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Economic Commentary - June 2007 By Clare W. Zempel, CFA Overview As has been the case since 2003, the headlines continue to focus on worst-case economic and market scenarios. If the stock market declines, it will continue to do so. If it rises, the decline will resume soon. The stock market has almost doubled since 2003 despite the headlines because the fundamentals have been and remain favorable. Recession risk matters to investors because bear-market declines in the stock market have tended to start before broad and deep economic declines have taken hold. The fundamental cause behind past recessions has been restrictive Federal Reserve policies. And real interest rate levels have provided the best clues about the extent to which the Fed's policies were restrictive or not. The Fed's policies were restrictive in the past when the real or inflation-adjusted federal funds interest rate rose above 425 basis points. Until and unless the real fed funds rate rose above that level, no recession occurred and Real GDP (Gross Domestic Product) expanded faster than its historical trend. The causes behind bear markets in common stocks have been restrictive Federal Reserve policies and/or extreme market overvaluation relative to interest rates. Until and unless the real fed funds rose above 425 basis points and/or the stock market became overvalued in the extreme, corrections occurred but no bear market erupted. The real federal funds interest rate is now around 313 basis points — well below the 425 basis points that preceded recessions and bear markets in the past. And the stock market remains undervalued relative to interest rates — not overvalued in the extreme like it was around past market peaks. Since real interest rates and the stock market's relative valuation are nowhere near "tipping point" levels, it follows that the economic expansion should reaccelerate and that the stock market should rise on balance in the months and quarters ahead. Investors should not let the headlines distract them from these favorable fundamentals — or from their well-founded asset allocation plans. Economic and Market Update Overview
Third, investor sentiment remains subdued. The American Association of Individual Investors' Investor Sentiment Index tracks the arithmetic difference between bullish and bearish responses. This index has been net bearish in recent weeks — nowhere near the extreme net bullish levels that indicated "irrational exuberance" around past market peaks. (Figure 1.) This is not a time for unrestrained speculation but neither is it a time to minimize common stock allocations. Absent the usual fundamental bearish forces — restrictive real interest rate levels, extreme overvaluation and irrational exuberance — there is much more than mere hope to support a positive economic and market outlook.
That is a reasonable and realistic approach. The Fed has an economic objective that in broad terms is to both contain inflation and support economic expansion. The Fed also has an economic forecast which foresees a moderate expansion with moderate inflation. (Figure 2.) But the Fed knows full well that economic relationships are too loose for forecasts to be all that reliable — that it cannot be certain that the current 5.25% federal funds interest rate level will fulfill its two objectives. And so the Fed has served repeated notice that it will raise rates further if inflation threatens but otherwise will not. This has made commentators and the markets supersensitive to even minor movements in the economic and inflation reports. This in turn has made it even more important than usual that investors maintain the broadest possible perspective — a perspective that real interest rates best provide. Real Interest Rates and Recessions
The most important lesson from how the real fed funds rate has behaved over time is this: recessions did not occur in the past until after the real federal funds rate had risen above 425 basis points. It follows that a real fed funds rate above 425 basis points has been the "tipping point" — the level where the Federal Reserve's policies became sufficiently "restrictive" to halt economic expansions. If this historical benchmark still holds, then recession risk remains low now — and the Federal Reserve's policies remain stimulative to further economic expansion — because the current 313 basis point real fed funds rate is well below the historical recession-inducing level. The Commodities/Claims Ratio But the rise in the federal funds rate to 5.25% has not stopped economic expansion and job creation so far. And the sustained rise in the Commodities/Claims Ratio indicates that the increased real fed funds rate has not even caused the economic expansion to lose much speed outside the housing sector. The top number in the Commodities/Claims Ratio is the CRB (Commodities Research Bureau) Spot Raw Industrial Commodities Price Index. This index measures prices for metals and raw industrial materials other than oil and food-related commodities. This number has soared since 2002 and reached another record level in May. Such an upward trend in industrial commodities prices almost always coincides with increased production demands and sustained economic expansion.
The Commodities/Claims Ratio has been an especially sensitive economic indicator because its two components have been quite quick to reflect shifts in the demand for the basic inputs to industrial production — raw materials and labor. When a recession (1960-61, 1969-70, 1973-75, 1980, 1981-82, 1990-91, 2001) — or even just a pronounced economic slowdown (1966-67, 1984-86, 1995-96) — loomed in the past, this indicator was always among the first to decline and warn that economic weakness was on the horizon.
Another lesser-known but nonetheless useful indicator that has not turned bearish on economic prospects is the "diffusion index" for the 50 states in the union. The latest (April) reading for this index shows that, compared to three months earlier, economic conditions have improved in 49 states. In contrast, six months before the last two national recessions started, 10 states had recorded 3-month declines. (Figure 5.) Moreover, compared to 12 months earlier, economic conditions in April also improved in all 50 states. Positive economic momentum remains too broad-based to be consistent with a deep national slowdown or a recession.
Real GDP
The nominal yield on the 10-year T-Note was around 4.72% in May. Subtracting the 2.12% "core" inflation rate, the real 10-year T-Note yield was 260 basis points. This was some 80-90 basis points lower than it was in the past when the real fed funds was around its current 313 basis point level. Much lower-than-normal long-term interest rates should help support residential real estate and stimulate business investment. In combination with the decline in oil prices since last August's peak, much lower-than-normal long-term interest rates make it seem possible that Real GDP will rise as fast as and probably faster than the consensus expects. At a minimum, lower-than-normal long-term interest rates and lower oil prices would seem to mean that recession or even just a severe economic slowdown remains quite improbable.
Most deep housing declines in the past resulted from sharp interest rate increases and restraints on available credit, but the current decline owes much more to steep increases in home prices that made homes less and less affordable to more and more families. From December 2003 to June 2005, home prices rose almost 24% while the median family's income rose less than 5%. In rather quick reaction to this price-induced decline in demand, the 12-month change in the Home Inflation and Mortgage Rates graph median home price plummeted from +16.9% in October 2005 to -0.9% in March 2007.
Housing is important but there have been times in the past when weakness in that sector did not preclude a solid expansion in Real GDP overall. One such period was 1989-1995 — an extended period that encompassed declines in home prices in New England and Pacific states, and all-but-flat home prices in Middle Atlantic states.
Real GDP should expand around 3% over the next 4-6 quarters because real interest rates remain low and oil prices have retreated some. Sustained job creation should continue to support consumer spending. Sustained job creation should also combine with flat-to-lower home prices to stabilize the residential real estate markets. Economic leadership will continue to shift toward business investment and to exports. Corporate profits and cash flow should support increased business investment in plant and equipment. The dollar's decline has kept our export products competitive and the world's economic prospects remain quite positive. Demand for our exports should remain strong because world economic prospects remain quite favorable.
There is a chance that the correction in residential real estate or past increases in oil prices and interest rates could combine to hold Real GDP's expansion near 2% in 2007. There is a precedent for this in the so-called "mini-recession" which occurred in 1966-67. But there seems to be an equal or better chance that the decline in oil prices since last August, low long-term interest rates here and robust economic expansion abroad could combine to lift Real GDP's advance above 3%. Much more important, recession seems quite improbable. And low recession risk is positive for the stock market. Asset Allocation Implications and Considerations Fixed Income Investments
The T-note yield has also remained low because central banks around the world have been creating excess liquid assets that have been used to purchase bonds. With many other central banks now following the Federal Reserve's shift toward less accommodative policies, this particular support for bond prices should weaken. (Figure 12.) It seems important to recall that concerns about potential economic weakness pulled the T-note's yield below the statistical model's lower limits for brief periods in both 1998, 2003 and 2005. In those cases, the concerns proved to be overdone and the T-note yield rebounded sharply. Absent a much deeper economic slowdown than now seems probable in 2007-8, the federal funds rate seems unlikely to fall much if at all from its current 5.25% level and the 10-year T-note yield could well rise. This risk implies that fixed income (bond) portfolio maturities should be kept somewhat shorter than normal.
Interest rates could well increase but should not soar. Profits could well rise slower than in the past but the level will not collapse unless an economic recession occurs — and recession seems quite improbable. It should also be noted that bull markets in common stocks do not end just because "undervaluation" has been eliminated. The usual pattern is that the stock market rises until it becomes overvalued in the extreme — usually by more than 40%.
The stock market's persistent undervaluation relative to interest rates reflects concern about economic and investment risks. This is understandable based on the shocks behind the market's extended decline in 2000-3 and the uncertain economic-political climate that has prevailed since 2001. But the pessimism beneath the market's estimated undervaluation has not been without precedents in depth (1974-75) and duration (1976-79, 1988-90, 1993-96). It proved profitable to invest in stocks in those periods — much more so than it was when extreme optimism and overvaluation prevailed (1987 and 1999).
It should also be noted that 2007 is the third year in the four-year presidential election cycle. This is relevant because the stock market has recorded well-above-trend advances in almost all such "third years" since 1951. The sole exception in the 14 "third years" in question occurred in 1987, when the stock market soared to an extremely overvalued level in August and then "crashed" in October. As noted earlier, the stock market seems undervalued now. (Figure 15.) Asset Allocation Implications The low real federal funds rate and the stock market's undervaluation relative to interest rates makes the stock market seem vulnerable to no worse than an occasional short-term correction. This seems all the more plausible because "third years" in the election cycle have been favorable and because investors' mood is far from "irrationally exuberant." Investors with well-considered asset allocation plans should check on the need to rebalance their portfolios but should otherwise adhere to their plans. Those without such plans should develop and implement some as soon as possible. All should focus on the fundamental forces and not the headlines. The most important and reliable fundamental forces that would warrant concerns about a recession or a bear market are not present. The most important and reliable fundamental forces remain favorable. This economic commentary is not intended as investment advice. No investment strategy can guarantee a profit or protect against a loss. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. It is not possible to invest directly in an unmanaged index. Recession is calculated as a significant downturn in economy lasting more than a few months as determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Northwestern Mutual Financial Network is the marketing name for the sales and distribution arm of The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI (Northwestern Mutual), and its subsidiaries and affiliates. Securities are offered through Northwestern Mutual Investment Services, LLC (NMIS), member NASD and SIPC. 1-866-664-7737. NMIS is wholly owned by Northwestern Mutual. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI 92-0381 (0607) |
Second, measured relative to interest rates, the stock market remains undervalued. This is important because most major "corrections" and all major "bear markets" did not occur until sometime after stocks had become overvalued in the extreme.
Federal Reserve Policies and the Economy
To illustrate, the Federal Reserve has held the federal funds rate at 5.25% since June 2006. Based on former Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan's favorite benchmark (the Personal Consumption Expenditure Deflator Excluding Food and Energy Prices), the "core" inflation rate is now 2.12%. Hence, the real federal funds rate is 3.13% — the 5.25% nominal fed funds rate minus the 2.12% inflation rate — or 313 basis points. (Figure 3.)
The bottom number in the Commodities/Claims Ratio is Initial Unemployment Insurance Claims — a number that counts those who have just lost their jobs and filed for unemployment insurance for the first time. Unemployment claims did rise somewhat in February and April but then fell to a 15-month low in May. Month-to-month fluctuations aside, jobless claims have remained in a downward trend since 2002. Such a downward trend in unemployment claims almost always coincides with improvements in job creation and in economic conditions overall. (Figure 4.)
The fact that the Commodities/Claims Ratio has not fallen to date is powerful evidence that interest rates have not reached levels that have made a recession or even just a severe slowdown inevitable.
Despite concerns that the undeniable weakness in housing will spread, neither the Commodities/Claims Ratio nor the U.S. State Economic Diffusion Index indicates that a recession — or even just a deep and broad economic slowdown — has been set in motion. This casts considerable doubt on the view that the Federal Reserve's past interest rate increases have been overdone.
But all else is not equal. Something should probably be subtracted from Real GDP's future expansion rate for the fact that oil prices soared well above $70 per barrel last summer and have remained high — around $63 per barrel on average — in April and May. But, if something should be subtracted from Real GDP for high oil prices, then something should probably be added for the fact that real long-term interest rates are much lower than usual. (Figure 7.)
Housing Weakness and Economic Leadership
This abrupt reversal in home-price inflation has combined with lower interest rates and rising incomes to reverse the decline in the number of families that can afford the median-priced home (the Housing Affordability Index rose from 99.6 last July to 113.9 in March). Stable-to-lower home prices should combine with rising employment (the Household Survey indicates that more than 2 million net new jobs were added in the year that ended in April) to help stabilize housing sales and construction in coming months and quarters. (Figure 9.)
The 1989-95 period did include a mild recession in 1990-91. Federal Reserve tightening had raised the real fed funds rate above 500 basis points in 1989 to set the stage for a severe economic slowdown. That slowdown became a recession when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in August 1990. But before and after that recession, expansion in business investment and elsewhere more than offset the weakness in housing to keep Real GDP's advances strong. (Figure 10.)
Just three of the 180 countries covered by the International Monetary Fund are expected to be in recession in 2007. Those three countries are Chad, Iceland and Zimbabwe. And just one country — Zimbabwe — is expected to be in recession in 2008. This would be the smallest number and lowest percentage in recession on record since 1980. Moreover, average real economic growth for the 180 covered countries, which reached a record-high 5.6% in 2006, is expected to be a robust 5.3% in 2007-2008. (Figure 11.)
The 10-year T-note yield has tended toward the lower end of the model's predicted range since mid-2005. The "savings glut" that accumulated in Asia since the 1997-98 "Asian-PacRim crisis" helps to explain that. So does the notion that worldwide economic conditions have become "safer" — less volatile in real terms and less inflation-prone on balance — and made bonds more attractive to investors.
Common Stock Investments
The current real federal funds interest rate level is 313 basis points — well below the 425 basis point level that induced both recessions and bear markets in the past. This plus its estimated undervaluation should limit the market's downside risk to occasional "corrections" and support its advance on balance in future months and quarters. (Figure 14.)
The stock market's undervaluation also seems to reflect skepticism about economic prospects. The press has focused on worst-case economic scenarios since 2003. But real interest rates are nowhere near Stock Prices and Election Cycles graph the 425 basis point level that induced both recessions and bear markets in the past. And the Commodities/Claims Ratio and 50-State Diffusion Index are still on the rise. Based on these fundamental indicators, the odds continue to favor the view that most economic surprises will be toward the upside.