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Wall Street History
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08/02/2002
The Bubble, Part IV
Continuing with our memories of the Bubble, it’s August 2000. The Nasdaq is close to an important secondary peak, after which earnings and the economy move to the front of the news on Wall Street. All comments are taken directly from my “Week in Review” columns and quotes, unless otherwise noted, are mine. [The date listed is that of the column.]
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[The next two weeks were light in market commentary due to my travel plans.]
8/25/00 – Dow Jones 11192 Nasdaq N/A
Cisco at $67 was still at a 90 P/E based on 2001 earnings estimates.
Jack Nicklaus on Tiger Woods. “(He) not only has the ability to be so much better than the other guys, but the other guys are not sure they can win.”
9/4/00 – Dow Jones 11238 Nasdaq 4234
After the swoon from the all-time highs of January and March, respectively, the Dow Jones was only off 4% and Nasdaq 16%. 4234 for Nasdaq would prove to be a key peak. Many investors had hung in there after the spring tech debacle. Alas, their patience was not rewarded.
23-year-old Mark Jakob issued an authentic looking press release on drug stock Emulex, wherein profits were to tumble. The wire services immediately picked up on the story and shares in Emulex dived 60% in minutes. Jakob was “short” the stock and picked up a cool $250,000 on the hoax, before he was arrested.
Dick Cheney announced he will forfeit the stock options he earned as chairman of Halliburton if elected vice president.
“Osama bin Laden was behind a plot to blow up a nuclear reactor in Sydney during the Olympics.”
9/9/00 – Dow 11221 Nasdaq 3979
Interesting Business Week survey. Attitudes were changing.
--73% of Americans think that business executives get paid too much. --74% feel that Big Companies have too much power and influence. --Given the statement “In general, what is good for business is good for most Americans” 47% agree, 49% disagree. By comparison in 1996, 71% agreed, 28% disagreed.
Oil prices hit 10-year highs, trading over $35.
More talk of slowdown and impact on corporate profits.
“No action is likely to be taken on prescription drugs because Gore wants this as a campaign issue.”
9/16/00 – Dow 10927 Nasdaq 3835
“The U.S. equity markets have been priced for perfection. It’s becoming increasingly difficult to attain it.”
Oracle fell $7 when it announced revenue growth may not be as robust as it had been in the future.
Bloomberg survey: 10 largest brokerage firms published 9,402 ratings on individual issues and only 29 were pure “sells.” I added, “Of course, the reasons for this dearth of anything negative have to do with conflicts of interest and investment banking relationships.”
9/23/00 – Dow 10847 Nasdaq 3803
Intel warned revenues would fall short of expectations in Q3, but Nasdaq weathered the bombshell. “What the market did on Friday was slough off Intel’s revenue warning as a one-time event, limited to Intel and some of its closest brethren, like Dell. This may prove to be a bit too optimistic.”
The great economist Ed Hyman released a statement proclaiming that the risks of a global recession had picked up markedly.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, speaking before the American Bankers Association:
“Today’s products and rapidly changing structures of finance mean that supervisors are backing off from detail-oriented supervision, which no longer can be implemented effectively.”
And Greenspan stressed that we need better disclosure of risks in order to avoid public loss of confidence. [“Moral hazard” issue. Some institutions too big to fail?]
9/30/00 – Dow 10650 Nasdaq 3672
U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers: “Oil prices are the largest dark cloud in the blue sky of the global economy History shows that supply shocks often have larger effects than people expect.” [Oil peaked at $38 during the week, before closing at $31.]
Nasdaq lost 12% in September. Apple Computer lost 50% in one day. Commenting on the latter, I wrote:
“I continually use the phrase ‘priced for perfection’ to describe the current market environment for a reason. There simply is no room for error in this new era of investing on Wall Street.
“And it’s not like Intel, Kodak and Apple are losing gobs of money. Rather, Wall Street’s research community has helped to promulgate this nonsense that valuations don’t matter!”
Foreign money flows:
In 1999 all foreigners bought $332 billion worth of U.S. stocks and spent $276 billion on direct investment in the U.S. – buying American companies or building factories, shopping malls or office complexes.
And here is what foreign investors owned as of March, according to the International Monetary Fund.
--$1.4 trillion worth of U.S. stocks, or 7% of the total. --$900 billion of corporate bonds, 20% of the total. --35% of publicly held federal debt, with a face value of $1.3 trillion.
But what if capital flows reversed? Economist Robert Samuelson commented:
“The magnitude of capital inflows into the United States ought to give us pause. They could reflect America’s genuine strengths – or represent speculative excess. We have ventured into unexplored territory. Hardly anyone truly understands today’s rapidly changing world of global finance. Even for the United States, what goes around could come around.”
From PIMCO’s Bill Gross, who was concerned about the ticking debt bomb:
“Corporations are assuming more and more debt, as they are forced to invest and innovate in a furious attempt to keep up with their Silicon Valley compatriots. Falling behind is akin to falling off a cliff, so the debt piles up along with the hopes that it can be serviced and paid off sometime in the not-so-certain future.”
10/7/00 – Dow 10596 Nasdaq 3361
Earnings news increasingly gloomy.
September unemployment rate fell to 3.9%. [The low.]
10/14/00 – Dow 10193 Nasdaq 3316
6-week losing streak for both indexes. Middle East unrest was growing. Market action extremely volatile.
Apple Computer hit $19, while its high on 3/23/00 was $75. Intel had fallen from $76 just six weeks earlier (8/28/00) to $35. Home Depot, Motorola, Lucent and Yahoo among those warning.
Abby Cohen issued another “stay the course” message.
10/21/00 – Dow 10226 Nasdaq 3483
PIMCO’s Bill Gross sees increasing odds of a “hard landing” in the U.S. economy.
IBM reported weaker-than-expected revenues for Q3. The next morning, the Dow opened down 4%, Nasdaq down 5%. Then investors swooped in, with Nasdaq climbing from Wednesday’s low of 3026 to 3483.
“What is obviously now clear is that last spring the bubble burst on those issues without any real business prospects and it has been a slow death ever since. That game is over, finis. There is enough material there to occupy market historians for decades.”
10/28/00 – Dow 10590 Nasdaq 3277
Markets diverged. Dow +3.6%, Nasdaq –5.9%.
Q3 GDP comes in at a slower-than-expected 2.7%, but reaction was positive, except for tech. Commenting on the number, I wrote the following:
“Of course, just 24 hours before Friday’s release of the GDP, Wall Street was saying that we needed to see 4% growth to prove that corporate earnings were not falling off a cliff. Then the 2.7% figure was printed and suddenly that was good news. It’s all a bunch of bull, but I do my best to sift through it for you. If you remember to wash your hands afterwards, you can keep from becoming ill.”
Telecom index fell 9% in one day as Nortel disappointed on the revenue front, heralding the slowdown in that sector. Nortel lost close to 25% in one day.
[Sorry to be political, but in light of current events, I have to add what I noted back in 10/00 concerning New Jersey Senator Jon Corzine, who at the time was in a heated race.]
The New York Times, in a stunner, endorsed Republican Bob Franks, and said in part:
“ Mr. Corzine is arguing that a confidentiality agreement with Goldman Sachs, the investment firm he once headed, prevents him from telling New Jersey voters the specific sources of the money for this tidal wave of personal spending. But New Jersey’s voters did not sign an agreement with Goldman Sachs, and they have a right to know how a multimillionaire candidate amassed the wealth that enables him to spend almost $2 million a week on advertising.”
11/3/00 – Dow 10817 Nasdaq 3451
Economy was slowing. “The earnings outlook for 2001 continues to deteriorate, particularly versus the frothy expectations established by Wall Street.”
Slide in consumer confidence for the month of October is largely attributed to problems in the Middle East.
WorldCom saw its shares body-slammed as the company announced that future prospects would not be as strong as expected.
And to digress a bit, I noted the following from a former White House aide, James Pinkerton, concerning space. Pinkerton first quoted Carl Sagan.
“In the long term, even if we were not the descendants of professional wanderers, even if we were not inspired by exploratory passions, some of us would still have to leave the Earth – simply to ensure the survival of all of us.”
Pinkerton added, “Pioneers are still needed, in other words, and visionaries must point the way.” So while today’s politicians straddle the political middle, “content with the shortest possible time horizon the high court of history, foreseeing potential annihilation, offers an enormous reward to the leader with the longest and broadest vision of the future. It’s such a leader who will save the human race.”
Note 8/2/02: After this week’s GDP revisions for 2001 and the realization that the first through third quarters of the year were negative, not just one single negative print, those who were bearish and calling for a “hard landing” look even more prescient.
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Next week we’ll finish up this series by taking the timeline from the presidential election through the beginning of 2001.
Brian Trumbore
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