Is there any end in sight? Will the G7 provide strong actions (or statements
of confidence) to support the global markets? Are these efforts by the world’s
central banks helping or simply scaring investors? Should more regulatory
actions be taken? Should exchanges suspend trading temporarily (as some
suggest) until calmer heads prevail?
With Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (OTC: LEHMQ) gone, investor worry shifted to Morgan
Stanley (MS) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
(GS) and both stocks plunged accordingly. While Japan’s
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. (ADR: MTU) still claimed to be moving forward with a deal
that would bring Morgan a badly needed $9 billion capital infusion, some fear
that the terms may be revised (or worse) by the time the deal is expected to
close tomorrow (Tuesday).
Is another bailout (or even nationalization) in the cards?
Earnings season moves forward though, by now, investors should realize they
are weak and not overreact each time bad results are announced. Intel
Corp. (INTC), JP Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM), credit card issuer Capital One Financial
Corp. (COF), and Southwest Airlines
Co. (LUV) are among those reporting.
Meanwhile, both inflation gauges – the producer price index (PPI) and
consumerprice (CPI) – will be released in the coming week. As declining energy
and commodity prices are reflected, hopefully investors realize businesses and
consumers soon will reap some related benefits. Can you folks please take note
of something positive for a change?
Market Matters
The intense market volatility, the never-ending downward spiral in stocks,
the unsettling global economy, and the overall “gloom-and-doom” talk that seems
to enter every discussion we have these days has spawned fears of another
Great Depression.
Undoubtedly, these are challenging times – and definitely aren’t for the
faint of heart – as most investors are experiencing one or more of the so-called
“Five Stages of Grief” (often all in the same day):
- Denial: Heck no, the market is not overpriced.
Each sell-off represents a great buying opportunity.
- Anger: Those darn greedy Wall
Streeters and politicos ruined it for Main Street folks like me.
- Bargaining: If only this market would settle down, I
promise not to speculate on securities I don’t understand ever again. I know I
said that after the dot.com meltdown, but I really mean it this time.
- Depression: I can’t quit staring at my online brokerage
statement. I can’t work. I can’t eat. I can’t even participate in my weekly
golf game.
- Acceptance: Since there is nothing we can do about it, is
my portfolio allocated in the most suitable manner for my family and me? (By
the way, can we find good bargains in the market carnage?) Sometimes, one just
has to laugh to keep from crying (or worse).
With the global financial markets in complete and utter collapse, U.S.
President George W. Bush took to the airwaves to remind the American people (and
others) of the steps the central bankers, the U.S. Treasury Department and
regulators taking to restore economic confidence.
The bankers have acted in meaningful ways to inject liquidity into the
financial system in an attempt to reignite the credit markets and provide
businesses with access to much-needed cash. The U.S. Federal Reserve also will
purchase significant commercial paper to aid short-term corporate
funding. [Check out Money Morning ’s special investigative
report on the commercial paper market, which includes the Fed’s new plan to
purchase commercial paper directly from
corporations for the first time since the Great Depression.]
A coordinated intervention by the world’s central banks proved
that the central bankers would work together to solve this crisis – rather than
placing blame on the culprits (of which there are far to many to name). But
there’s no guarantee these moves will work. [Check out Money
Morning’s special investigative report on the Federal Funds target rate, which includes insights
on why this strategy may not work – and could actually damage the central banks’
reputation in the process.]
The bailout plans across the globe may interfere with basic concepts of
free-market capitalism, but most experts agree these plans were needed in this
time of panic and uncertainty. Indeed, it’s possible they should have been
implemented sooner, and should have been even more aggressive than they
ultimately proved to be.
In his comments late last week, U.S. President George W. Bush probably should
have mentioned how oil prices had plummeted 45% in a few months and that
consumers should feel much-needed relief at the gasoline pumps; shipping and
travel costs also should drop in time for the holidays as diesel and
jet-airplane fuel. He could have noted the plunging commodity prices, as
manufacturers and farmers alike welcome lower agricultural (fertilizer) and
metals costs they can pass along to consumers.
Just a few short weeks ago, inflation was a huge concern. Why is no one
talking about this?
Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) beat out Citigroup Inc. (C) for Wachovia Corp. (WB), though legal issues continue [For a full
report on the Wells Fargo/Citigroup scuffle, check out this story elsewhere in today’s issue of
Money Morning.]
International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) pre-announced better-than-anticipated third-quarter earnings,
while Alcoa Corp. (AA), General Motors Corp. (GM), and General Electric Corp. (GE) reported weak (but somewhat expected) numbers. The
global indexes dropped in a freefall to levels not seen in years as fear
overshadowed fundamentals and the concerns became self-fulfilling. The
Dow Jones Industrial Average moved below 9,000, then
8,000, as volatility was out of control and 100 point gyrations occurred by the
minute (especially at Friday’s close). [[For a
full report on the Dow’s deadly drop, check out this story elsewhere in today’s
issue of Money Morning.]
Mass redemptions prevented hedge funds and mutual funds from bargain hunting
and all proceeds seem to be going into short-term Treasuries. By Friday’s open,
this year’s losses on the Wilshire 5000 translated into a loss of shareholder
wealth (negative wealth effect) of more than $8 trillion. Eight days and
counting means another 20+% losses on the Dow. No one is laughing (especially
since it had set an all-time high exactly one year ago…to the day).
That sure seems like “depression” to me; please hurry up and bring on
“acceptance.”
| Market/ Index |
Year Close (2007)
|
Qtr Close (06/30/08)
|
Previous
Week
(10/03/08)
|
Current Week
(10/10/08)
|
YTD Change
|
|
Dow Jones Industrial
|
13,264.82
|
11,350.01
|
10,325.38
|
8,451.19
|
-36.29%
|
|
NASDAQ
|
2,652.28
|
2,292.98
|
1,947.39
|
1,649.51
|
-37.81%
|
|
S&P 500
|
1,468.36
|
1,280.00
|
1,099.23
|
899.22
|
-38.76%
|
|
Russell 2000
|
766.03
|
689.66
|
619.40
|
522.48
|
-31.79%
|
|
Fed Funds
|
4.25%
|
2.00%
|
2.00%
|
1.50%
|
-275 bps
|
|
10 yr Treasury (Yield)
|
4.04%
|
3.98%
|
3.64%
|
3.86%
|
-18 bps
|
Economically Speaking
A relatively quiet week for economic releases was far from quiet in terms of
related activity by the Fed and its counterparts. In addition to adding
liquidity via significant short-term financing, the world’s central bankers –
the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Central Bank (ECB), China,
Australia and others – acted in a coordinated effort to lower their key bank
lending rates.
The Federal Funds target rate now stands at 1.5%, and many economists expect
additional reductions of a quarter to half a percentage point either at – or
before – the central bank’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
Oct. 28 monetary policy meeting.
Investors should have taken some comfort from the coordinated global action –
but did not. It really was a remarkable move: Indeed, the last time the Fed and
ECB moved at the same time was in the aftermath of 9-11 terrorist attacks on New
York and Washington. The United Kingdom even announced its own bank-bailout
plan, with the obvious hope that businesses and consumers would be able to meet
their borrowing needs again. With the Group of Seven 7 (G7) finance ministers
scheduled to meet in Washington this past weekend, economists remained hopeful
that more coordinated efforts would lead to some semblance of confidence before
the bottom falls out.
On the data front, retailers continued to struggle last month (as expected)
as weak same-store September sales numbers reflected poorly on the upcoming
holiday season. While Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) enjoyed some decent results, the news was far
worse for the likes of Target Corp. (TGT), J.C. Penney Co. Inc. (JCP), The Gap Inc. (GPS), and Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF).
Buried deep inside the weekly news announcements were a few tidbits that
should have been positively received by investors (if anyone was paying
attention). Pending home sales in August rose a surprising 7.4%, the best
showing since June 2007. Meanwhile, filings for new unemployment benefits
actually declined in the latest report, a positive sign for the slumping labor
market. And finally, the August trade deficit moved lower (though
ever-so-slightly) as imports of foreign oil declined from recent record levels.
(What say you, OPEC?).
Weekly Economic Calendar
|
Date
|
Release
|
Comments
|
|
October 7
|
Fed Policy Meeting Minutes
|
Hinted at possible rate cut
|
|
|
Consumer Credit (08/08)
|
1st decline in borrowing in 10 years
|
|
October 9
|
Initial Jobless Claims (10/04/08)
|
Decline in benefits claims as effects of hurricanes subside
|
|
October 10
|
Balance of Trade (08/08)
|
Slight decline though shortfall with China expanded
|
|
The Week Ahead
|
|
|
|
October 15
|
PPI (09/08)
|
|
|
|
Retail Sales (09/08)
|
|
|
|
Fed Beige Book
|
|
|
October 16
|
CPI (09/08)
|
|
|
|
Initial Jobless Claims (10/11/08)
|
|
|
|
Industrial Production (09/08)
|
|
|
October 17
|
Housing Starts (09/08)
|
|