1. This remains a hope-based rally (with strong technicals). I say that because during this six-month 50%+ rally in the S&P 500, the U.S. economy has shed 2.4 million jobs, which is almost as many as we lost during the entire 2001-02 tech wreck � in just six months. The market�s ability to shrug off the loss of 2.4 million jobs is either a sign that it is treating this as old news or sees the cost-cutting as good news for profits. Either way, what we are seeing transpire is without precedent � the magnitude of the employment slide versus the magnitude of the market advance. Truly fascinating stuff.Treasuries Yields Topped In June
2. Companies have not really been beating their earnings estimates � only the very final estimates heading into the reporting quarter. For example, the consensus view for 3Q EPS at the start of the year was $21.00, last we saw the estimates were down to just over $14.00. But there is a deeply rooted belief that earnings are coming in better than expected. This is a psychology that is difficult to break. It is completely unknown (for some reason) that corporate revenues are running at a -25% YoY rate, which compares to the -10% we saw at the worst part of the 2001-02 bear market and the -3% trend at the most negative point in 1991.
3. Valuation is a poor timing device but even on �normalized� trailing 10-year earnings, the S&P 500 is trading near 18x, which is now above the historical average of 16x.
4. All the growth we are seeing globally this year is due to fiscal stimulus; not just here in Canada and the U.S., but also in Korea, China, the U.K., and Continental Europe too. For 2010, the government�s share of global growth, by our estimates, will be 80%. In other words, there are still very few signs that organic private sector activity is stirring. For a Keynesian, government stimulus is necessary, but the question for an investor is the multiple one attaches to a global economy that is still relying on a defibrillator. The problem is that governments do not create income or wealth, and today�s stimulus is really a future tax liability. Curiously, that future tax liability is likely going to pose a roadblock for the return to a �normalized� $80 operating EPS estimate that strategists are now starting to pen in for 2011.
5. While Mr. Market may be pricing in a fine future for the U.S., but when the 3-month Treasury-bill yield is 13bps north of zero, which is completely abnormal, you know that there are still substantial fundamental imbalances that need to be worked through.
$TNX - 10 Year Treasury Yield
click on chart for sharper image
After hitting an intraday high just above 4 in June, 10-year treasuries seems to be having second thoughts about the strength and/or duration of the recovery.
Stock are pricing in one hell of a recovery in earnings, completely ignoring demographic factors, secular changes in consumer spending patterns, foreclosures, and a miserable jobs market that is unlikely to bottom for another year.
The latest earnings estimates for the third quarter are $14. Let's do the math. 1000/ (14*4) = PE 18.
If $80 in earnings is on the horizon as some now claim, the treasury market does not see it. Nor do I.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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