Archive for November, 2008
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Fun with Numbers
Eddy Elfenbein, November 20th, 2008 at 12:23 pmThe S&P 500 hit an intra-day low this morning of 776.76. That’s the exact same level as the closing low from October 9, 2002, the previous bear market low. Incidentally, the closing Dow low of August 12, 1982 was 776.92.
The Dow is inches away from reaching 10 times the S&P 500 for the first time in 42 years.
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Buffett’s Stock Slump
Eddy Elfenbein, November 20th, 2008 at 12:10 amThe Drudge headline says “Now Buffett in stock slump!” Berkshire was down 12% on Wednesday. Now let’s take a look at BRKA divided by the S&P 500.
Not a bad slump. -
TIPs Yields
Eddy Elfenbein, November 19th, 2008 at 9:56 pmHere’s a look at the current TIPs yields-to-maturity listed by maturity date.
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A 40-Year Look
Eddy Elfenbein, November 19th, 2008 at 4:09 pmThe S&P 500 closed at a 68-month low today. Given that the CPI report came out today, here’s an interesting stat. Adjusted for inflation, the S&P 500 has advanced just 23.9% in 40 years. Annualized, that’s 0.54%.
This means that almost the entire gain came from dividends. I should add that this is a bit of playing with numbers since 40 years ago was a cyclical high, and I hope we’re near a cyclical low.
Inflation over the last 40 years has increased by 513.5%. The S&P 500 closed today at 806.58. On November 19, 1968, the S&P 500 closed at 106.14. So the index has grown by 660%. -
Heading Towards Deflations
Eddy Elfenbein, November 19th, 2008 at 2:38 pmThe TIPs say deflation is coming and may stay around for a bit:
Yet, if you believe the yields on US Treasury inflation protected bonds, or Tips, we shall have a 2.2 per cent fall in prices in 2009, a 2.5 per cent decline in 2010 and only flat prices in 2011. If that turns out to be true, the real interest rate burden on even the highest-rated borrowers will be extremely hard to bear.
As a practical matter, long before we had significant “negative prints” of consumer prices, the Federal Reserve would just flat out buy Treasury bonds and monetise away with “quantitative easing”. Gold dealers would replace hedge fund managers at the art auctions, model agency parties and Congressional hearings.But there’s more to the story. John Dizard says that the market is simply becoming less efficient:
What’s really going on is another effect of the disappearance of dealer and arbitrageur capital. The dealers can’t afford to make efficient markets, given their decapitalisation, downsizing, and outright disappearance. That means anomalies sit there for weeks and months, where they would have disappeared in minutes or seconds.
Here’s another look at yield you can get for the TIP maturing in two months.
It’s currently yielding 13.73%. -
Inflation and Stocks
Eddy Elfenbein, November 19th, 2008 at 1:48 pmWith today’s report showing how steeply prices fell last month, I wanted to revisit the issue of inflation’s impact on stock prices. Let me add the important caveat that correlation doesn’t necessarily mean causation. The short answer is that inflation is bad for stocks. In fact, the only thing worse is deflation. What the market likes is inflation that’s nice, steady, predictable and low.
Going back to 1926, there have been 72 months of deflation coming in below -5%. The inflation-adjusted total return for that period is an annualized loss of -9.6%.
Here’s how it breaks out.
Inflation Rate…………Real Stock Returns (annualized)
Below -5%…………………………-9.6%
Between 0% and -5%………….20.9%
No Inflation………………………..17.1%
Between 0% and 2%…………..10.0%
Between 2% and 5%…………..14.1%
Between 5% and 7.5%………..-0.2%
Between 7.5% and 10%………-2.8%
Over 10%………………………….-11.1
Basically, when inflation is over 5% or under -5%, the market averages a real 5.5% loss. When inflation is between -5% and 5%, it average a 15% gain. -
Gene Simmons Rings the Opening Bell
Eddy Elfenbein, November 19th, 2008 at 12:48 pm -
CPI Posts Biggest Drop in 61 Years
Eddy Elfenbein, November 19th, 2008 at 11:42 amThe headline rate dropped by 1% last month which was the most since monthly record began, although the numbers in the database go back to 1913. Consumer prices dropped for an extended period beginning in the 1920s and going into the 1930s. Wall Street was expecting a fall of 0.8%.
We knew a big drop was coming thanks to the fall in oil prices, however, the biggest surprise was the core prices also fell for the first time since 1982. Wall Street was expecting a 1% rise and it got a 0.1% loss. -
More on Corporate Bond Spreads and Their Impact on Equities
Eddy Elfenbein, November 18th, 2008 at 3:23 pmMichael Stokes stokes picks up on my post from last week, and finds that “high spreads have been bullish for the stock market, except when spreads reach extreme heights (like they have at this very moment).”
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If There Was Something We Could Have Done….
Eddy Elfenbein, November 18th, 2008 at 2:09 pmCitigroup hits 13-year low:
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