Given
that we are in the middle of 4Q12 earnings season we wanted to point out an
alarming trend that we are seeing.
Earnings Results
Starting
with earnings results for the last quarter, we have seen roughly 30% of the
companies in the S&P 500 report and analysts are expecting almost 3%
earnings growth year over year. That is an improvement from 3Q12 but still pretty anemic.
We
can attribute the soft 4Q12 earnings results on two events in our opinion.
First, Apple (AAPL) has been somewhat of a drag on the numbers for the final
quarter of last year.
Additionally,
we are most likely seeing a drag on earnings due to the uncertainty created by
the fiscal cliff negotiations of late last year.
That
can be seen in today’s durable goods figures. While orders for big ticket items
jumped 4.6% in December, when you carve out the transportation sector orders
increased 1.3%. Durable goods orders ex-transports and military (excluding the
most volatile components) we saw a weak 0.2%. It appears that the private
sector refrained from cap-ex spending in the latter part of last year.
That
said, we like to avoid the quarter to quarter fluctuations in earning results
and attempt to value the market based on twelve-month forward earnings
expectations. As of last week, analysts now expect the S&P 500 to earn
$112.52 per share. That places the index 13.3x forward earnings.
This
is where it gets interesting
Based
our analysis, our fundamental model encompasses several valuation metrics in an
attempt to arrive at a fair value for the US indices.
The
key elements within our fundamental model focus on:
1 -
The twelve-month forward earnings yield for the S&P 500 (which is the
inverse of the twelve-month forward P/E ratio).
2 -
Expected earnings growth over the coming twelve months.
3 -
Yield differential against the ten-year treasury yield to attempt to capture
security rotation.
Based
on the above valuation metrics and the 10-year Treasury yield sitting around
1.8% we are putting fair value for the S&P 500 at $1563.
There
are no such things as coincidence.
Based
on the fundamental model, the new fair value for the S&P 500 places our end
point at the top of a major fifteen year cycle. As can be seen in figure 3, our
fair value figure sits at critical resistance levels.
Bottom
Line: We continue to be long this market but have been issuing warnings as to
the strength of this rally for several weeks. It is our opinion now that the
stock market will most likely see a major correction as the S&P 500
approaches this critical resistance level. We will readjust our portfolio
weightings as market action dictates.
-Joseph
S. Kalinowski, CFA
Twitter:
@jskalinowski
JSK Partners of New York,
LLC
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New York, NY 10005
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