NEW YORK (Reuters) - At the start of the historically weakest month
for equities there are plenty of reasons to believe stocks may be just
about reaching a top - at least in the short term.
The S&P 500 has surged 14 percent this year and is
at its highest level in more than 4 years. Not counting 2009 when
equities rebounded from their crisis lows, this could be the best year
for stocks since 2003 - nearly a decade.
A report showing hiring in the United States in August
was again much slower than expected and warnings of a slowdown at Intel
and FedEx this week, which will likely foreshadow a very weak earnings
season, have not been enough to deter investors buoyed by aggressive
central bank action.
After the European Central Bank's pledge to buy the
debt of troubled eurozone countries this week the Fed is widely expected
to introduce new stimulus measure in the form of more bond buying when
it closes its two-day meeting on Thursday.
"Good news in good news and bad news is good news,
largely because of the Bernanke put," said Eric Kuby, chief investment
officer, North Star Investment Management in Chicago.
The S&P 500 is now trading at 13.3 time its forward
earnings estimates, meaning investors are willing to pay just over $13
for a dollar of expected earnings from S&P 500 companies.
Although that is below a median forward
price-to-earnings ratio of 13.7 since 1976 - according to Morgan Stanley
- it is close to the upper end of the range in the low-growth post
crisis era of the last 5 years. During that time there has been a median
price-to-earnings ratio of 12.9, according to Thomson Reuters data.
In fact, the recent price-to-earnings high was 13.5 in
February 2011, just above current levels. If you are of the view that
little has changed since then, there is no reason for the ratio to go
much higher. That combined with a slowing earnings picture inevitably
means lower prices.
"Our view is that the next double digit move in the market is down not up," said Morgan Stanley in a research note.
The analysts, led by equity strategist Adam Parker,
believe the S&P 500 will finish the year at 1,214, 15 percent below
where it is now.
At current levels the risk-reward skew is starting to
look less attractive then it did. That is especially true given the
uncertainty the November presidential elections are likely to generate,
as well as the potential for more slip-ups in Europe.
"We put a 1,450 target on the S&P for year and so
I'm encouraged," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris
Private Bank in Chicago. "But I will say, if this trend continues, I'm
inclined to declare victory and move to the sidelines (and) start taking
profits."
The average analyst estimate for the S&P 500 this
year is 1,383 according to a Reuters poll from the middle of the year.
That shows Ablin is not alone. The S&P's performance has already
outstripped most expectations.
Another negative factor is the rapidly declining
earnings outlook for the remainder of the year, as well as for 2013.
Analysts are now expecting a 2.1 percent drop in third quarter earnings
year-on-year. About a year ago they were looking for growth of nearly 15
percent.
This week Jonathan Golub, UBS's chief U.S. equity
strategist, cut his S&P 500 earnings outlook due to a weaker U.S.
economic outlook, conversion distortions from a stronger dollar, as well
as weaker oil prices.
For 2012 Golub cut his S&P earnings forecast to $102.50 from $103.50 and to $107.00 from $110 for next year.
Golub believes third quarter earnings will be just
$25.10, 2 percent below the same period last year. On an annualized
basis that would translate into an S&P 500 level of just over 1,300
given a price-to-earnings ratio of 13.
Signs are that those forecasts are already starting to come true.
On Tuesday, FedEx Corp (FDX),
the world's second-largest package delivery company, cut its profit
outlook for the current quarter, saying weakness in the global economy
was hurting demand for overnight international shipments.
Three days later, Intel Corp (INTC)
cut its third-quarter revenue estimate due to a decline in demand for
its chips, as customers reduce inventories and businesses buy fewer
personal computers. A revision of Intel targets had been expected by
some analysts after PC makers Hewlett Packard Co (HPQ) and Dell Inc (DELL) warned of slow demand last month.
Golub is now talking about an earnings "drought" and even an earnings "recession."
"While investors are focused on monetary policy, we
believe these weak earnings results will contain a market advance," he
said in a research note.
Golub has a year end S&P target level of 1,375, 4.3 percent below Friday's closing level.
The latest leg of the rally was a 2 percent surge on
Thursday that pushed the S&P 500 to its highest in more than four
years and the Nasdaq to its highest in 12 years.
The move was courtesy of the European Central Bank and
its pledge to act as an unlimited lender of last resort to troubled
European nations. But it is not a done deal.
The German constitutional court will rule on Wednesday
whether the European Union's new ESM rescue fund should come into being.
If it vetoes it, the ECB's plans could be left in tatters since its
intervention requires a country to seek help from the rescue fund first.
Dutch elections on the same day look to have been
robbed of some of their potential drama, with the hard-left socialists
now slipping in the polls. Instead, the fiscally conservative Liberals
are set to win most seats with the center-left Labour party also polling
strongly.
But there are no guarantees and Germany could yet be
robbed of one of its staunchest pro-austerity allies in the debt crisis
debate.
"While we got some monetary solutions we still need
more answers (on) the underlying European economy," said Ablin. "I don't
think bond buying solves the euro crisis."
Europe is not the only concern for investors. A slew of
Chinese data on Sunday will provide an insight into how the world's
second economy is faring amid concerns of a slowdown. The data includes
inflation, retail sales and industrial production.
The Baltic Exchange's main sea freight index (.BADI),
which tracks rates for ships carrying dry commodities, fell for the
eighth straight session on Friday. Some of the weakness is blamed on
collapsing iron ore demand from China.
Shipments of iron ore account for about a third of
sea-borne volumes. Spot iron ore prices just hit their weakest in nearly
three years, extending a market rout that began in July, while Poor
demand drove Shanghai steel futures to a record low this past week.
But even with the less than stellar fundamental picture, the old saying 'don't fight the Fed' has proven to be true once again.
The chances of the Federal Reserve embarking on another
round of bond purchases next week have jumped after the disappointing
August U.S. employment numbers on Friday, according to a Reuters poll of
economists.
The median of forecasts from 59 economists gave a 60
percent chance the Fed will announce another round of quantitative
easing, or QE3, on Thursday.
For the last 40 years the MSCI world index (.MSCIWO)
has lost 0.9 percent on average in September, making it the worst
performing month for the stock market, according to data from Thomson
Reuters. So far the index, a broad measure of global equities, is up 2.6
percent this month.
This year may well buck the trend.
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