|
|
Wall Street History
https://www.gofundme.com/s3h2w8
|
07/19/2002
The Bubble, Part II
Continuing with our memories of the Bubble, we pick up the story in January 2000, the Dow Jones having finished 1999 at 11497; Nasdaq, 4069. The following comments are taken directly from my “Week in Review” columns and all quotes, unless otherwise noted, are mine. [The date listed is that of the column.]
---
1/8/00 – Nasdaq has risen 187% from the market lows of 10/8/98 through 12/31/99. It closed the first week of January at 3882. The Dow dropped 500 points the first two trading days of the year, but recovered to close the week at 11522, a new all-time high.
Qualcomm (pre-split) went from $800 to $560 in days. Yahoo (pre-split) fell from $500 to below $370. Lucent issued a profits warning and fell $20.
The world handled the Y2K issue with few major problems.
1/15/00 – AOL and Time Warner announce their merger.
Alan Greenspan gave a speech: “The American economy has never exhibited so remarkable a prosperity for at least the majority of Americans.” He added that the surge in the stock market is pushing the economy beyond its limits (“wealth effect” playing a major role).
Dow closes at 11722. [Still its all-time high.] Nasdaq, 4065.
Oil shot up from $24.22 to $28.02 as it looked as though OPEC would stick to their production cuts.
1/22/00 – The Fed announced they would change the way they release their reports to make them clearer; issuing new statements such as, “We think a slowdown in the economy is the greater risk,” instead of just saying the Fed is calling for a “tightening” or “neutral” bias. I say the Fed should issue statements like, “Technology stocks are severely overvalued, sell.”
The equity markets decouple. Dow finishes down 4.0%, 11251. Nasdaq gains 4.2%, 4236 (new record).
First Call (keeper of earnings data) estimated profit growth for the 4th quarter of 1999 at 20%. I add, however, “Profit gains were often the result of the strong performance in the company’s own investment portfolio.”
Margin debt up 25% in just the past two months.
Apple Computer’s board awarded Chairman Steve Jobs with a $40 million corporate jet.
President Clinton gives his “How Great Thou Are” State of the Union speech.
Owners of theGlobe.com, aged 25 and 26, are forced to step down. Shares have fallen from $90 to $8 with no apparent business model.
The Dow fell 513 points to 10738. Nasdaq fell 8.2% to 3886, its worst week since August ’98.
Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Steve Galbraith found that of the 50 Nasdaq stocks with the highest returns in ’99, only 15 made money. The average turnover in this group was 600% (bought and sold 6 times over the course of the year). Turnover on the whole NYSE was 79%. I add, “So, yes, just more evidence that much of last year’s Nasdaq action was of a casino nature. And in a casino, the house always wins.”
Fourth quarter ’99 GDP rose 5.8% (first estimate). February will mark the longest boom in our nation’s history, 107 months of uninterrupted growth.
The yield curve “inverted” (short maturities with higher yields than longer ones). 2-year stands at 6.54%, with the 30-year at 6.44%.
Alan Greenspan, in renomination hearing, said he was very worried about the level of margin debt.
The euro fell below $1 for the first time since it was launched in ’99 at $1.16.
2/5/00 – The Nasdaq registers its best point gain in history after dropping 8% the week before, up 9.2% to 4244. The index has already had two, 10% corrections in 5 weeks and keeps bouncing back.
Yield on the 30-year Treasury collapsed from 6.75% to around 6.00%, before finishing the week at 6.27%. Stupendous volatility.
GDP rose 36.6% in the 90s vs. 52.8% in the 60s.
2/12/00 - “We still have a market priced for perfection, with leading issues like Cisco trading at price / earnings multiples of 140 or higher. When the slowdown finally materializes, earnings projections will head south.” [Cisco’s market cap hit $450 billion and analysts spoke of it becoming the market’s first $1 trillion corporation.]
2/19/00 – Alan Greenspan’s Humphrey-Hawkins testimony:
There is “little evidence” the economy is slowing and, in spite of the continued tame inflation numbers, “the profoundly beneficial forces driving the American economy to competitive excellence are also engendering a set of imbalances that, unless contained, threaten our continuing prosperity.”
The Dow fell to 10219, 13% from its all-time high. Nasdaq sat at 4411.
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir said he was “frightened” by the growing clout of global corporations, some of which “are more powerful than mid-sized countries.”
In “The Simpsons,” Maude Flanders dies. She was eulogized as one who “didn’t grab our attention with catch phrases.”
Charles Schulz died.
Linus: After you’ve died, do you get to come back? Charlie Brown: If they stamp your hand.
2/26/00 – The Dow loses 3.5% and now stands at 9862, off 14.2% for the year, while Nasdaq rose 4.1%, 4590, up 12.8% year-to-date, a historic disparity.
Since the Fed started raising rates 6/30/99, the Dow Jones is down 10%. Nasdaq is up 71%. Greenspan has not been successful in pricking the bubble.
In 1973, the median price / earnings ratio on the Top 20% in the S&P 500 was 33.9, while the median on the rest of the index was 12.3. Today, the median p/e for the Top 20 is 70.8, with the other 400 issues at 14.7.
As for Nasdaq, I say “CRASH!!”
A one-bedroom “cottage,” listed at $495,000 in Santa Clara, sold for $750,000.
3/4/00 - Palm Inc. IPO, priced at $38, trades as high as $165 on first day of trading and finished week at $81.
Nasdaq rose another 7% to 4914. Oil is at $31.45.
3/11/00 – On Friday, the lead column in the Wall Street Journal blared, “Conservative Investors Finally Are Saying: Maybe Tech Isn’t A Fad.” The Nasdaq peaks that same day at 5048. Dow falls to 9928.
Nymex crude oil hits $34 (highest since 11/90) before finishing the week at $31.75. Iran and Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s two largest producers, said they’d raise production quotas.
3/18/00 – Biotech bubble bursts when U.S. and Britain agree to openly share information on the human genome project. Many of the issues plunge 50% from highs established just the previous week. The market is worried that the profit incentive has been wiped away.
Professor Jeremy Siegel writes an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal proclaiming technology grossly overvalued. [3/14]
Margin debt is exploding, up 87% year-over-year.
An analyst on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” program touts a stock, Aspeon, which proceeds to go from $22 to $35 that morning, only to fall back to $21 by the end of the same day.
Markets go in different directions. Dow Jones advances 6.7%. Nasdaq declines 5%.
3/25/00 – Dow finishes up another 4.9%, making its two-week gain almost 1200 points to the 11118 level. The Nasdaq closes at 4964.
To give you a sense of the volatility in the biotech sector, 52- week high / low and the closing price for the week. Abgenix ($413 - $12 - $150) Protein Design Labs ($338 - $13 - $72)
On March 22, Cisco had a market cap of $500 billion; Intel, $480 billion. Cisco’s price / earnings multiple is 200. Intel’s 68.
Federal Reserve raises interest rates 25 basis points on 3/21 (the 5th such increase since 6/30/99). Market rallies right in Greenspan’s face.
2-year Treasury yield: 6.62%. 10-year: 6.19%
Mutual fund flows at record levels.
4/1/00 – OPEC agreed to raise production 1.5 million barrels and announced a new price band of $22 - $28 as being desirable.
Abby Cohen slightly reduced her exposure to stocks in her model portfolios, saying we need to consider the “question of valuation.” [Note 7/19/02: Cohen has taken way too much credit for this miniscule move, if I recall, from 65% equities to 60%. This was hardly turning bearish, as she now claims.]
Hedge-fund maven Julian Robertson, in a letter to shareholders announcing his departure:
“There is no point in subjecting our investors to risk in a market which I frankly do not understand.”
Nasdaq suffers its worst point loss in history, 390, to close at 4572. The week contained the 4th, 10% decline of the year. Dow closed at 10922.
4/8/00 – On Monday, 4/3, the Dow finished up 2.8%, while the Nasdaq declined 7.6%, the largest divergence between the two since the day after Black Monday in 1987. The next day Nasdaq hit 3649, off 13.6% for the day at its worst point, or a 20% two- day decline. Then the Nasdaq reversed course and soared 800 points the rest of the week (22%).
C.R.A.P “Companies without revenues and profits.”
4/15/00 – For the period 3/10-4/14 (since the Nasdaq peaked at 5048), the Dow Jones had gained 4% (now at 10305), while Nasdaq lost 34% (3320).
Nasdaq lost 25% on the week, the worst performance for any major index in U.S. financial history. [In the span of two weeks; down 20%, up 22%, down 25%.]
45 analysts rate Cisco a “Buy,” 1 “Hold,” as stock as fallen from $82 to $55.
Abby Cohen appeared on Wall Street Week and said, “Nothing has changed.”
4/22/00 – “The tech wreck will have a much more immediate impact on consumer spending than the interest rate hike the Federal Reserve has given us.” -- Economist Ed Yardeni. [Like Yardeni, I was wrong on this end.]
“The impact on the real economy will be faster than people expect and concentrated in technology.” – Economist Bob Barbera.
Author Ron Chernow. “Our most prestigious investment houses have invented bogus mathematical formulas to justify stratospheric stock prices feeding the inexhaustible appetite of small investors.”
Investment legend Leon Cooperman: --Get off margin. --Know what you own. --Cut your expectations for future returns.
4/29/00 – “There is an almost surreal quality to the present boom. What we get (in the stock market, most prominently) is a tug of war between wild optimism and instinctive caution.” -- Economist Robert Samuelson
I wondered aloud if we really need to keep upgrading our PCs. “I have trouble with the feeling that we will always be spending increasing amounts in every tech product imaginable (particularly on the corporate level).”
AT&T workers are taking out second mortgages to purchase shares in AT&T Wireless. [They get crushed.]
5/6/00 – “In the past year, the ability to monetize shareholder ignorance has never been greater.” – Warren Buffett
“The most notable contribution of computers to the recent growth in productivity has been in the manufacturing of more computers.” – Jim Grant
5/13/00 – Dow, 10609. Nasdaq, 3529.
Cisco registered its 12th consecutive quarter of beating analyst estimates by one penny (but this time Cisco fell, closing the week at $60).
5/20/00 – The Federal Reserve raised rates 50 basis points on 5/16, releasing this statement:
“Increases in demand have remained in excess of potential supply, exerting continued pressure on resources The disparity in the growth of demand and potential supply (may) continue, which could foster inflationary imbalances.”
“Overconfident individuals, companies and foundations are heavily invested in this market. Some retirees (who) have sunk all of their savings into stocks risk losing not only their investments but their homes.” – “Irrational Exuberance” author Robert Schiller in an op-ed piece.
Nasdaq rises on day the Fed raises rates, just as it has the previous 5 times since 6/30/99.
Washington Post editorial: “The uncomfortable truth of Wall Street is that the information on which it runs is suspect.”
5/27/00 – “This is the kind of party where the guests, if deprived of the host’s refreshment, whip out their pocket flasks and gather round the piano to sing another round of, ‘Brother, can you spare a dime?’ They are rude and undisciplined, and they won’t go home.” – Thomas Donlan / Barron’s; referring to the last Nasdaq bulls.
Nasdaq, at 3205, down 21% year-to-date; off 37% from the 3/10 high. Dow is at 10299.
The House voted to permanently normalize trade relations with China.
Total profit per episode for “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?” is in excess of $4 million.
6/3/00 – CNBC has baseball’s Jose Canseco on in the morning. Later in the day, one of the reporters goes, “China.com is up. You heard Jose Canseco talk about it!” That pretty much sums up the atmosphere during the great Nasdaq bubble.
---
We’ll resume the chronology next week.
Brian Trumbore
|
|
|