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The Third Week of 2008
Risk Premiums For The Dow Indices
Bush Rushes To Rescue Plan: How Effective Can It Be?
January
18th, 2008
How
effective can the president’s proposed stimulus be? Not very if it comes
late in the economic cycle.
Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Ben Bernanke and President George W. Bush are proposing a $150
billion “fiscal stimulus” package, intended to forestall an economic
recession. The stock market’s continued steep decline illustrates lack
of confidence that the federal rescue plan, together with further
interest rates cuts, will be effective in halting the slide into a
recession. We believe the stock market is correct in discounting the
effectiveness of federal aid and larger cuts in interest rates. Although
both these measures should prove beneficial over time, we feel the lag
in remedial actions will prove to have come too late in the economic
cycle to forestall a recession.
The Dow Jones Industrial
average fell this past week 507 points, continuing the bearish behavior
experienced in recent months. Since the close of trading in 2007 the Dow
has fallen 9.5%. It finished the year at 13,365.87 and has subsequently
fallen 1,266 points to date. The industrial index now stands at
12,099.30, well below the 14,164.53 high reached on October 9th
2007, a fall of 14.5% from the peak. Other indices such as the S&P 500
and Russell 2000 are also down considerably, with the Russell 2000 off
nearly 20%, the threshold number to officially herald a bear market.
Foreign markets have recently turned decidedly bearish, suggesting that
a U.S. recession will lead a world-wide recession.
President Bush’s
stimulus plan and the Fed chairman’s proactive statement’s cannot hurt.
But they may prove ineffective at preventing a recession at this stage
of the economic cycle. A call for action from the White House has done
little to alleviate the bearish sentiment across financial markets. The
center piece of President Bush’s stimulus plan calls for a one-time tax
rebate of $100 billion for individuals and $50 billion for businesses.
In theory, investor confidence should be bolstered by the rescue plan.
But Congressional action will take time and that is the single most
important variable driving our thoughts about the latest thinking on
interest rate cuts and the economic aid package.
Considering that the
Fed’s rate cuts will require months to filter through the economy, it is
clear now that they should have been steeper at an earlier stage. For
example, if a homeowner’s adjustable rate mortgage adjusts in July, that
individual will not begin to directly benefit from lower interest rates
until this summer. Thus, the Fed’s recent rate cuts will not reach the
full market for several months. There may be light at the end of the
tunnel but the economic burden of an ailing housing market will be with
us for the foreseeable future. Reduced borrowing costs may not actually
begin to entirely manifest themselves until late this year or next.
Complicating a
turn-around in real estate is the fact that lenders have raised the bar
for extending mortgages, thus making it difficult to mortgage a property
in a housing market with surplus inventory and declining home values.
In our view, had the Fed begun lowering rates not only sooner but much
more aggressively, the spiraling negative housing loop may not have
deteriorated so severely. The real estate death spiral remains a heavy
burden on the economy and consumer psychology. Larger rate reductions
are more likely to shore up housing confidence.
Can Bernanke’s “aggressive” be translated into a number? Yes,
Maybe Now.
An ever increasing
number of economists believe that the Fed may be considering a 75-basis
point cut, bringing the Fed Funds rate down to 3.5%. It did just that
in an emergency move prior to the January 22 market openings. We
postulated last week that a 100-basis point reduction this month would
offer increased hope for troubled households. The Fed’s next rate
official setting meeting is set for January 29-30.
Unless there is some news to the contrary and/or the stock market
rallies significantly (which we doubt), the Fed may cut rates by another
50 basis points at the month end meeting, to 3.0%.
How helpful will a
federal stimulus plan be?
The market did not find
the prospects of a fiscal boost reassuring. President Bush has presented
a broad program designed to jump-start
the economy. As noted above, the economic stimulus approach revolves
around tax rebates (i.e. cash which consumers will presumably put back
into the economy). The amount and timing of tax rebates is problematic.
Right now, President Bush has only a broad outline of the package on the
table. And, while there seems to be bipartisan support for it, Congress
is not known for its speed. When it comes to enacting legislation such
high profile proposals inevitably find that members of Congress may have
different priorities, thereby slowing down passage. Proposing an
economic stimulus plan in an election year raises serious questions in
our minds as to the political leverage candidates and parties will seek
to claim. Assuming Congress is determined and acts swiftly, the
logistics of implementing such an aid package would require time to be
implemented. Qualifying households and retooling the Internal Revenue
Service alone could take months. Meanwhile the economy would probably
continue to falter.
Our Risk Premium
analysis indicates that a bear market is here for investors, resulting
in contracting P/E multiplies. Instead of focusing on broad sectors,
investors need to take a defensive posture, concentrating on healthy
companies able to withstand a bear market with the least amount of
damage to their stock prices. The old caveat that a falling tide takes
down all ships cannot be ignored. For the week ending January 18th,
the “yellow line” reflects typical bear market financial physics as
illustrated in the charts below:
§
The Industrial Risk Premium ended at 6.82% versus 6.54%
§
The Transportation Risk Premium decreased to 7.73% from
7.75%
§
The Utility Risk Premiums increased to 5.81 % compared to
5.39%
n
|
Date |
January 11, 2008 |
Date |
January 18, 2008 |
|
DJ Industrial Risk Premium |
6.54% |
DJ Industrial Risk Premium |
6.82% |
|
30 Year Treasury |
4.37% |
30 Year Treasury |
4.28% |
|
Industrial Risk Differential |
2.17% |
Industrial Risk Differential |
2.54% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Date |
January 11, 2008 |
Date |
January 18, 2008 |
|
DJ Transportations Risk Premium |
7.75% |
DJ Transportations Risk Premium |
7.73% |
|
30 Year Treasury |
4.37% |
30 Year Treasury |
4.28% |
|
Transportation Risk Differential |
3.38% |
Transportation Risk Differential |
3.45% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Date |
January 11, 2008 |
Date |
January 18, 2008 |
|
DJ Utility Risk Premium |
5.39% |
DJ Utility Risk Premium |
5.81% |
|
30 Year Treasury |
4.37% |
30 Year Treasury |
4.28% |
|
Utility Risk Differential |
1.02% |
Utility Risk Differential |
1.53% |
Continues ▼
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For January
11th's Comment Please Click Here
For January 4th's Comment Please Click Here
For December 28th's Comment Please Click Here
For December 21st's Comment Please Click Here
For December 14th's Comment Please Click Here
For December 7th's Comment Please Click Here
For November 30th's Comment Please Click Here
For November 23rd's Comment Please Click Here
For November 16th's Comment Please Click Here.
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