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Subject: J.P. Morgan Eye on the Market 5/2/2012: The road less traveled
Date: Wed, 02 May 2012 13:55:19 +0000
Attachments: 05-02-2012_-_EOTM_-_The_Road_Less_Traveled.pdf
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Eye on the Market, May 2, 2012 (attached PDF is easier to read, particularly thefirst chart)
Topics: how lonely a road is Europe traveling; Graham-Dodd and Shiller US equity valuation measures; casual reading
Europe and the road less traveled. As we wait for the next round of fiscal transfers from North to South, European Central Bank
rescue operations, IMF firewall expansions, foreign capital flight, deferral of tighter bank capital standards, elections, Bundesbank
resignations, protests, rising unemployment and generally miserable economic data in the European Periphery, it's worth
remembering something broader about what Europe is up to. There is no small amount of economic hubris associated with the
European monetary project, and the chart below shows why. Multinational monetary unions are rare (see Appendix). Some
regions debate adopting them, like the Persian Gulf, but decide not to, preferring to retain independent monetary policy. Europe
went ahead anyway, despite large differences between member countries. Just how different? Countries in the European
Monetary Union are more different than just about any other monetary union you could imagine:
6056 The European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU): A Road Less Traveled
Measuring the dispersion of hypothetical and actual monetary uniCaS
4, Dociersion measures the standard deviation of courry-specific facto, ineach trim. Factors reflect over 100
economic. social art pOlalcal charactenstics %triter of countnes in each union show in brackets. See temt for
V 5°C* further details Source' World Economic Fonrn Global Competaveness Report. J P. Morgan Loser Ma-ogemert
0
1
•
40% •
30% •
20% •
0
0% --
Market United Central Gulf state Reconstit. northern Reconstit. English. East Asian AA counties Cotritries Major
economies Kingdom America GCC of Urion of Europe of Ottoman spading Tigers on Earth a begrring countries of
of Latin fl its (Si COUrt11011 Soviet incksding En-pin, Eastern and (El the 5th with the European
America Engich IE1 Soot Scandinavia circa 1800 Southern paraild letter lt Monetary
[6] speaking Fleet/Ace (Ill [25] Mrke north [13] Unora EMU
offshoots [121 [is] latitude (121
I6I [121
•
hypothetical monetary unions
What does this chart show?
** The best way I know of to compare countries is via the World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Report. This
compilation rates 142 countries on over 100 factors related to labor and goods market efficiency; government institutions
(property rights, corruption); macroeconomic soundness (debt, deficits); health and education; business sophistication (local
supplier quality/quantity); and capacity for innovation (quality of scientific research institutions, R&D spend, patent grants).
" 1 Using this raw data, I imagined what other monetary unions might exist, and how different their constituents would be. The
chart shows the country dispersion for hypothetical unions comprised of the UK and its English-speaking offshoots (US, Can,
Australia, Ire, NZ); and of countries in Central America, Latin America, the Gulf, Northern Europe, Africa and Southeast Asia (see
Appendixfor details). All of these hypothetical monetary unions have lower country dispersion measures than the
European Monetary Union. And yet, these regions have resisted the temptation to form one.
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I even reconstituted the old Soviet Union by combining the Russian Federation with II former republics, and the Ottoman
Empire, by combining 25 countries which now inhabit its 18th century borders. I also added a random monetary union comprised
of the 12 countries on Earth located at the latitude of the 5th parallel (north), and another union comprised of the 13 countries on
Earth whose names start with the letter "M". Even these groupings exhibited less dispersion than the EMU.
And still, Europe soldiers on, even as the rest of the world avoids monetary union in circumstances more favorable to it. What
remains are political questions regarding how much inflation and/or fiscal transfers Germany can sustain; if a true fiscal
union can be created, seen by some as indispensable to the Euro's future (e.g., Bordo); and how much austerity countries
like Spain can take. As this is a road less traveled, it's hard to know how it will turn out. it's a tough road, and I think the chart
helps explain why. Europe's problem is not just one ofpublic sector deficit spending differences, but also of deeper, more
fundamental differences across its various private sector economies. Whether it's equities, credit or real estate, EMU valuations
need to be considerably more attractive than US counterparts to justify investment given the challenges of the European project.
US equip valuations: how do Graham-Dodd and Shiller P/Es work, what are the inherent assumgfigge.
Despite all the numbers, equity valuation is more art than science. There are a lot of different tools that investors use, and I find
that there's room for many of them, as long as you know what's inside. Some clients have asked me about the Graham-Dodd
approach to equity valuation, and the implication that S&P 500 earnings are now expensive relative to history. Graham-Dodd uses
smoothed, backward-looking earnings to value the market, rather than current or forward earnings estimates. The idea is to
capture the earnings power of a given market and also dampen business and economic cycle noise. Chart I is our take on the
Graham-Dodd model, using a 10 year lookback. Chart II also shows the Robert Shiller approach, which generates similar results.
S&P 500 Price-to-10 year average reported earnings SW 500 Price-to-10 year average reported earnings
Chartl. Multiple Chart II, Maple
35x 35x
Expensive Expensive
30x • Our version of 30x Our version of
Graham-Dodd r -ilam.Oodd
25x 25x
20x 20x
15* 15x
10x 10x
sx • sx Shilier PE ratio
Cheep Cheap
Ox Ox
1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 1961 1991 2001 2011
Sotree:RobertJ Setler.Standard 8 Poora Souree:Rot•rtJ. Shiler,Standard It Poore.
There are 2 assumptions inherent in these models that are worth thinking about:
se What's the best way to compare multiples across time when inflation has been so different?
What are the implications of using the last ten years as a proxy for the future?
On the first point, note that the lowest post-war PIE multiples occurred during the 1970's, when inflation was high. This makes
some sense, since I would presumably pay a lower multiple for a given earnings stream if inflation were much higher. One reason
P/E multiples are often lower when inflation is high: inventories cannot be replaced at historical cost, rendering income statements
less reliable. When inflation is lower, earnings are worth more to me, so I would pay a higher multiple for them, as long as there is
no risk of outright deflation. To adjust for inflation, we adopt an approach used by Empirical Research Partners, and invert the
P/E ratio in Chart I into an earnings yield (Chart III). The benefit of an earnings yield is that we then can subtract inflation to
derive a "real earnings yield required by the market" (Chart IV). After doing so, current valuations do not appear as expensive as
in Chart I. The bottom line: the vantage point of history looks very different if you assume that Inflation changes your
required return for investing in equities.
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Nominal S&P 500 10-year trailing earnings yield Real S&P 500 10-year trailing earnings yield
Chart III, Percent Chart N. Earnings yield less headline CPl,percent
10% 5%
Cheap
9% 4%
8%
3%
7%
2%
6%
1%
5%
4% 0%
3% -1%
Expensive
2% -2%
1945 1955 1965 1975 1965 1995 2005 1945 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005
Source: RobertJ. Shiler, Standard& Poore. Source: RobertJ. Sh filer, Standard &Poors, Emp neat Research Partners.
On the second point, when using backward-looking models, consider what you are looking at. Such models (particularly
those linked to credit markets) performed miserably in 2007, since it had been 17 years since the last consumer-led recession, and
the preceding market history did not show any signs of stress. Similarly, it is worth wondering if the last 10 years of earnings
history is a good proxy for the future. As shown below in Chart V, there have been plenty of sharp earnings declines since 1873.
But the most recent one outstripped anything we have seen before; one does not have to be a Pollyanna to assume that future
earnings declines would probably be more like the ones that preceded it.
Furthermore, keep in mind that the S&P 500 is a dynamic index. Since the year 2001, almost half the index (240 companies) has
been dropped and replaced. Notable deletions: Lehman, General Motors, Bear Stearns, Washington Mutual, Wachovia, Circuit
City, Merrill Lynch, AMBAC, Fannie Mae, C1T Group and MBIA (amazingly, AIG is still in there). As a result, the earnings
capacity of current S&P 500 constituents is likely to be more resilient than the actual S&P constituents over the last decade,
particularly since the S&P weight to highly-leveraged financials has declined from 22% in 2007 to 14%.
One final issue: reported vs. operating earnings. I understand the desire by many investors to value the market based on reported
earnings rather than higher-level operating earnings, given how some companies dump a lot of quasi-operating items below the
line. But over the last decade, reported earnings have fallen to a record low of 83% of operating earnings. I think it is reasonable
to assume that this ratio returns to something like 88%.
So, let's bring back the Graham-Dodd 10-year backward-looking P/E ratio from Chart I, and make some adjustments. The red dot
in Chart VI shows our Graham-Dodd P/E after: (a) using the current S&P 500 constituency rather than the historical one to derive
average earnings; (b) assuming that the 2008-2009 earnings recession was only as severe as the worst earnings recessions from
1873 to 2002; and (c) using a reported-to-operating earnings ratio of 88%. After doing so, backward-looking valuations look
more or less in line with the historical average multiple.
S&P 500 reported earnings drowdowns S&P 500 Price-to-10 year average reported earnings
Chart V. 2-year percent change a nnua l zed Chart VI. Multiple
-10% - Y. 1 imu •yi 35x
30x
Expensive
25x
20x
15x
10x
-60% • Adjusted for ea nines recession
5x severity. index constituents. and
Cheap
40% Ox magnitude of extraordinary items
. . . . ' " •
1673 16.6 1903 1918 1933 1948 1963 1978 1993 2008 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011
Source:Robert J. Sever, Standard &Poor*. Source. Robert J Shner, Standard& Poors.J P. MOM/MASIManagement
This is a lot of adjusting, and each step can be strenuously debated. If you believe that the prior decade is a good template for the
future, then the Graham-Dodd chart should probably not be tinkered with. I am not sure this is such a good assumption. We have
concerns about the reliance of earnings on easy monetary policy, and on the degree to which the lowest wage compensation in
decades is flattering profits. But after the largest technology, credit and housing bubbles in US history, I am prepared to assume it
will take a while before the public and private sector conspire to repeat them. If so, the less-traveled road of two severe earnings
recessions over the last decade may have less relevance, and a Graham-Dodd approach may modestly underestimate the run rate
of future earnings. After another quarter of decent S&P profits in Q 12012, we remain much more concerned about US public
sector dynamics than private sector ones. Hence, this week's casual reading recommendation...
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Casual reading. Our firm's chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon held a session last week at which members of Congress, corporate
CEOs and members of the Committee For a Responsible Federal Budget discussed the long term deficit outlook and the US
economy. We prepared a brief paper on the market implications of US debt dynamics for this gathering. If you would like to see
a copy, please contact your J.P. Morgan team.
Michael Cembalest
J.P. Morgan Asset Management
Ssmicsatsz5 on the n Union chart and associated topic.*
▪ "Major countries of the EMU" include Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Greece, Belgium, Portugal, Austria,
Slovakia, Finland and Ireland. This group accounts for 98.5% of Eurozone population and GDP. Excluded to avoid small-country
distortions: Slovenia, Estonia, Cyprus, Luxembourg and Malta. When they're included, the results are similar. Results are also
similar when Greece is excluded; the dispersion in Europe is not just about Greece.
▪ Some of Europe's higher dispersion scores relate to the link between pay and productivity (#7.06); the efficiency of the legal
system in settling disputes (#1.10); anti-monopoly policy (#6.03); wastefulness of government spending (#1.08); judicial
independence (#1.06) and quality of scientific research (#12.02).
▪ "Market Economy of Latin America" is a category that excludes Venezuela and Argentina for reasons we can discuss some
other time. If you owned shares in companies that were nationalized in either country, you know what I am talking about.
▪ In the 1860's, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland and France created the Latin Monetary Union. Greece (!!) formally joined in 1876,
but was expelled in 1908 for currency debasement. Among the reasons the LMU failed: a glut of silver reduced the value of LMU
coins relative to gold, and the LMU did not control the printing of paper money, forcing some countries to finance higher
spending of other members (Italy). The LMU ended in practice with the onset of WWI and the need to finance military
expenditures with paper money.
▪ Sweden, Denmark and Norway created the Scandinavian Monetary Union in 1873, which functioned well in both political and
economic terms until member countries suspended convertibility at the beginning of WWI. The most successful monetary union
in European history appears to be one between Belgium and Luxembourg, which lasted from 1922 until Euro integration in 1999.
In both cases, member countries were in an economic sense much more homogenous than in the Latin Monetary Union or
today's EMU.
▪ 120 million people in 8 French-speaking West African countries have been using the CFA Franc for more than half a century.
The CFA Franc is pegged to the Euro, and France guarantees its convertibility in exchange for holding —50% of the region's
foreign exchange reserves. Some analysts believe the CFA Franc is overvalued, creating incentives for perpetual capital flight,
and advantageous terms for French exporters selling goods into West Africa. Studies I have seen suggest that CFA membership
has hindered growth performance in CFA members relative to other sub-Saharan countries.
** The microstate islands of the Caribbean have successfully been using a currency union since the establishment of the Eastern
Caribbean Currency Union in 1965. Combined population: 616,000.
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