Today's Financial
Euphoria Can't Last
By HENRY KAUFMAN
The conventional view is that, to be successful in his second term,
President Clinton will have to continue to reduce the federal budget
deficit, which means putting Social Security and Medicare on sound
footings. While these are worthwhile objectives, they pale beside a risk he
cannot control: a stock market crash, with all the negative economic,
financial and political consequences it will spawn.
Such a contingency is hardly on the minds of most investors as equity
prices continue soaring, driven by astonishing flows into mutual funds and
by many corporations' large-scale share repurchases. Ratios of stock prices
to cash flows and of market to book values are lofty by historic standards,
while dividend yields are the lowest ever. As the chart shows, yearly
increases in financial wealth have far eclipsed fresh savings out of
personal incomes, reinforcing the prevailing bullish mentality.
Temporary Euphoria
Today's high spirits are not entirely groundless. The economy is
chugging along at a moderate tempo and will probably move ahead without
pushing up inflation very much. Corporate profits will rise further, though
at a slowed pace. Credit is readily available, interest rates are at
accommodating levels, and tight monetary policy is not imminent.
Yet a few cautionary words are in order. Today's financial euphoria is
not immortal. To begin with, the current business expansion has benefited
from several unusual developments that may not last. Further reductions in
the federal budget deficit can't be as large as in the past four years.
Corporate downsizing and restructuring, once necessities for survival, are
now more discretionary.
More importantly and somewhat paradoxically, U.S. business expansion has
been aided by the sluggish business recovery in the rest of the industrial
world. Other countries' very liberal monetary policies have indirectly
helped finance America's economic expansion. This combination of limp
business activity abroad and highly liquid monetary conditions will not
last indefinitely. At some point, enlarged credit demands abroad will slow
the flow of funds into the U.S.
In the meantime, the exaggerated financial euphoria is increasingly
conspicuous. Some claim that we are in a brand-new era because of many
breakthroughs in science and technology and because of political
liberalization around the world. According to this view, securities deserve
higher valuations.
Perhaps. But unfortunately, history is replete with similar exalted
expectations. The most compelling analogy to our present economic and
financial condition was the 1920s, also a period of relatively moderate
economic growth combined with fairly low, steady inflation. Our economy
outperformed Europe's, as it is has in the 1990s. The (modest) federal
budget was usually in balance or close to it. Financial markets were
innovative. A broad portion of the general public was drawn in to the
financial arena for the first time. Bold entrepreneurs demonstrated
extraordinary flair and speculative appetites. Irving Fisher, one of the
outstanding economists of that or any era, proclaimed just before Oct. 29,
1929, that stocks had reached a "permanently high plateau."
Another manifestation of financial euphoria is the popularity of foreign
investing, especially in emerging countries. This, too, has its parallels,
again most notably in the 1920s. Then as now, the dilemma is that foreign
investing in emerging countries is a fair-weather tactic, mainly driven by
the industrial world's excess liquidity. When the liquidity disappears,
investors withdraw. By the mid-1930s, 14 Latin American nations, 10
European states, Canada and China were in arrears on some or all of their
external debt. While today's markets are far more developed, some of the
risks are similar.
The exploitation of financial leverage is also a symptom of financial
euphoria. Today, the financial positions of American families vary greatly
across society. Overall, households have gained considerable wealth from
the appreciation of financial assets. But for many age and income groups,
household debt burdens are approaching historical highs, while ownership of
equities is still quite modest. Few American corporations, meanwhile, are
increasing their credit quality despite enormous gains in profits. One
reason is that many are buying back their shares in the market, some even
increasing their borrowings to keep this going.
Of course, the excessive use of leverage goes way back. In the 1920s,
the variety of new instruments included highly leveraged obligations of
public utility holding companies and investment trusts, which went to large
premiums over the already bloated values of the underlying stocks.
Today's thrilling stock market ride depends on economic growth that is
sufficient to lift profits, while the inflation rate is flat. The ride will
end either because growth will slow a lot more than optimistic earnings
estimates foretell or because inflation moves up. If inflation creeps up
because of routine pressures on an economy trying to operate in the
vicinity of full employment, then U.S. interest rates will rise. That
rather natural cyclical progression might cause a relatively contained
correction of equity prices, but in and of itself is unlikely to provoke a
sudden crash. So what else would it take?
One cause would be a sharp drop in the dollar. Already many U.S.
businesses are lobbying for a weaker dollar to relieve competitive
pressures. If the administration abandons its support for a strong dollar,
large-scale outflows of foreign funds are inevitable.
Second would be a backsliding toward aggressive trade policies to
appease protectionist elements in both political parties. That would touch
off fears of higher inflation and dredge up long-forgotten memories of how
the 1929 crash degenerated into global economic and political catastrophe
because of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, passed in June 1930 but already under
consideration in October 1929.
Third would be an abrupt reversal of flows into mutual funds. Anything
that drove U.S. interest rates up sharply could seriously test the tenacity
of households to stay the course as equity investors.
Fourth, when the equity market's speculative fervor fans out to envelop
other asset markets, including commodities and commercial real estate,
leveraging will mushroom, and the financial bubbling will be mutually
reinforcing. Then a downturn in any one of these markets will damage
others.
How can this threat to our well-being be prevented? A combination of
tightening fiscal policy and excellent monetary guidance contributed
importantly to this decade's noninflationary expansion. Yet fiscal policy
can do very little to deal with today's financial bubbling. Indeed,
legislating a balanced budget, a not impossible event in the next year,
would further encourage financial euphoria.
At some point, the Federal Reserve will have to face the larger question
of whether to take actions that may not be necessary to pre-empt a rise in
inflation, but may be decisive in heading off an unsustainable financial
bubble. There is a wide variety of preventative measures available, ranging
from simple reminders from Chairman Alan Greenspan that risk exists even in
a powerful bull market; to greater restrictions on the use of leverage in
equity purchases; to considering the state of the equity markets when
determining monetary conditions.
Endangered Prospects
Embarking on such a policy course would not find widespread public
acceptance. Business leaders do not want profit prospects or their stock
options endangered. Middle-income Americans would have mixed feelings;
after all, their wealth has ballooned in recent years. But preventative
action is consistent with the broader mandate to maintain the financial
well-being of society, including discouraging financial excesses.
Thus, to a significant extent, the success of President Clinton's second
term hinges on the astuteness and fortitude of Mr. Greenspan.
Mr. Kaufman is president of Henry Kaufman & Co., a New
York-based money management and consulting firm.
Copyright © 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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