Today's Employment Report: Focus on the Long Term Trends 9 comments
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After this morning's employment report, all of the hopefulness that surrounded an impending economic recovery is quickly eroding. With total jobs lost coming in at a worse than expected 190,000, and the unemployment rate finally jumping to 10.2% barrier, gloom and doom are reentering the scene. Those searching for glimmers of economic growth are once again scratching their heads and trying to determine when we will finally see the turn from contraction to growth.
As easy as it is to allow ourselves to become enamored with these short-sighted views, as investors we are better served to take a long-term perspective. Economic data is often revised numerous times and the likelihood of this number standing as a definitive statement of the employment market is virtually zero.
Instead, let us focus on two long-held beliefs that often accompany the release of employment data. The first is that employment is a lagging indicator. When the economy begins weakening, employers are slow to lay off workers with the hope that the slowdown is temporary and robust growth will quickly resume. When they eventually trim jobs, these same employers do not hire staff in anticipation of an economic rebound, but add new jobs only when existing staff cannot handle the influx in new orders. Since the disappearance and creation of jobs both lag the turn in the actual economy, people view employment as a lagging indicator. Following this logic, one cannot associate a still weak economy with a weak labor market.
The second belief is that the stock market is a discounting mechanism and acts as a predicative indicator. Since the value of an asset is the sum of its discounted future cash flows, increases in the stock market are thought to indicate that future economic growth will increase, while declining stock prices show weakness ahead. While studies of investor emotion have damaged the long-held view of the market accurately reflecting the future, arguing that millions of profit-seeking investors are always wrong about the future is a high hurdle to cross. Instead, we should assume the market is an accurate forecaster on most occasions with temporary instances of disconnect.
Following the logic of these two arguments, one could assume that when jobs stop disappearing, the economy will already be in the process of expanding and the market will already be in rally mode in anticipation of this expansion. If we accept these arguments, the only event that could propel the market even higher is increasing employment, which would signal that the economy continues to expand.
To test this theory, I revisited a chart that consistently appears in my weekly newsletter. Since 1948, there have been seven periods of sustained job loss that lasted from nine to 22 months. Looking at where the S&P 500 traded when jobs stopped disappearing and then where the market was when the subsequent growth led to the recovery of those jobs, we see some interesting statistics.
First, before we became a much more service-based economy, the recovery of jobs that had been lost during a recession typically required only nine to 12 months. During the first jobless recovery, which occurred in 1991, that number stretched to 20 months, and after the most recent recession 33 months were needed to recover all those jobs.
Second, the movement of the S&P 500 from the time when jobs stopped disappearing to when they were finally recovered has averaged 13%, with all of the changes falling in a tight range. What has differed is the return delivered to investors. The quick recoveries from 1982 and earlier delivered average annualized gains of 15%, while the most recent recession delivered average gains of 6%.

Looking at these results, I arrive at two conclusions. The first is that the stock market does a solid job of forecasting the future. By the time job losses cease, the stock market has already forecast the turn in the economy and rallied in anticipation of better times. The second conclusion is that those looking to make a quick profit from this market in the years ahead face an enormous hurdle.
As the economic damage suffered in this recession is well beyond any historical comparison other than the Great Depression, I expect the time to recover the 7.4 million lost jobs to be extremely lengthy. If we follow the 2002 format, it would require nearly 10 years. My bet is it will be longer. If we then see the typical 13% rally during this time period, buy-and-hold investors will be left with a slightly higher than 1% annualized return.
Expecting subpar investment returns years into the future, I maintain the stance I have followed for nearly a year. The age of buy-and-hold is gone forever. At times (such as the current rally from the March low) this approach will look brilliant, but only those who are constantly tweaking their risk profiles and looking for opportunity will prosper. We will remain in a decade-long trading range where prices go up and down, but only those who are active will emerge better off.






















[Note: Quote excerpted from the words of a full colonel (with an Eagle on his shoulder strap) in a 50's black-and-white movie the title of which is forgotten by this commentator.
The movie was about a strayed American Nuclear bomber heading for Moscow, and the colonel was tearfully dragged away from the Air Force Command Center by white-color helmeted MP while uttering those words.]
Teutonic Knight
On Nov 06 09:39 AM Fueled By Randomness wrote:
> Lagging indicator or not, employment will not pick up until the situtation
> in Washington gets sorted out. Few employers wish to hire as long
> as there are new mandates (healthcare "reform") and taxes (cap and
> trade, VATs, repeal of 2003 tax cuts) hanging over their heads like
> the sword of Damocles. It's only logical; why take a risk and expand
> your business when the Congress might soon greatly increase your
> cost per employee and then crush demand with new taxes? Logical indeed,
> except if you're a politician.
This dovetails nicely with my comment for Felix Salmon's article "10.2%"
talks about the internals of Friday's numbers...worthless...
That is why I don't think they want to break up the biggest banks. They are Bernanke's best bond customers. That can't go on indefinately, can it?