The Week Ahead: Is It Too Late To Join The Stock Rally?

 | Nov 09, 2014 02:40AM ET

This coming week, the calendar is dealing us a light week for economic news and data. This usually opens the field for Pundits on Parade!

With markets at fresh highs and the calendar winding down, I expect this question:

Is it too late to join the stock market rally?

h2 Prior Theme Recap
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In my last WTWA I predicted that we would be asking about how to invest in a post-QE world. There was plenty of that discussion, including a CNBC employment report preview about the absence of the “F word!” It was not the main theme last week. Everyone tried to milk financial news from the election, even though there was little to glean. CNBC bailed out on election-night coverage (See criticism from Jeff Reeves via Chris Roush at Talking Biz News , a favorite source). They made up for it with incessant stories over the next two days. More on that below. I will accept this as an end to my hot streak in guessing the theme.

Feel free to join in my exercise in thinking about the upcoming theme. We would all like to know the direction of the market in advance. Good luck with that! Second best is planning what to look for and how to react. That is the purpose of considering possible themes for the week ahead.

h3 This Week’s Theme
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Whenever there is a pause in the flow of economic news there is extra emphasis on the perpetual market debate. Pages and air time must still be filled, and there is no shortage of opinion. I expect a popular theme to be whether it is “too late” for sidelined investors to buy stocks. Here are some key viewpoints:

  • It is a mistake to buy stocks “up here.” This is often presented as an argument from a technical analysis perspective and/or a historical comparison.
  • Stocks are over-valued, possibly in potential crash territory. (See anything from John Hussman, including the most recent take ).
  • Stocks have beaten bonds throughout history, especially for longer holding periods. Josh Brown uses Jeremy Siegel’s data for a “thirty second course” on asset allocation.
  • Don’t wait for the “fat pitch.” Michael Batnick reviews ten years of reasons for not investing. Read the list to see if any seem familiar. Currently? Here is the current year comment and also his conclusion:

    2014- “I’m gonna wait for the geopolitical risks to settle down. I also want to wait and see what will happen after the taper.”

    My favorite Buffett quote and the one I think is the most relevant for the average investor is “so if you wait for the robins, spring will be over.” Buffett wrote this in his “Buy American. I am.” Op-ed in the New york Times in 2008. Don’t wait for the fat pitch and don’t wait for the robins because like Nick Murray said, “If you think the market is too high, wait until you see it twenty years from now.”

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There is plenty of ammunition for the dueling pundits.

Before turning to my own conclusions, let us do our regular update of the last week’s news and data. Readers, especially those new to this series, will benefit from reading the background information .

h3 Last Week’s Data/h3

Each week I break down events into good and bad. Often there is “ugly” and on rare occasion something really good. My working definition of “good” has two components:

  1. The news is market-friendly. Our personal policy preferences are not relevant for this test. And especially – no politics.
  2. It is better than expectations.

The Good

There was plenty of news both ways, but it was mostly good.

  • Election 2014. I am scoring this as “good news” not from cheering the outcome, but strictly from the market perspective. Here are the positives:
    • First and foremost, it is over! This means that we can have a brief respite from posturing, with potential for some needed compromises.
    • Sen. McConnell, expected to take over as Majority Leader, stated that the GOP would neither shut down the government nor obstruct increases in the debt ceiling. If you remember what happened around these controversies in 2011, you will see why that is important.
    • The Keystone Pipeline will get approved. While this is putatively an executive decision, the Obama Administration is about to get a serious nudge from a Republican Congress. Unlike some other issues, this one will have Democratic support making it close to veto-proof. (National Journal ).
  • Employment Report. The easiest way to know that this was a good report was to watch CNBC’s Rick Santelli, the point man for bearish commentary on all things economic. He could not complain about seasonal adjustments, which actually depressed this report. Rex Nutting explains that it was the best October in history. He could not complain about the birth/death adjustment, which also leaned the other way. Those traditional themes were therefore ignored as he explained that the growth was “not enough.” I agree!
    • The economists’ consensus in a nice piece from Sarah Portlock of the WSJ . “On the whole, a strong report.”
    • The trend is better than expected. The Economist explains that payroll growth only needs to be 50 to 75 K to reduce unemployment. Many sources are using old and inaccurate numbers. They also explain that the trend in growth is accelerating.

      But stepping back for a moment, today’s numbers are anything but boring. Demographic trends suggest that to keep up with the long-term underlying growth in the labour force, payrolls need only grow 50,000 to 60,000 per month, Morgan Stanley reckons. America has been consistently creating jobs at four times that rate this year. The steadiness of the gains – this is the 56th straight month of private sector job growth – belies the fact that they have also been accelerating. This year’s average of 228,000 is up from 194,000 in 2013 and 186,000 in 2012. That demonstrates increasing cyclical economic momentum. That is also evident in the unemployment rate which continued to drop in October, to 5.8%, another six-year low, from 5.9%. It has now fallen 1.4 points in the last year, one of the fastest 12-month drops in 30 years.

    • The household report was even stronger. Justin Wolfers suggests doing an 80-20 blend of the two reports. His conclusion is one of pretty strong growth.
  • Earnings continue to beat estimates at a strong pace, 70% according to FactSet .
  • ISM manufacturing beat expectations with an increase to 59.0. Calculated Risk has the story and this chart: