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- <text id=93TT1730>
- <title>
- May 17, 1993: How Long Will The Bull Run?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WALL STREET, Page 44
- How Long Will The Bull Run?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite high stock prices, most market pros aren't too worried,
- yet
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by John F. Dickerson and Jane
- Van Tassel/New York and William McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> The warning signs are everywhere. Share prices in the
- relentlessly upbeat stock market now stand at sky-high levels
- by historical standards, and dividend yields have fallen to near
- record lows--classic signals that the bull market that began
- 2 1/2 years ago has got dangerously long in the tooth. At the
- same time, companies continue to flood Wall Street with new
- issues to cash in on the bull's run before it can stumble--another omen that the market may be overheated and headed for
- a fall. Even the current rush of little-guy buyers is usually
- a harbinger of a bear market.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the money propping up share prices comes from
- small savers who have put their money into mutual funds simply
- because returns on alternative investments have got so low. With
- money-market deposits and CDs barely eking out 2% in interest,
- individuals poured a record $11.3 billion into stock mutual
- funds in March, snapping up shares so fast that managers barely
- had time to invest all the cash. Buyers feasted on all kinds of
- funds, from those that purchase slow-growth utility stocks to
- aggressive acquirers of speculative new firms. But the binge
- failed to satisfy the public's ravenous appetite for shares. "If
- I had more money, I think I'd put it all in the market," says
- Winston Mason, 72, a Los Angeles retiree. "Oh yes, I think right
- now is the time."
- </p>
- <p> This stampede into the risky world of stocks has only
- heightened concern that the market may soon come tumbling down.
- Never far from bearish minds is the 1987 crash, which saw the
- Dow Jones industrial average plunge 508 points on Black Monday.
- Even more frightening was the more recent, and more devastating,
- collapse of the Japanese stock market that began in 1990, when
- the bloated Nikkei average plummeted from nearly 39,000 to less
- than 15,000 in 2 1/2 years. Then there are recollections of the
- Great Crash itself, which have become part of America's memory.
- "People start thinking of the '20s and '30s," says author and
- retired fund manager Peter Lynch, "and almost everyone seems to
- have had an Uncle Louie who lost everything and ended up
- selling pencils."
- </p>
- <p> So is this the time to get out of stocks? In spite of the
- danger signs, few Wall Street gurus foresee a sharp downturn
- anytime soon, as long as interest rates stay low. That's because
- investors still have plenty of liquid funds left: they hold
- nearly $3 trillion in low-yielding investments like bank CDs and
- are likely to continue moving them into stocks. Even if share
- prices start to tumble, experts say, fund managers and cash-rich
- individuals will swiftly scoop up bargains and thereby halt the
- slide before it can erode the market 20%--the level that
- indicates a bear market has begun. Last Friday the market closed
- at 3437.19, up 9.64 points for the week and down 41.42 points
- from its April 16 peak.
- </p>
- <p> Still, many investors--and especially small investors--are starting to get nervous. "The mood is sour but not
- panicky," says John Markese, research director of the American
- Association of Individual Investors. "People are less certain
- about the economy, less optimistic about the political
- environment than they were at the start of the year, and not
- quite certain that the recovery is taking hold."
- </p>
- <p> One source of concern is the Clinton Administration, which
- many on Wall Street now regard with disdain. Investors fret
- that Clinton's proposed tax hikes and forthcoming plans to
- finance health-care reform would slow the economy, squeeze
- corporate profits and thereby bring stock prices down. At the
- same time, critics charge that Clinton's often wishy-washy style
- has helped chill business and consumer confidence. "A weak
- presidency always makes markets very nervous," says Stephen
- Bell, the Washington-based managing director of Salomon
- Brothers. "We saw that late in the Bush Administration, and
- we're seeing it now under Clinton. People are having doubts that
- Clinton is up to the task."
- </p>
- <p> The national economy is throwing off its own confusing
- messages. A continuing sluggish recovery is certainly bad news:
- it threatens to trim corporate profits and cause stock prices
- to slump. But a robust recovery might have the same effect: by
- boosting interest rates it could entice investors back to banks
- and money markets and put the bull to flight. The key to
- everything seems to be interest rates. "If you get a major rise
- in rates, it will kill the market," says Marty Zweig, who runs
- the Zweig Funds.
- </p>
- <p> A big jump in interest rates would also clobber the bond
- market, to which mutual-fund buyers have flocked as well. Bonds
- took off on a powerful rally last November that has pushed
- long-term yields to their lowest level in 20 years (the higher
- a bond's price, the lower its interest yield). A spurt in
- interest rates would have the opposite effect, halting the boom
- and sending bond prices spiraling down.
- </p>
- <p> Even without higher interest rates, Wall Street bears
- argue, the market is perilously overvalued. On average, stocks
- now fetch prices that are 23 times as high as corporate profits
- as measured by earnings per share; the stock of a company with
- profits of $3 per share would therefore sell for a whopping $69.
- This heady price-earnings multiple is nearly twice the average
- for past markets and stands even higher than the one just before
- the 1987 Wall Street crash.
- </p>
- <p> The bears further point out that stocks are returning
- little to investors in the way of dividends. On average,
- dividend payouts currently equal just 2.8% of stock prices, the
- lowest yield since August 1987. "The market has rarely been this
- high in terms of price to earnings or dividends," says James
- Grant, an investment-magazine editor who predicts a break in
- prices. "The eternal paradox is that people will buy more cars
- or canned goods when the price is down, but they seem to buy
- more stocks when the price is up."
- </p>
- <p> Many investors are increasingly hunting for bargains
- abroad, where stock prices and yields are often more attractive.
- "We are moving to markets in Europe, where levels are clearly
- a lot cheaper than in the U.S.," says Barton Biggs, managing
- director of equity research for Morgan Stanley. "And to Asia,
- where the real economic growth in the world is taking place."
- Chicago's Wanger Asset Group has already collected $160 million
- in its overseas funds only seven months after opening for
- business. Much of the money is headed for Japan, where the stock
- market is slowly recovering from its speculative meltdown.
- Americans invested more than $3 billion in Japanese stocks in
- this year's first quarter alone.
- </p>
- <p> Wall Street's numerous bulls, however, counter that
- traditional measures of stock value have become misleading in
- today's fitful economy. They say price-earnings ratios are out
- of whack because many companies wrote off restructuring costs
- and took other special charges that depressed profits last year.
- "Anyone who says the market is overvalued is not looking at the
- whole picture," asserts Bill LeFevre, a veteran Wall Street
- watcher who puts out an investment newsletter. "Why did we have
- such crummy earnings? A lot of it was the huge write-offs."
- </p>
- <p> In the same way, bulls say the current low dividend yields
- remain in line with the returns on bonds and other
- interest-bearing investments. A 2.8% dividend payout doesn't
- look so bad, they note, when compared with the low level of
- interest rates in general. "This cycle is unlike anything since
- the Second World War, because we haven't got to the point where
- rates have gone up, and a rise doesn't seem to be on the radar
- scope," says Charles Blood, director of financial-markets
- analysis at Brown Brothers Harriman. Concurs LeFevre: "With
- lower interest rates it is understandable that stocks command
- a lower dividend yield because stocks have growth whereas bonds
- don't."
- </p>
- <p> Most market watchers doubt that a sharp spike in interest
- rates is on the horizon. With inflation still hovering near a
- mild 3%, the Federal Reserve Board would seem to have little
- reason to tighten the money supply and push interest rates up.
- Moreover, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has been calling for years
- for the White House and Congress to take the tough action needed
- to bring down the deficit. Now that such efforts are under way, a
- Federal Reserve source notes, "Alan doesn't want to discredit
- the enterprise" of deficit reduction by jacking up rates and
- further weakening the recovery.
- </p>
- <p> Market optimists also fiercely dispute the conventional
- wisdom that small investors rush into the stock market just
- before it crashes and then sell out in a panic. On the contrary,
- many experts say, the little guy is increasingly in for the
- long haul, with an eye toward putting his children through
- college or investing for retirement. In the 1987 crash, for
- example, it was institutional investors, rather than
- individuals, who fled wholesale from the market.
- </p>
- <p> Still, there is no way to avoid risk when buying and
- selling stocks. Unwary investors who switch from risk-free CDs
- or Treasury bills to the stock market can find themselves in a
- frightening new world where prices can rapidly decline.
- Minneapolis, Minnesota, high roller Irwin Jacobs says that
- because of low interest rates, "people are being forced to make
- investments where they never would have been otherwise. That is
- going to be scary for a lot of people who are very naive and
- inexperienced out there." Says Blood of Brown Brothers Harriman:
- "You just know that some people are making inappropriate
- investments. There are people who are buying funds who don't
- realize that one day they can wake up and lose three years of
- accumulated income."
- </p>
- <p> Experts say the remedy for such roller-coaster rides is to
- invest for the long term rather than trade frequently in an
- effort to time market swings. "Stock market declines are
- normal," says Peter Lynch, who notes that the Fidelity Magellan
- Fund he managed fell nine times during his 13-year tenure.
- "Stocks have still averaged an 11% return through depressions
- and world wars," Lynch adds. "But if you're unable to stand
- volatility, you should not be in. If you spend more than 14
- minutes a year worrying about the market, you've wasted 12
- minutes."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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