Is this a Historic Buying Opportunity for Stocks?
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- by Mike R, on Wed Nov 12, 2008 7:04am PST
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<strong>By Mike Rowan</strong><br>
<strong><br> Is this a Historic Buying Opportunity for
Stocks?</strong> <p>Everybody knows that the stock
market has plunged.</p> <p>If you have received your
quarterly statement for your 401k, 403b, <a rel="nofollow"
id="KonaLink0" style="text-decoration:underline;"
href="http://erollover.com/blog/obama-401k/historic-stock-opportunity#"><span
style="color:#009600 important;font-family:Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif;font-weight:400;font-size:12px;">IRA</span></a>
, or other investments, you are more than likely aghast when seeing
the losses on paper. I have heard many different arguments with
regards to whether this is a historic buying opportunity, or a
preview of an even more severe economic downturn.</p>
<p>Some of the country’s most famous <a
rel="nofollow" id="KonaLink1" style="text-decoration:underline;"
href="http://erollover.com/blog/obama-401k/historic-stock-opportunity#"><span
style="color:#009600 important;font-family:Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif;font-weight:400;font-size:12px;">investors</span></a>
, including Warren Buffett and John Bogle, have started to make the
case that it’s time to dive back into the stock market.
</p> <p>They are usually careful to add that they
don’t know what stocks will do in the short term. Yet their
basic message is clear enough: stocks are now cheap, irrational
fears have been driving the market down lately, and people who buy
today will be glad that they did. </p> <p><br>
</p> <p>Another camp is bearish due to the fact that
Barack Obama has been elected, and they fear that the capital gains
tax and personal <a rel="nofollow" id="KonaLink2"
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style="color:#009600 important;font-family:Arial, Helvetica,
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</span><span style="color:#009600
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may dramatically increase in the near future. This can be
attributed to the sell off that we are currently seeing in the
markets.</p> <p>But there is another argument that
deserves more attention than it has gotten so far. It’s the
bearish argument that is based neither on fears that the country
may be sliding into another depression nor on gut-level worries
about the unknown. It is based on numbers and history, and it has
at least as much claim on reason as the bullish argument
does.</p> <p>It goes something like this: Stocks are
truly cheap only relative to their values over the last 20 years, a
period that will go down as one of the great bubbles in history. If
you take a longer view, you see that the ratio of <a
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style="color:#009600 important;font-family:Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif;font-weight:400;font-size:12px;">stock
</span><span style="color:#009600
important;font-family:Arial, Helvetica,
sans-serif;font-weight:400;font-size:12px;">prices</span></a>
to corporate earnings is only slightly below its long-term average.
And in past economic crises — during the 1930s and 1970s
— stocks fell well below their long-run average before they
turned around.</p> <p>To make matters worse, corporate
earnings have now started to plunge, too. Assuming that they keep
dropping, stocks would also need to fall to keep the price-earnings
ratio at its current level. </p> <p>There are any
number of ways to measure the valuation of the stock market. Some
examine prices relative to earnings, others are based on cash flow,
a company’s underlying assets or the total value of the
market. But they tell a pretty consistent story right now. Stocks,
which were fabulously expensive for much of the 1990s and this
decade, no longer are.</p> <p><br> </p>
<p>The 10-year price-to-earnings ratio tells an incredibly
consistent story over the last century. It has averaged about 16
over that time. There have been long periods when it stayed above
16 and even shot above 20, like the 1920s, 1960s and recent years.
As recently as last October, when other measures suggested the
market was reasonably valued, the Graham-Dodd version of the ratio
was a disturbing 27. But periods in which the ratio has jumped
above 20 have always been followed by steep declines and at least a
decade of poor returns.</p> <p>By 1932, the ratio had
fallen to 6. In 1982, it was only 7. Then, of course, the market
began to self-correct in the other direction, and stocks took off.
</p> <p>Where will we be 1, 2, or 5 years from now? I
wish that I had a crystal ball, but I would say that you have to
keep on buying and dollar-cost averaging in your 401k, IRA, 403b,
or other <a rel="nofollow" id="KonaLink4"
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. You may look back and be glad that you did. Hopefully, that
is.</p> <p><strong>Please visit our site for more
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