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June 2008
The
Many Faces Of Inflation
The Many Faces Of Inflation...As
we've mentioned more than a number of times in the past, one of
the key debates among investors at the moment is that of greater
macro inflation versus deflationary forces. Go ahead and
check out investment message boards/forums focusing on gold,
commodities in general, housing, etc., and the debate is hot and
furious. We see the same thing in the divergently opposing
outlooks of many headline financial market commentators. For
most, it's simply a black or white choice, with about zero
potential for any gray to enter the picture. Personally,
we're believers in coexistence. Really going back to the
beginning of this decade, our macro investment credo has been that
both proactive sector and asset class selection, as well as
equally important selective and proactive sector avoidance, is key
to successful investment outcomes in the current environment.
As we stand here today, we see absolutely no reason to alter this
philosophical outlook. And to us, that means in both sector
and broader asset class characterizations, we can indeed
experience both inflation and deflationary nominal pricing
pressures, dependent, of course, on the individual sector or asset
class being analyzed. So, although we want to hopefully
provide some perspective on headline inflationary trends and how
those trends directly relate to our investment activities in the
here and now, in no way will this be a debate over definitive
macro inflationary or deflationary pricing outcomes. Why?
Because we expect both to occur simultaneously, as we have been
directly experiencing over the last few years.
Very quick definitional
tangent. In academic terms, inflation is an expansion in the
money supply and theoretically has little to do with
"prices" per se. Asset or commodity specific price
changes are a symptom of monetary expansion or contraction, as well
as being driven by real world supply and demand forces. But you know and we know the
general public and so many on the Street don't equate monetary
policy and nominal prices in the same sentence, so to speak.
When we talk about inflation in this discussion, we are referring
to popular perceptions of price. Why? Because that's
how the consensus thinks of inflation. Regardless of our
academic definitions or thoughts, we need to put ourselves in the
shoes of the consensus, of the broad population of investors that
do indeed set financial asset prices each and every day. For
the academic purists out there, we just want to make ourselves
clear.
Having said all of this, let us
cut right to the chase and get to the issue we believe to be most
important, and hopefully most helpful in our here and now
investment activities as far as headline inflation is concerned.
Point blank, periods of rising headline inflationary pressures
have been associated with periods of contracting equity
valuations. Important point being, if we are to look for a
better tone to the equity market any time ahead, a key structural support to
that better tone would be inflationary pressures that are
declining on a rate of change basis. To be honest, history
is very supportive of this idea. Below we've created one of
our infamous combo charts that tracks both the year over year rate
of change in headline CPI set against the longer term S&P 500
P/E multiple. A quick tangent. We've used the
historical Robert Shiller P/E data in the chart. Yes, we
know the Shiller data can be controversial. No, it's not a
forward P/E multiple history, so as you look at the chart, you see
a current valuation level higher than what you'd see if you were
looking at current price relative to forward S&P analyst
earnings estimates of the moment. To be honest, using
Shiller data or some other type of P/E multiple methodology for
the sake of this exercise is virtually immaterial.
Directional rhythm of so many P/E valuation series are similar.
What's different is absolute levels at any point in time.
But as you'll see as you look at the chart, what we are after here
conceptually is directional similarity and consistency in rhythm
across time between headline CPI trends and corresponding S&P
P/E multiples. One last point, we created this chart a few
months back, so the CPI data is a few months stale.
As of the April reading, the year over year rate of change
is now 3.9%, not terribly far off what you see below.
Have a look.

Yes, there sure are a lot of
red bars in this chart, aren't there? What we've done is
create the bars for all of the periods where the year over year
rate of change in CPI was rising meaningfully from trough to peak.
We only left out one rising CPI period, and that was the
environment leading up to the macro equity market peak in late
1999/early 2000. As you know full well, almost nothing was
influencing equity valuations at that point, with the exception of
maniacal momentum. Other than this period being a bit of an
exception, as we simply visually inspect the chart (without
dragging you through one long data table), all other periods of
rising year over year CPI were associated with a declining S&P
P/E multiple. To us, as far as the importance of
inflationary measures of the moment are concerned, this is THE
issue to be considered vis-à-vis the macro outlook for equities.
Point blank, if inflationary pressures continue to rise ahead,
that's going to be a boat anchor around equity valuation expansion
possibilities. Meaning?
Real world earnings then become wildly important to forward
equity progress. Of course, that and the extent of Fed liquidity adventures
ahead.
Very briefly in terms of
explanation, this phenomenon is pretty much common sense. In
rising inflationary periods, rising corporate revenues and
earnings are more reflecting price inflation as opposed to organic
revenue and earnings growth, all else being equal. Here's a
relatively dramatic example for you, but it completely proves the
point as to why equity investors should not "pay up" for
corporate earnings that are driven in large part by general price
inflation, and why macro equity valuations should indeed contract
when the general level of inflation is rising. In inflation
adjusted terms, S&P 500 earnings in early 1968 and again in
1982 were equivalent Over this same period of time, reported
S&P 500 nominal earnings were up 140%. Also over this
same space of time, the S&P in price only terms was up less
than 5% point to point. If you ask us, over this period of
clearly accelerating inflationary pressures, the equity market was
indeed very efficient. It looked right through inflating
corporate revenues and earnings by imposing almost perfect
continuity of contracting P/E valuation multiples across the
entire period. A dramatic longer cycle example? You
bet it is. But, again, as we eyeball the chart above, this
same valuation contraction phenomenon is seen again and again as
headline CPI rose meaningfully on an annual rate of change basis.
Back to the future of the here
and now. There is simply no question that in good part,
nominal corporate earnings in aggregate are still expanding,
especially when financial sector earnings are backed out of the
equation. In fact, as you may have seen discussed as of
late, if one were to back out financial sector earnings from
aggregate S&P fourth quarter 2007 earnings, the year over year
increase in reported earnings would have exceeded 13%. Hey,
wait a minute, that's not bad at all. In fact quite the
opposite. So why the less than satisfying equity market
activity YTD? At least in our minds, it's rising headline
inflationary pressures of the moment that are acting to contract
equity valuations, whether investors realize it or not. So
theoretically if corporate earnings grow ten percent ahead, yet
inflationary pressures act to contract equity valuations by ten
percent, investors are essentially going nowhere really fast.
We've belabored the concept enough here. Rising inflationary
pressures simultaneously constrict equity valuations. This
is the issue of the moment. As a final comment, this
relationship is simply exacerbated in a slowing economic
environment. As we have said repeatedly in prior
discussions, a stagflationary environment is a boa constrictor for
equity valuations. We're sorry it has taken us so long to
explain exactly why and show you the factual evidence of this very
concept across time. Mission now accomplished.
Academically, if investors are looking for a meaningful rise in
equities any time soon, then they simultaneously need to be
looking for a significant peak in the rate of change in year over
year CPI with a subsequent decline to follow in very short order.
Simple enough.
So, if indeed we need declining
inflationary pressures to at least in part come to the rescue of
equities in terms of possible valuation expansion, how likely is
that to happen any time soon? Although we wish we could give
you some type of definitive answer, you're going to have to settle
for a little bit of perspective. As we've detailed to you in
the past, we prefer to look at many trends on a six, nine and one
year annualized rate of change basis. It's there where we
get the sense for shorter-term trend acceleration or deceleration.
So without further adieu, let's apply this little exercise to some
reported inflationary trends of the moment. The following
table does the trick for us.
| Period |
Headline
CPI |
Core
CPI |
CPI
Food |
CPI
Energy |
| |
| 6
Mo Annualized |
4.5% |
2.2% |
5.7% |
21.9% |
| 9
Mo Annualized |
3.9 |
2.2 |
5.2 |
15.6 |
| 12
Month Rate Of Change |
3.9 |
2.3 |
5.1 |
15.5 |
At least as of April, the near
term acceleration in price trends is crystal clear literally
across all measures shown in very consistent fashion, of course
with the exception of the Fed favorite core rate which has been
hypnotically stable.
In a macro sense, it's going to
make it tough for equities to even have the potential to
experience any type of valuation or multiple expansion any time
soon without meaningful deceleration in the CPI components.
So what that means is that on a short term basis, we really need
to home in on inflation adjusted trends in both corporate revenue
and earnings growth as we consider individual investment
opportunities. For those companies that can achieve pricing
gains above general inflationary trends, they may indeed be
accorded premium valuations relative to their brethren.
We’ve seen exactly this with energy, ag and materials issues.
But as we step back and look across the breadth of wider
historical experience, there is one other consistency in
inflationary patterns of the past that we need to acknowledge and
monitor closely as we move forward. Another large debate
among many Street seers of the moment is whether the US has
already entered a recession, despite the official numbers of the
here and now. As you know, since official US recessions are
only documented in hindsight, we simply do not know for sure at
this point. As
we’re sure you saw in the recent 1Q GDP revision, the deflator
(inflation measure) clocked in at 2.6% rate.
Believable as being representative of the true US inflation
rate of the moment? We'll leave that for you to
decide. But the very important issue surrounding recessions
is that in cycles past, annual rate of change in headline CPI has
tended to peak either leading up to or during these recessionary
interludes, or is already in rate of change decline prior to the
end of the official recession itself.
The fact is that as per the
message of history, equities have bottomed prior to the official
conclusion of recessionary interludes. A very meaningful
part of the reason why this has happened is because headline
inflation was peaking on a rate of change basis at exactly the
same time. Declining inflationary pressures mean equities
have the opportunity to experience valuation expansion as they
"look ahead".
History is very clear in terms of the peaking of CPI on a rate of
change basis in recessions past. Below is a graphic example
that absolutely proves the point. The chart documents the
year over year change in headline US CPI with official recessions
past marked with the red bars.

Now that we are aware of this historical
experience, should we as equity investors really be welcoming a US
recession as providing the ultimate slowdown in inflationary
pressures that could indeed drive macro equity market multiples
higher? If indeed history is to repeat itself ahead, that's
not too bad an assumption and expectation. But we'd suggest
to you that THE wildcard in the current inflationary equation is
globalization. In other words, how much can we attribute the
inflationary pressures that we now see in nominal prices to growing physical demand
in the foreign and emerging economies, the decline in the US
dollar versus foreign currency cross rates, etc.? As you
know, this question is most pertinent to the obvious food and
energy price pressures we are experiencing. We wish we had
the answer to the question of magnitude of globalization influence
affecting domestic inflationary pressures, but no one has exact
forward knowledge. What
we do have are anecdotes. It’s
our suggestion that we need to view inflationary factors in much
broader terms than just the singular domestic CPI numbers.
We all know that the US has indeed enjoyed importing
deflation in many senses for quite some time, with particular
emphasis on consumer products coming from Asia. But
inflationary pressures of the moment, particularly upward energy
and food price pressures, are indeed influencing the global economy
and global nominal dollar pricing. And, we believe, this
influence has now clearly turned the tide in terms of US import
price trends. The following chart is elegant and telling in
its simplicity.

As of the first quarter of
2008, the year over year rate of change in US import prices rests
at a level not seen since 1981. The change in important
prices exclusive of petroleum costs has achieved a level last seen
in 1989. Are these the inflation trends we should be
watching and will they have a bearing on US equity
valuations? Maybe the best we can suggest is that we believe
we need to be open to the idea that current trends in
globalization may indeed change the nature of past patterns in
domestic inflationary pressures influencing US equity valuation
multiples.
We need to broaden our view to the global.
From our vantage point, we expect the influence of
globalization on domestic US CPI to be cyclical set against an
ultimately rising secular trend. Although this is no
massively new or wild revelation, we academically backed into a
huge question of the moment. Yes or no, will domestic
inflationary pressures subside on a rate of change basis as the US
economy slows? Or will the influence of globalization
override this, even to a point, in the current cycle? Given the flow of thinking we have subjected you
to in this discussion, the correct answer to this question has
very meaningful bearing on forward US equity market performance.
You already know we will be monitoring this at literally every
turn of the screw looking ahead. Without stretching for
sensationalism, we believe this is probably one of the most
important sets of issues for the financial markets over the next
twelve to eighteen months.
Face The Music
And Dance?...We're not
done with the issue of inflation quite yet. If you don't
mind, just give us a few more minutes for a few additional
thoughts, okay? Certainly one of the key questions of the
moment is whether what is happening with clearly meaningful upside
pressure in global food and energy price inflation will ultimately
flow into core inflation trends, and if so by what magnitude.
What we've done in the chart below is very simple.
We've taken the year over year rate of change in headline CPI and
subtracted it from the year over year change in core CPI.
What are we essentially looking at? Food and energy price
inflation in isolation. You know, the stuff that the Fed and
friends tell us not to look at. About as simple as the day
is long. As is clear, there have been some very meaningful
upward and downward spikes in this relationship over time.
Although it's just our interpretation of historical events, it
sure seems to us that big, or anomalistic, spikes upward or
downward in this simple ratio were meaningful tip-offs, or leading
indicators, of very
important financial market and economic change to come.
Secular change. Admittedly,
we've gotten the chance to create this graph with the clarity and
100% certainty of hindsight. Was it that the very large
spike in energy and food price inflation in the early 1970's,
again in hindsight and due to the energy crisis of that period,
was the
signal that broader inflationary pressures AND higher interest
rates were about to befall the US economy and financial markets?
Likewise, was the early 1980's spike downward the clue that change
in broader trends was to occur as macro disinflationary forces were about to
take command? Again, in hindsight it gets pretty easy to
make these type of observations. But certainly the reason we
bring this up is that the upward spike in this very ratio has again
occurred in recent years, as well as over the last six months.
Is this the conclusion, or final bookend, to the disinflationary
macro trend begun just over a quarter century ago? This is exactly the kind of
historical relationship that
reinforces our caution on the potential for equity market
valuation multiple expansion at the moment, and really has us
thinking more about the potential for valuation compression than
not.

Lastly, as we listen to Street
pundits far and wide pontificate about inflationary trends ahead
(again, remember as per the consensus thinking regarding inflation
that is nominal dollar prices), we hear again and again that
inflation is not about to become a real problem in the absence of
wage inflation. And as we all know, current wage inflation
is occurring at a rate even below that of the headline CPI
numbers. History does indeed tell us that, as an example,
significant inflationary pressures seen in periods such as the
1970's were indeed accompanied by meaningful wage inflation,
ultimately reinforcing the primary trend in higher nominal prices
system wide. But these pundits tell us that since there is
no real nominal domestic wage inflation at the moment, the risk of
higher macro inflationary pressures continuing is small. Or
as the Fed and friends would tell us, "inflation is
contained". Again, in our minds, this is narrow
thinking. You're darn right, wage pressures domestically are
indeed subdued. And this is exactly why US consumers are
being squeezed at the gas pump and at the grocery store. But
again, we simply implore folks to think more broadly. It's
globalization, globalization and globalization...and little else
in terms of analytical framework. Although wages are not
growing domestically, what about the global wage frontier?
Decade to date in the US, payroll employment is up 5.7%.
It's the lowest decade to date US percentage payroll employment
growth number on record over the last half century at least.
Global corporations are drawing on a global employment base.
Although wages are not growing domestically at a rate exceeding
even the heavily massaged CPI, that's not the case at all in
foreign markets.
Let's try to put this into
perspective with one last chart. Essentially we've taken the
chart above and this time overlaid the year over year rate of
change in US service sector hourly wage growth. We're using
service sector wages as the US service sector is clearly the
dominant domestic US employer of the moment. As you can see,
energy and food price inflation combined are running a good 2%
ahead of the core CPI numbers right now. We saw exactly
this same set of circumstances in the late 1970's. But in
the late 1970's, the year over year rate of change in hourly
service sector wages was accelerating from 5% to 9%.
Today? Less than a 4% growth rate in domestic wages.

Question being, will global
energy and food price pressures soon abate simply because US wages
are growing at a rate well below historical experience in prior
macro inflationary interludes such as the 1970's? Or in a
globalized world, will the US singularly be much less of a factor
in terms of driving global commodity prices, regardless of US wage
trends?
Although the total story
remains to play out ahead, we believe we need to view inflationary
price pressures within the context of the global
environment. We also need to be open to the idea and
incorporate into our thinking that it is different this time in
that inflationary trends that are set in the global marketplace
will influence the rhythm of domestic US equity valuation
multiples. So after all of this explanation and analysis,
what is the point? Inflationary headwinds are global in
nature. The US economy domestically is less a price setter
or price determinant than has been the case anywhere in recent
history. Academically, equity valuations are inversely
correlated with inflationary pressures. We need to keep this
in our thoughts and incorporate it into our behavior and decision
making as investors. It is absolutely clear that in the
context of the global, commodities are being repriced upward,
driven by demand, currency cross rates and institutional
investment in commodities as an asset class. For now, the
wage growth following these pricing pressures is most meaningfully
being experienced in the emerging economies, while the industrial
economies face increasing social contract (social security, Medicare,
etc.) costs ahead. Social costs which have not been funded
and are at great risk of being monetarily inflated away.
Finally, as seen above, domestic wage pressures are currently
subdued relative to historical experience seen in rising macro
inflationary environments of the past. Will this ultimately
pressure corporate earnings ahead as consumer spending is
pressured? Earnings that will become a key focal point if
indeed inflationary pressures weigh down upon equity valuation
multiples? As the global economy
and financial marketplace continues to evolve, our thinking,
analysis and approach to valuation must also evolve. If
inflationary nominal dollar price trends of the moment do not
abate, equities in the macro face the headwinds of valuation
multiple compression. And that means actual corporate
earnings will have to work that much harder in terms of propelling
equity prices higher. And that tells us sector specificity
in terms of active participation and active avoidance will
continue to be critical to investment outcomes.
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