Stocks must be getting cheap, right?
The market closed modestly higher again on Friday, as the TSP stock
funds tacked on between 0.4% to 0.9% on the day. The 4-day
rally took the S&P 500 up nearly 11% for the week, and after an
awful start, it is now positive in the month of March.
Whether you were a bull or bear, you had to realize that sooner or
later we'd see a decent rally after what happened during the first
9-weeks of the year, but it still is never easy to make the call.
I thought we'd rally in late February and I got eaten up a bit and
had to run back for cover. Then, out of nowhere, we got the 7%
rally on Tuesday and it seemed too late to try to play any remainder
of a bounce. I was still thinking about the - sell any 2 or 3
day rally in a bear market rule.
The question now of course is whether or not this rally is going to produce
anything more than the prior one-week wonders we have seen in the
market since this bear market started. Since September, every
week that had a gain of more than 4% was met with a loss the
following week, by an average of -4.4%. Being an options expiration
week, it should be interesting in that there can be some
manipulation with March options and futures contracts expiring on
Friday.
The S&P 500 remains in a downtrend and has now rallied over 13%
off of its recent low. We know that 20% rallies in a bear
market are not uncommon, so we could still have some upside
potential, but there is plenty of resistance overhead and I just
don't see anything that makes me believe this is anything more than
a bear market rally. There is a lot of hope out there, but
hope does not make a bottom.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
I am much more of a technical analyst, looking at charts and
indicators to help me make my decisions, but I thought I'd share a
little part of the fundamentals side of the story today, with a
little help from our friends at DecisionPoint.com.
The chart below shows us the earnings for the 4th quarter of 2008,
as well as the earnings estimates for the following four quarters.
For those who may not follow the "fundies", the P/E, or price
earnings ratio, is the ratio of the price of the S&P 500 in this
case, and the one-year earnings estimates.
Based on historical data, I think Decison Point's assumption that a
P/E of 10 or less is low and would make stocks undervalued is fair,
a P/E of 15 can be considered fairly valued, and a P/E of 20 or more
would be overvalued.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
Being that the 4th quarter of
2008's earning were -$20.73
(that's negative $20.73) we will throw that out of the 1 year
equation and use the following 4-quarters, 2009 Q1 through Q4.
Where the S&P 500 is priced now (756), the P/E is 23.3 based on the
GAAP earnings of all 4-quarters.
756 divided by Q1-Q4 earnings of 8.36+8.25+7.98+7.82, or
756 / 32.41 = a P/E of 23.3
If the S&P 500 is going to have a P/E of 20.0, which is still
overvalued, the S&P 500 would have to be about 650.
If the S&P 500 is going to have a P/E of 15.0, which is fairly
valued, the S&P 500 would have to be about 486.
If the S&P 500 is going to have a P/E of 10.0, which is undervalued, the S&P
500 would have to be about 324.
The one thing that could happen to make things better P/E wise, would be for
earnings estimates to be moved higher. Unfortunately, I'm not sure
this economic environment would be conducive to seeing higher estimates, but
that is what the fundamentalist would be looking for, at least the bullish
ones. If the estimates are not raised, it means this market is
actually overvalued by historical standards.
The dollar has broken its recent sharp uptrend and has triggered a PMO sell
signal. If a pullback is coming, this is not necessarily a bad thing
for stocks, but it does suggest that the I-fund may outperform the C and
S-funds over the short-term.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
What a falling dollar might do, however, is create a rise in the
price of commodities including oil, gold, copper, and even foods such as
soybeans, wheat, etc. so we may eventually have to deal with the issue of
inflation, which has not been a problem recently. That in turn would
cause the Fed to raise interest rates, and while none of it is bad in and of
itself, you can see where there could be potential problems if the economy
does not start to show signs of improvement. But, the fact that these
commodities rise can actually be a sign of economic improvement so it will
be an interesting cycle to watch play out.
That's all for today. Thanks for reading. See you
tomorrow!
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