John wrote:Higgenbotham wrote:My best guess is that you are correct this time and stocks will rally for a few days, or maybe even a few weeks or months.
How on earth could that possibly happen, when P/E ratios are in the 20s, and
corporate earnings are still falling????
John
I should probably go back to this question of PEs first. I kind of covered that in the last post by talking generally about how PEs might be weighed against other assets classes and then gave the example of money market funds.
Another way to approach this is to look at specific stocks. I made a list of stocks that I thought astute investors might take a look at once they got ready to bargain hunt. One example, Apple Computer. Apple Computer hit a low on Friday of 85 and closed up about 10%. I think it closed around 96. The last 4 quarters of earnings are $5.12 from what I remember, so that would make the PE around 19. But what I had identified that an astute investor might look at is the fact that Apple has 23.45 in cash on its books and no debt. So if Apple paid that 23.45 out to investors or invested it into new income generating businesses, the PE would remain unchanged. So let's say an investor bought Apple at 85 and to keep it simple Apple paid that cash out. We know they won't do that, but that effectively makes the price of the stock 62 and the PE 12. I can't find hundreds of examples where this situation exists, but there are quite a few. Most of them exist in the technology area, and the Nasdaq was up on Friday.
Anyway, I compiled a list of companies like Apple that I tbought investors would buy for various reasons once they felt the panic and forced liquidation in the stock market subsided and smart investors began to take over. Day after day, those stocks got hammered because people were just selling everything. Finally, on Friday, as the market turned up, this time those stocks got bought and most of them were up substantially by the end of the day.
So that's just one signal I can describe that I noticed in the stock arena, but that in itself was not enough to convince me that the market had temporarily turned. And I'm only talking about a 1-3 day rally from here to start with. But I think it has the potential to go further than that like Gordo said.
You know, you've posted many times about the talking heads asking if capitulation is here. In the 1920's stocks were margined to the hilt--I remember reading that accounts were margined as much as 98%. Today a stock margin account is margined at 50%. But of course, hedge funds can be margined to much much higher levels and they invest in all kinds of things. So one thing I've been looking for is a sign or signal that the hedge funds and other similar players have capitulated. We can only guess what these funds may have been up to their necks in, but looking at the biggest
bubbles in commodities might be a good place to start. How about oil or silver? I think oil ran up about 15 fold from 1998 to 2008 and silver ran up about 5 fold, but the last 12 months were crazy, just like stocks in 1929. Although silver is not nearly as large of a market as oil, it is instructive to look at for a number of reasons. When the stock market crashed in 1929 and all of the margin leverage got unwound, stocks lost about 20% in 2 days or so. I can't remember the exact figures. A similar thing may have happened in oil and silver on Friday and, to a lesser extent, gold. Oil lost about 10% of it's value on Friday, silver 20%, and gold around 10% before recovering some at the end of the day. In my opinion, the commodity
bubbles may be popping in very similar fashion to 1929, with oil and silver down over 50% since their highs this year, and maybe the final debt liquidation having occurred on Friday.
John, I could go on and on but these are some ideas I have out of dozens. What Gordo posted was all good stuff and we could spend many paragraphs and pages discussing his ideas too.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.