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Are stocks cheap now? The common sense answer...
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:16 pm
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:16 pm
I thought this was a good answer that I found off of a yahoo article.
*****
As to the claim stocks are "cheap" and long-term investors should be buying, Roque has a simple response: "Have they stopped going down? If they haven't stopped going down, they're not cheap. If people have no confidence to own [stocks], they're likely to go lower."
In other words, the habitual bottom-pickers are going to get burned yet again.
*****
As to the claim stocks are "cheap" and long-term investors should be buying, Roque has a simple response: "Have they stopped going down? If they haven't stopped going down, they're not cheap. If people have no confidence to own [stocks], they're likely to go lower."
In other words, the habitual bottom-pickers are going to get burned yet again.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:20 pm to footballislife
We still don't know how far we'll fall. I suspect we'll fall more after Christmas when we hear just how bad sales really were.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:28 pm to TigerinATL
We don't have a crystal ball so we cannot know how far stocks will fall. We can get a better handle on earnings going forward. Do you see a mechanisim for earnings in 2009? I don't.
The financial sector has collapsed. Home bldg has collapsed. CRE is beginning to collapse and will continue. Consumers are not spending (maybe they are in La but not here). Consumer credit is tightening. Mortgage rates are moving up, not down. I could go on.
Where are there earnings going forward?
The financial sector has collapsed. Home bldg has collapsed. CRE is beginning to collapse and will continue. Consumers are not spending (maybe they are in La but not here). Consumer credit is tightening. Mortgage rates are moving up, not down. I could go on.
Where are there earnings going forward?
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:30 pm to TigerinATL
people keep pointing to low P/E ratios. that's nonsense. the "E" in those ratios is the big unknown, although everyone knows it will go down. Negative in the case of many companies. I'm both long and short right now.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:30 pm to Rivers
quote:
Where are there earnings going forward?
That is why I keep laughing when I read about a company's PE ratio. It means very little right now.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:37 pm to footballislife
Yeah, it's a hoot the way the talking heads on squeek blab try to push stocks every day. They are nothing but pimps.
The market will not go straight down. There will be bull moves in this bear market. Do not get whip sawed by one of these. This is a very difficult market to trade even if you are a pro and know how to hedge it. If the damn thing gaps open then it's a disaster and nothing one can do but take some lumps. Been there, done that.
The market will not go straight down. There will be bull moves in this bear market. Do not get whip sawed by one of these. This is a very difficult market to trade even if you are a pro and know how to hedge it. If the damn thing gaps open then it's a disaster and nothing one can do but take some lumps. Been there, done that.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:48 pm to Rivers
quote:
Do you see a mechanisim for earnings in 2009?
The economy isn't dying, it's just contracting because previous business estimates were based on false assumptions. Once we hit the bottom and everyone has burned off inventory and adjusted their business models the economy will get back on track. When that happens is hard to say. I tend to think Christmas 2009 will be the first time we'll have a chance to see if we've stopped falling or not.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:53 pm to TigerinATL
Fed meeting minutes released yesterday said they expect 2010 before normal growth resumes fwiw.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 3:55 pm to footballislife
quote:
Are stocks cheap now?
Cheaper than they were yesterday, last week, last month, last year.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:03 pm to TigerinATL
You are much more optomistic than I am. The credit markets are indicating that the defaults will be greater, percentage wise, than in the great depression.
Corporate AAA commercial mortgage spreads are at extreme wides, standing at over 700 bips; added to reference this means that super senior AAA commercial mortgages now yield more than 10%. Given the level of credit enhancement in these deals this forecasts default rates of more than thirty percent in this space. Similar extreme spreads are found among both the "high grade" and "high yield" corporate bond markets.
The credit market is telling you that we are headed for an S&P 500 trading at three hundred and a DOW at under three thousand. That we are headed for unemployment north of 20% on the U6 (broad) measure, and GDP contraction of twenty percent cumulatively from top to bottom.
Unemployment...very very high.
So far the credit markets have called every turn right while Hank and Ben have been full of it on every call. Who you gonna believe?
Corporate AAA commercial mortgage spreads are at extreme wides, standing at over 700 bips; added to reference this means that super senior AAA commercial mortgages now yield more than 10%. Given the level of credit enhancement in these deals this forecasts default rates of more than thirty percent in this space. Similar extreme spreads are found among both the "high grade" and "high yield" corporate bond markets.
The credit market is telling you that we are headed for an S&P 500 trading at three hundred and a DOW at under three thousand. That we are headed for unemployment north of 20% on the U6 (broad) measure, and GDP contraction of twenty percent cumulatively from top to bottom.
Unemployment...very very high.
So far the credit markets have called every turn right while Hank and Ben have been full of it on every call. Who you gonna believe?
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:15 pm to Rivers
quote:
The credit market is telling you that we are headed for an S&P 500 trading at three hundred and a DOW at under three thousand.
The DJIA hit 3000 for the first time in 1991. Granted that could have been a bogus 3000 just like we had a bogus 10000+, but do you really think that our economy is less productive now than it was in 1991 before the Internet? Our productive capacity has not taken a hit, it's not like we got bombed into the stoneage and have to rebuild everything from scratch.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:25 pm to TigerinATL
You need capital to maximize that productive capacity. The reallocation of that capital is what causes the economy to underproduce (recession). I feel it is safe to say that we are undergoing a massive reallocation of capital (deleveraging). Does that mean DOW 3000? I have no idea, but I'd say that's unlikely. Does that mean that total GDP contracts to 1991 levels? Good god I hope not. We wouldn't make it that far down.
I don't think we'll see DOW 11000 for several years though, and it is absolutely possible that we never see DOW 14000 again. Just ask Japan. The indexes can slump for years while the broader economy functions at a reasonable growth rate. Again, just ask Japan.
I don't think we'll see DOW 11000 for several years though, and it is absolutely possible that we never see DOW 14000 again. Just ask Japan. The indexes can slump for years while the broader economy functions at a reasonable growth rate. Again, just ask Japan.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:36 pm to kfizzle85
I think you guys are greatly overstating my optimism. My first comment in this thread was that Christmas sales would be bad and we'd fall more after those sales figures are announced. Then I said that Christmas 2009 is the earliest possible point to know if we've stopped falling, which was in response to the comments about the "experts" trying to be positive and pushing stocks TODAY. I think it's entirely possible we keep contracting for 2-3 years and once we hit bottom it will take a while for us to get back up. It's bad, I just don't think it's economic armageddon.
This post was edited on 11/20/08 at 4:38 pm
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:37 pm to TigerinATL
quote:
It's bad, I just don't think it's economic armageddon.
Same.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:43 pm to TigerinATL
Our productive capacity is not in question. We have morphed into mostly a service economy. Consumers are cutting back. Production means nothing if people are not buying. Services go unused if people are not spending. A very large part of any recession is the psychology of the consumer. Right now the consumer is afraid. Why is the consumer afraid? They are afraid because they are losing their homes, their jobs and their access to credit has been reduced or is gone completely.
What good is lots more productive capacity if it is unused? That is more pushing on a string. It takes producers and it takes buyers with access to affordable credit to make an economic engine run.
What good is lots more productive capacity if it is unused? That is more pushing on a string. It takes producers and it takes buyers with access to affordable credit to make an economic engine run.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 4:54 pm to Rivers
quote:
Production means nothing if people are not buying.
That is why I said we will need to hit bottom first before we can start growing again. Are we really disagreeing or are you seeing economic armageddon?
Posted on 11/20/08 at 5:08 pm to TigerinATL
Posted on 11/20/08 at 5:10 pm to TigerinATL
I do not know if we are disagreeing. I do not have a crystal ball, so cannot predict the future reliably. What I do is observe the credit markets and let them inform me of probable futures for the economy. Right now, the credit markets are pointing to disaster.
BTW, I feel sure you know this but the stock market is to the credit markets like a flea is to an elephant. The serious money is saying, by actions, that the future is dim. I will not bet against the credit market signals...these are the people with the best possible information, insiders.
BTW, I feel sure you know this but the stock market is to the credit markets like a flea is to an elephant. The serious money is saying, by actions, that the future is dim. I will not bet against the credit market signals...these are the people with the best possible information, insiders.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 5:14 pm to Rivers
Bond markets have been slowly re-disintegrating since last week. They accelerated this week and went all out today. 30 yr swap -60 and long bond yield 3.17%. Yikes.
Posted on 11/20/08 at 5:18 pm to kfizzle85
Yes, and lots of people are being guided by CDS as well as bond prices/interest. CDS on US Treasury issues have been widening. That is sort of humorous...who would survive to pay off after a default?
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