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- <text id=89TT2420>
- <title>
- Sep. 18, 1989: Money Angles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 18, 1989 Torching The Amazon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 62
- Money Angles
- The Gloat Factor and Other Market Indicators
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Andrew Tobias
- </p>
- <p> Some things you can know for sure and some you just can't.
- For example, Kellogg knows for sure that there are 17 servings
- in a box of its S.W. Graham Brown Sugar Cinnamon cereal, and I
- know for sure there are 208 individual bite-size grahams (I
- counted them), leading me to know for equally sure that there
- are twelve per serving, or nearly enough to completely cover the
- bottom of a very small cereal bowl. What one can't know is
- whether anyone has actually ever eaten a portion that size,
- because such a person would presumably be too faint from hunger
- to raise his or her hand.
- </p>
- <p> So it goes with the stock market. There's a lot we can know
- about it -- that the Dow Jones industrial average has more than
- tripled in seven years; that, adjusted for inflation, it would
- have to hit 3000 before matching its 1987 peak, and 3800 to
- match 1966; and that, even so, it ain't cheap. But the one tiny
- thing we can't know -- not even the folks at Kellogg know -- is
- where it will go from here.
- </p>
- <p> Morgan Stanley's exceptional strategist Barton Biggs says
- we're in for a bear market: perhaps one more spurt as investor
- enthusiasm heats to a boil, and then an 18-month, 20% drop.
- (Which, however, would be a lot healthier than the six-hour, 20%
- drop we had two years ago.) And economist David Bostian, who
- recommended maximum investment in stocks in August 1982, now
- recommends that conservative clients sell every share.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Steve Forbes says stocks are undervalued. "Stocks will
- be higher a year from now than they are today," says Forbes'
- deputy editor in chief, who wins prizes for his predictions with
- some regularity. And though I'd sooner drive nails into my knee
- than buy a stock after it's tripled, there actually is a lot of
- reason to be optimistic. (That, of course, is a good reason to
- be pessimistic. The world always looks bright at market tops.)
- </p>
- <p> The Dow showed real class in timing its surge past the
- pre-crash high. It was the day the first non-Communist in more
- than 40 years was sworn in to head a "Communist" country -- what
- better symbol of the end of the cold war? And it was the day
- man's hand reached the farthest planet of the solar system --
- what better symbol of technological promise?
- </p>
- <p> The significance of these two symbols is hard to overstate.
- The end of the cold war could mean a redirection of more than
- a trillion dollars here and abroad over the next decade from
- unproductive military spending. FORTUNE -- no liberal rag --
- recently advocated a $100 billion cut in the annual U.S.
- defense budget. Axing a single Stealth bomber, of the 132
- proposed, frees up as much cash as the Government plans to
- invest during the next five years in Sematech, the new U.S.
- microchip-technology consortium. Imagine having 50 such ventures
- instead of 50 extra bombers. Or "deploying" 200,000 bright,
- motivated military personnel (as civilians, of course) to
- bolster public school teaching staffs. Long-term national
- strength is more the product of education and investment than
- of arms.
- </p>
- <p> Match the end of the cold war with the promise of
- technology -- we've begun bouncing telecommunications off meteor
- trails! Within a decade or two, we will have mapped out the
- entire human genome! -- and there is reason to think the stock
- market really should be higher today, adjusted for inflation,
- than it was in 1966. Dow Jones 4000! Stir in the global shift
- to free-market economics, greater personal incentives and freer
- trade -- Dow Jones 4500! Indeed, some market observers have
- begun predicting a Dow of 5000 by the mid-'90s.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, it's just this kind of euphoric talk that
- signals market tops. Even if such optimism eventually proves
- justified -- as I think it largely will -- short-term, the
- stock market could be a lousy place for your money. It's when
- everyone is talking calamity, not bright prospects, that you
- want to invest. Everybody knows that when market highs make
- headlines, it's time to sell.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand -- and here's where it gets tricky --
- when everybody knows something, the market oft as not fakes them
- out. When God created the stock market, he told it, "Now listen.
- You can't fool all the people all the time -- but I want you to
- try."
- </p>
- <p> One bullish sign is the return of Doug Casey. "After ten
- years of relative silence," trumpets a recent junk mailing,
- "Doug Casey speaks out." His "best-selling financial book of all
- time," Crisis Investing, predicted complete economic collapse
- by 1983. Now he's bearish again, and offering a newsletter
- called Investing in Crisis. (His publisher crows that Crisis
- Investing was written in 1978 and predicted an explosion in gold
- prices. Yet whenever it may have been written, Crisis Investing
- was published in July 1980, months after gold had peaked and
- begun its long slide.) But the point is, Casey's back, telling
- us things will collapse. This is no guarantee they won't -- the
- problems he cites are real -- but his shrill predictions are
- reason to sleep better, nonetheless.
- </p>
- <p> A bearish sign, on the other hand, is that the far more
- entertaining but no less gloomy Paul Erdman (The Crash of '79,
- The Panic of '89) has become a bull! "We're bound to have a bump
- in the road next year as the business cycle finally winds down,"
- he writes in August's Manhattan,inc. "But after that, blue sky
- as far as my eyes can see." Uh oh.
- </p>
- <p> There are even theoretical underpinnings to today's high
- stock prices, one of which lies in the relationship between
- stocks and bonds. For most big investors, this relationship is
- crucial, because they constantly look to see whether the
- uncertain rewards of stocks justify passing up the known if
- unspectacular returns from bonds.
- </p>
- <p> Right now, with long-term Treasury bonds yielding better
- than 8% and stocks yielding less than 3.5% in dividends, the
- spread is very wide. (In 1966 Treasuries yielded just 5%, vs.
- the same 3% or so for stocks.) Why take the risk of owning
- stocks when you can own bonds?
- </p>
- <p> But Smith Barney market strategist John Manley argues that
- the world has changed. In the old days, he says, the primary
- threat was depression, not inflation. Sharp recessions occurred
- regularly, sending stocks into a tailspin. Bonds were a lot
- safer because the major threat to bonds is inflation, and there
- wasn't a lot of that when America was on the gold standard.
- Pegging the dollar to gold may or may not have been the best way
- to run things, but it kept inflation in check. So bonds were
- safe, and stocks were risky.
- </p>
- <p> Now, argues Manley, inflation is the far greater risk. (If
- you are a politician today, which are you likely to tolerate:
- inflation or a depression?) So stocks may have become relatively
- more attractive than they were in the old days. Manley doesn't
- think stocks are cheap at this level; but he says that, absent
- a credit-tightening move by the Federal Reserve, the market's
- path of least resistance is apt to be up.
- </p>
- <p> But then there's my Gloat Indicator. Simply stated, when I
- find myself gloating about someone else having been wrong, that
- generally means his prediction, embarrassingly premature though
- it may have been, is about to come true.
- </p>
- <p> In the current instance, I came across FORTUNE's fall 1988
- Investor's Guide. The article that caught my eye: "And Now,
- Where NOT to Invest in '89." It singled out eight stocks to
- avoid -- perhaps even to sell short -- dogs it "nominated for
- the Canine Club of 1989." Today all eight are higher, including
- AT&T, then 29, now 39; TCBY Enterprises, then 12, now 23; L.A.
- Gear, then 19, now 64; and Turner Broadcasting, then 14, now 54.
- As I scanned this list of dogs with the benefit of hindsight,
- I found myself grinning broadly . . . no, gloating -- which
- makes me think these stocks, and perhaps the whole market, may
- now be poised to fall.
- </p>
- <p> No offense to FORTUNE, it's just nice to be reassured from
- time to time that I am not the only one who has no idea where
- stocks are headed. Which is precisely why any prudent investor
- must have a four-pronged strategy: some liquid money (every so
- often, cash is king); an inflation hedge (a house or two); a
- deflation hedge (long-term bonds, which would do well in a
- recession); and -- yes -- stocks (best purchased through no-load
- mutual funds).
- </p>
- <p> It's wise not to buy stocks aggressively when they're
- fairly valued, as they probably are now, because when they're
- "fairly" valued, they're "fully" valued. Better to buy them when
- they're under-valued. And it may also not be wise to jump in
- when some sellers are delaying sales in hope of a cut in the
- capital-gains tax. But over the long run, stocks always
- outperform "safer" investments. If you're one who steadily
- invests in stocks, this is no time to stop. (One stock that
- looks a trifle plump, though, up more than fivefold in the past
- seven years and yielding a slim 2.3%: Kellogg, maker of
- 100-calories-to-the-serving S.W. Graham.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
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