GuruVision: The Economy's Impact on Stocks Is Overrated
02/06/01 - 07:31 PM EST
Whose Slowdown Is It, Anyway?
SAN FRANCISCO -- "Everybody" knows the economy is slowing. And "everybody" knows it is going to rebound in the second half of the year, providing a boost to corporate earnings. Reflecting the current profit malaise, Cisco (CSCO Quote - Cramer on CSCO - Stock Picks) reported earnings and revenue slightly below expectations after the close today. Meatballs, Kerschner points out that GDP
"just doesn't matter" when it comes to stock prices. All that matters are earnings. "Investing based upon any short-term judgment on the economy is risky, in that the state of the economy is not only difficult to estimate, it is also difficult to measure -- even years after the fact," he wrote. For example, fourth-quarter GDP, which an advance report last Wednesday put at 1.4%, could ultimately prove to be negative 1.4% or up 4.4% after myriad revisions are eventually completed, Kerschner wrote. Meanwhile, Kerschner noted even such lauded observers as Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan "have a hard time figuring out what exactly is going on in the economy," (again making me wonder why he's held in such astronomical esteem). In June 1990, just one month before the NBER later declared the recession began, the chairman testified before the Senate Banking Committee that "all things considered, continued modest economic growth remains the most likely outcome," the strategist recalled. As for the current earnings reporting season, Chuck Hill, director of research at First Call/Thomson Financial, said today that energy, utilities and health care continue to have the top earnings trends, both in terms of besting fourth-quarter results and receiving upward revisions for 2001. Beyond those three sectors, first-half estimates are in free-fall, he said, particularly in technology, consumer cyclicals and basic materials. Hill noted expectations are now for tech earnings to be flat in the third quarter vs. expectations for 11% growth back on Jan. 1. Kerschner didn't directly address earnings for specific sectors, other than stating "with the world economy in good shape and secular demand for high-tech equipment fundamentally strong, [the] inventory correction should be over fairly soon." (That was prior to Cisco's report, I'll note.) Still, UBS is predicting flat earnings for the S&P 500 in 2001 at $57 a share, a forecast predicated on "double-digit growth" in the fourth quarter. Looking ahead further, the Fed's commitment to avoid recession plus the Bush administration's tax-cutting initiatives augur "easy comparisons" and double-digit earnings growth in 2002, Kerschner concluded. But if earnings are all that matter, his projections for 2001 don't support the argument the current environment is "one of the five most attractive opportunities of the past 20 years," as the strategist
recently declared. Unless, of course, investors are already looking ahead to 2002's results, about which even Kerschner conceded it's "premature" to speculate. Kerschner was unavailable for additional comment. Meanwhile, Callies dubbed consumer cyclicals her top pick. That's consistent with her theory, in contrast to Kerschner's view, that less earnings growth is actually preferable for those long. Since 1970, "average quarterly gains in the S&P 500 index were much stronger -- at 7.5% -- when profit growth was sharply negative," she noted. "The stronger the profit growth, the smaller the gains in equities." Her specific recommendations included retailers Ethan Allen (ETH Quote - Cramer on ETH - Stock Picks), Home Depot (HD Quote - Cramer on HD - Stock Picks), Talbots (TLB Quote - Cramer on TLB - Stock Picks) and Wal-Mart (WMT Quote - Cramer on WMT - Stock Picks), as well as lodging/gaming names Harrah's Entertainment (HET Quote - Cramer on HET - Stock Picks) and MGM Mirage (MGG Quote - Cramer on MGG - Stock Picks). (Merrill has done underwriting for MGM.) 


