Ford Wealth Report

October 30, 2006

The Markets

The Dow Jones Industrials plowed ahead last week, hitting its thirteenth new high in 18 days. Market optimism was driven, in part, by the fact that nearly three-fourths of major companies have reported higher-than-expected profit for the third quarter of 2006, according to MarketWatch.

Then, on Friday, the market's momentum was checked when the Commerce Department reported that economic growth, as measured by the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the United States, was just 1.6% for the third quarter. That was well below analysts' expectations for 2.1% growth, and continued the slowing trend we've seen throughout the year. According to Yahoo! Finance, during first quarter, economic growth was 5.6%--the fastest rate in almost three years. During second quarter, growth was 2.6%--largely because of high energy prices and high interest rates. Third quarter's poor showing was attributed to a 17% drop in residential construction activity.

What should investors be keeping an eye on?

As mentioned in last week's newsletter, we are seeing a divergence in sentiment from the individual investor and corporate insiders. Last week we the saw an improvement in Michigan's Consumer Sentiment index while corporate insider selling surged.

Vickers notes that corporate insiders of stocks traded on the NYSE ramped up their selling activity last week to 7.81 shares sold for every share bought. On the NASDAQ, the insider sell/buy ratio shot to 6.36. Both ratios have more than doubled over the past few weeks. With the DOW hitting new highs & clues from corporate insiders, one wonders if investors should follow Warren Buffet's words of wisdom:

"Be fearful when others are greedy; be greedy when others are fearful."
-Warren Buffet

Returns through 10/27/06 1-Week Y-T-D 1-Year 3-Year 5-Year 10-Year
Dow Jones Industrials 0.7 12.8 16.2 7.7 5.3 7.2
Nasdaq Composite 0.4 6.6 12.5 7.6 6.6 6.8
Standard & Poor's 500 0.6 10.3 15.0 9.9 4.9 7.0

Source: Yahoo! Finance, Barrons
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.
Three-, 5-, and 10-year returns are annualized. Assumes dividends are not reinvested.
 

WILL THE RULE OF 20 REGAIN POPULARITY? Back in the 1950s and 1960s, investors would use the Rule of 20 to determine the appropriate price-to-earnings (PE) multiple for the market. Although there appear to be many different versions of the rule, The Financial Times Rule of 20 is that the market is fairly valued when its PE ratio equals 20 minus the current rate of inflation. When inflation is high, a company's future earnings are worth less than today's earnings. Consequently, the company should attract a lower PE multiple. With the PE ratio of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index at 18.44 on October 27, 2006, and core inflation at about 2.5%, the market would appear to be fairly priced, according to this rule. Whether the market follows this rule or not is another question.

 

Weekly Focus -- Crack the Code

Instructions: Select the correct letter from the words in uppercase in each line.
Put these letters in the same order and find the secret word.

My first is in ROSE but not in NOTE.
My second is in HAIL but not in ROLE.
My third in YELLOW you will find.
My fourth is in KIT but not in KIND.
My fifth is in HOPE and also HEAD.
My last is in MEET but not in TREAD.
My whole in song is often heard.
A rather oddly spelled word.
 

Answer to Sept 25 Puzzle:

Answer to October 23 Puzzle: Saturn!
The ancient Babylonians chose to organize their calendar around 7 days of the week, and each day corresponds to one of the seven "planets" visible to the naked eye. Saturday is ruled by Saturn.

 

Best Regards,

Ford Wealth Report

Ken Ford

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