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From: US GIG
To: Undisclosed recipients:;
Subject:
Morgan Eye on the Market 2/29/2012: Goldilocks
Date: Wed, 29 Feb 2012 17:50:57 +0000
Attachments: 02-29-2012_-_EOTM_-_Goldilocks.pdf
Inline-Images: image002.png; image004.png; image006.png
Leap Year Eye on the Market, February 29, 2012
Topics: Riding the central bank reflation machine; Q1 US economic data, and an offset to rising oil prices (nat
gas/coal)
CTRL-P. Many people weren't convinced, including yours truly, about what the first European Central Bank unlimited
bank lending program (LTRO #1) could do for European economies and markets. While the former is an open question,
the latter is not. So far, LTRO #1 has been a tremendous salve for global equities (see below). The calmness of the rally
relative to what preceded it indicates that markets were waiting for Europe to stop falling down the stairs (think of LTRO as
an ATM machine that spits out money from someone else's account and lends it to you for 3 years in unlimited amounts at
1%). Following LTRO #1, bond auctions have been well-bid, sovereign spreads rallied, banks prefunded 2012 and 2013
bond maturities, bank debt markets reopened, and the decline in US money market fund exposures to European banks
finally ended. There's a long way to go, since Italy and Spain are only 20%-30% of their way to their 2012 funding goals
and they are still in recession. But isn't the point of LTRO that Germany has capitulated and in 2012 at least, will pay the
price [a] to prevent worst-case outcomes? There's no reason to believe that LTRO #2 will be the last one, if another is
needed. Weimar Republic memories,
MSCI World Equities
Level
1,350
1,300
1,250
1,200
1.150
1.100
1,050
1 Jul
18-Jul
4-Aug
21-Aug
7-Sep
24-Sep 11-Oct
28-Oct
14-Nov
1-Dec
18-Dec
4-Jan
21-Jan
7-Feb
24-Feb
LTRO. Dec 21
Pre-LTRO volatility': 27%
Post-LTRO volatility': 10%
LTRO market reaction. For most of the last two decades, equity markets were priced closer to "fair value", and
accompanying risks were modest as well. But last September, this was not the case. Equities were very cheap, using a
barometer of S&P real earnings yields (see chart). The risks were exaggerated as well: a potential Italian sovereign default,
an unresolved US budget situation and the risk of more ratings downgrades, the unholy reliance of profits on low labor
compensation, etc. To accompany that, the largest sidelined cash balances [b] I have seen in 25 years. Last fall, it's as if
everyone was standing outside waiting for a 2012 Mayan collapse, and then the Central Banks decided it would not happen
on their watch (see below). If there's an inflation tax, someone in the future will have to worry about that. As we wrote 2
weeks ago, while excess manufacturing and labor capacity are gradually shrinking, they do not appear tight enough yet to
scare today's collection of Central Bankers.
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Real S&P 500 earnings yield
Earnings yield less core CPI (earnings yield = earnings/price, using 12-month trailing earnings per share before extraordinary items)
8%
7% -
6% -
5% -
4% -
3% -
2% -
1% -
0%
-1% -
-2%
1956 1959 1962 1965 1968 1971 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010
As of 9/30/2011
As of V28/2012
How to invest in periods like this, with exaggerated risks coupled with boatloads of sidelined cash, and earnings
priced cheaply? Going into 2012, we decided to split the difference. We hold equities at a bit below normal levels, with
the difference in credit, commodities and hedge funds. "A bit below" means different things to different people. In our
Balanced portfolio, public + private equity is around 35%, and that excludes whatever directional equity risks reside in our
22% hedge fund allocation. To me, that seems "just right", given the risks and opportunities. As a business, we have
never invested based on "S&P 500 year-end targets" or things like that, and aren't going to start now. Our portfolio
allocations reflect our best thinking given all the prevailing risks and opportunities that we chronicle each week, and they
will remain as the primary way our investors communicate with you. On the notion of a "goldilocks" market, one thing's
for sure: this is a different kind of stock market rally. In the second chart, we look at periods like March 2009 until
today, when S&P 500 returns have been up over 75%. In the past, accompanying gold returns have been much lower, and
in the 1990s, they were negative. The market's current verdict reflects both the enthusiasm and potential risks inherent in
the Central Bank solution.
Not on my watch
Central bank balance sheets, percentof aggregate GDP
28%
23%
18%
13%
8%
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
Japan. EU. US. UK Swlatit
Includes estimates for FY2012 Bank of
Japan Quantitative Easing (S37 tin) and
Bank of England Quantitative Easing
(t50 bn)
2011
Goldilocks indeed: a different kind of stock market rally
1000-day cumulative price return for stocksand gold when S&P 500
•
returns exceed 75%
120%
100%
80%
th
erer
ielibildi
S&P 500
60%
40%
20%
0%
-20%
-40%
Gold
e r earee
d"
noawa
4 P.
a 4 r-a.
%
There are clients who disagree with us, on both sides of the risk spectrum. I gave a talk at our 726 Madison Avenue
office last night. It is a rare occurrence when a group of clients can out-do me in "paint a picture of unavoidable
catastrophe", but this group succeeded. If we had served arsenic in the hors d'oeuvres, it would have matched the
temperament of the crowd regarding their appetite for risk and their opinion of the future of the United States, Europe and
Japan. I get the risk part; what was missing was their assessment of how much certainty to place on their views, and how
they would translate that into their portfolios. Over the last 100 years, there have only been a handful of times when it
made sense to position for Armageddon. If someone with a normal portfolio risk allocation of 55% (to meet their goals
regarding net worth after taxes, inflation and spending) is at 20%, I would argue that they are putting an enormous amount
of certainty on a Mayan outcome.
Where does all of that leave us on portfolios? The world still has a lot of healing to do. This can be seen in retrenching
household balance sheets, outsized government deficits and debt burdens, depressed labor compensation and housing
activity, below-trend OECD growth, etc. In the aftermath, Central Banks are trying to allow their respective
economies to heal at their own pace, not one dictated by a Hoover/Mises-style liquidation frenzy. That's what the
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Central Bank money-printing is all about. If inflation remains under control, they may succeed in time. There are signs in
the US that it's working (see page 3), and it better work, given the amount of debt the public sector has to pay back. In
Europe, I do not think the Periphery will ever un-Humpty Dumpty itself back into robust economic health [c], regardless
of the monetary policy employed.
We do not have nearly enough certainty to say that a bull market has begun, nor do we believe that the Central Banks are
all doomed to failure. As a result, our portfolios are positioned somewhere in between. This view may seem to you like
Hamlet (indecisive and spineless), but in this case, I prefer Terence over Shakespeare: "All things in moderation".
Michael Cembalest
Chief Investment Officer
Notes
[a] More signs of German capitulation: Germany may now allow the ESM and EFSF facilities to run in parallel (effectively
increasing the firewall), it may increase the size of the ESM, and has also already agreed to pay its share of the ESM cash
earlier. Germany may also need to agree to soften the terms of the Irish bailout, if the EU wants to ensure a "Yes" vote on
the referendum Ireland will hold on the Maastricht 2.0 fiscal treaty. While the EU was able to defuse the Greek referendum
by effectively firing Papandreou, it will be harder to do in Ireland.
[b] Empirical Research estimates that $1 trillion left managed equity funds from 2008 through 2011. Some of this went
into ETFs and index funds, but it does capture the broader trend of some investors de-equitizing their portfolios after a
disappointing decade.
[c] One example: while Peripheral current account deficits are closing, these countries would need a lot more foreign
capital if employment ever went back to normal levels. As such, "cyclically-adjusted current account deficits" are a better
measure of the large competitiveness gaps that remain in the Periphery, gaps that will need to be closed by years of
deflationary austerity (if the Euro holds together).
For anyone interested in the details of LTRO #2:
** The ECB allotted EUR 529 bn of liquidity, with demand from 800 banks. The take-up is a bit higher than that at the
December 3y LTRO (EUR 489 bn), and the number of bidders is higher as well (800 vs. 523 in December).
** The estimated net new borrowing in today's LTRO was around EUR 313bn. After today, more than 90% of the ECB
liquidity operations are in the two 3y LTROs.
** There will likely be no official detail on the take up by the banking system or individual banks in the coming weeks.
The latest LTRO settles on March 1st, and will be reflected only in the end-of-March national central bank balance sheet
data, typically released in early April. There will be no detail on the type of collateral used in the LTRO, as the ECB only
shows a chart in its annual report averaging the types of collateral used.
** If someone told me that Unicredito was able to borrow from the ECB against a vintage movie poster of II Gattopardo
signed by Claudia Cardinale, I would believe it.
An assessment of high-frequency US economic data, looking at Jan/Feb 2012 vs Q4 2011
Stronger: vehicle sales, consumer confidence, ISM manufacturing, service sector and employment surveys, NFIB small
business survey, non-farm payrolls and household employment survey, hours worked, jobless claims, existing home sales,
NAHB housing market index
Weaker: real retail sales, industrial production, capital goods orders, MBA mortgage purchase applications, durable goods
The relative strength of these trends is what probably led to Bernanke's not giving any explicit guidance in today's
Congressional testimony regarding future quantitative easing.
Offsets to oil price increase: softness in other energy commodity prices
While oil prices have risen recently, unlike 2010's oil price spike, they have not been accompanied by other rising energy
commodity prices. In fact, this time, coal and natural gas prices are down. It's complicated to weight these changes across
the consumer and industrial basket, but it's fair to say that the aggregate impact of the oil price increase is only a third or so
of what it might have been had coal and natural gas behaved as they did in 2010. According to the most recent EIA data,
US coal + natural gas consumption is slightly greater in BTU terms than oil consumption.
BTU
British Thermal Unit
EIA
Energy Information Administration
ECB
European Central Bank
EFSF
European Financial Stability Facility
ESM
European Stability Mechanism
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LTRO
Long Term Refinancing Operation
MBA
Mortgage Bankers Association
NAHB
National Association of Home Builders
NFIB
National Federation of Independent Business
OECD
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
The material contained herein is intended as a general market commentary. 0.
•tenons expressed herein are those of Michael Cembalest and may differ from those of other
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