Try Jim Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS
Stock-Picking Training Program

Five Lessons From the Credit Crisis

Covestor.com

09/30/08 - 01:34 PM EDT
By Sean Hannon, CFA, CFP, of Covestor.com

During September, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has dropped nearly 10%. This compares with drops in the Nasdaq of 16%, the S&P small-cap index of 9% and the Wilshire 5000 of 14%.

While prices were dropping, the government became linked with the capital markets. Over the past year, we have seen the Treasury and Federal Reserve attempt to influence behavior.

All of these actions were done at the edge of acceptable policy and were meant to unclog the capital markets while allowing free enterprise to reign supreme. Over the past month, government intervention increased and free market ideology was swept aside.

To gain perspective, during September we have seen key linchpins of the housing market placed into conservatorship (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), the failure of two large banks (Washington Mutual and Wachovia), the nationalization of the largest insurance company (American International Group), the elimination of the stand-alone investment bank (Lehman's(LEH) bankruptcy and Morgan Stanley(MS) and Goldman Sachs(GS) becoming commercial banks) and the disappearance of the largest brokerage firm (Merrill Lynch merging with Bank of America).

With the government failing to approve a rescue bill, we have entered a period of heightened uncertainty, lower tolerance for risk, lower levels of financial leverage and lower innovation.

These expected changes have a dramatic implication over how we will invest. To consider the effects, I have developed the "Five Lessons of the Crisis." They are as follows:

Knowing the rules of the market have changed, we need to decide how to progress. The answer is cautiously. Right now, buying stocks remains far from anyone's mind. However, within fear opportunities exist. Capitulation is needed for a market bottom and that has finally arrived. An investor looking for an excellent business at a cheap price should look toward XTO Energy (XTO). XTO possesses oil and gas reserves in geopolitically safe areas. Market value of its natural reserves exceeds $60 per share, and a high amount of 2009 production has been hedged at energy prices that are higher than prevails today. Therefore, XTO offers excellent value with limited exposure to volatile commodity prices.


Brokerage Partners