with Richard Russell.
Hopefully, things will be back to normal soon. I must admit to not understanding
why the FAA could not have chosen a more deliberate approach to pulling planes
out of the system. It does not appear to be a real near-term safety issue.
A lot of people were seriously inconvenienced, and I can't even begin to imagine
how much it cost business and consumers, not just in money but in time.
As noted above, I am at my fifth annual Strategic Investment Conference in
La Jolla. It is sold out at about 280 attendees. Somehow, only two people had
to cancel due to American Airline problems. It is good to see old friends and
new ones, and the conversations have been very stimulating. I am hopeful that
we can get some of the presentations up on the web soon.
I am off to London and then Switzerland this Monday on American. I am looking
forward to being a tourist for a few days in the Interlaken area of Switzerland,
after my speech for Bank Sarasin, and then back next Monday.
Have a great week!
Your always a believer in value analyst,
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