National Post

The stock market isn’t crazy after all

- Pierre Chaigneau Pierre Chaigneau is an associate professor of finance and commerce at the Smith School of Business at Queen’s University.

How can stock markets fly so high when the economy is in its deepest dip in 90 years? This widely noticed disconnect has led to speculatio­n about ( yet another!) impending market crash, with dreadful consequenc­es for pension plans and individual investors. But maybe the stock market isn’t so crazy as it might seem.

The common wisdom is that markets are anticipati­ng and pricing in a V-shaped economic recovery. This means current stock prices would be justified if the economy were to recover as fast as it plummeted — which does seem unlikely.

Many analyses of stock market valuation rely at least implicitly on such indicators as price-earnings ratios, which compare stock prices to corporate earnings and assume that the ratio of the two is bound eventually to revert to a historical mean. In this perspectiv­e, a high stock price can only be justified if future earnings are sufficient­ly high. Without a V- shaped recovery, this is doubtful.

But this analysis is incomplete. It fails to take into account the impact of interest rates on market valuations. With U. S. and Canadian 10- year bond yields at 0.66 per cent and 0.54 per cent, respective­ly, interest rates not only are very low but they have also sharply declined in the past 12 months — by 71 per cent and 64 per cent, respective­ly. Because a lower discount rate leads to higher stock prices, this interest rate decline has on its own had a strong positive impact on market valuations. And data from the past decade suggests interest rates probably won’t revert to their long- term averages but will remain relatively low even in good times.

A lower discount rate also implies an increase in the importance of long-term versus short- term earnings. That increases the disconnect between forward-looking stock market prices and prevailing economic conditions — but it should at least alleviate concerns about disappoint­ing short-term earnings.

The counter- argument here is that low discount rates don’t matter if the crisis is so severe many companies go bankrupt. A company with zero earnings won’t be worth any more with a lower discount rate. It will still be worth zero. That’s obviously true but, paradoxica­lly, even rising bankruptci­es could imply higher market valuations.

Suppose a number of important companies do go bankrupt or are acquired by stronger rivals. In most industries, this will mean less competitio­n and more pricing power for the companies left standing. Companies that can scale up their production will generate more profits, maybe even to such an extent that industry profits will be higher than they would have been with more firms competing.

There are exceptions to this rule, of course. Lehman Brothers going bust in 2008 aggravated the financial crisis because of the systemic risk inherent to the banking industry. But, in general, the increase in profits at surviving companies could be big enough that economywid­e profits increase after the crisis. That would be bad for consumers but good for shareholde­rs.

In this regard, it is worth noting that although some companies are highly leveraged, others are well- positioned to weather the storm. Corporate cash holdings have been on an increasing trend for many years, so much so that former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney once referred to them as “dead money” and urged Canadian companies to get rid of it. Luckily for their pandemic survivabil­ity, many did not listen.

A final point: stock markets arguably hate uncertaint­y but there is now much less uncertaint­y about COVID-19 than there was a couple of months ago. We better understand both how the virus is transmitte­d and its effects on infected individual­s. The virus also appears less deadly than once believed, with the latest estimates of the infection fatality rate falling between 0.1 per cent and 0.4 per cent according to the Centre for Evidence-based Medicine at the University of Oxford — much lower than the 3.4 per cent the WHO reported in early March.

Perhaps as importantl­y, several countries that successful­ly relaxed COVID- related restrictio­ns so far have not experience­d a devastatin­g second wave of infections. This suggests economic activity may be able to resume at almost normal levels, albeit with continuing safety precaution­s, such as wearing masks, maintainin­g distancing and avoiding handshakes and large-scale events. That was not on the horizon two months ago. This gradual return of optimism has undoubtedl­y contribute­d to the rebounds in investor optimism and stock prices.

In the end, stock markets may end up going up or down. There is no shortage of threats to the economy, whether from geopolitic­al tensions or heavy- handed regulation or taxation in the wake of the current crisis. It would be a mistake, however, to believe that the pandemic necessaril­y should have led to a massive and sustained fall in stock market valuations.

 ?? Frank Gunn / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Lower interest rates have had a strong impact on market valuations, Pierre Chaigneau writes.
Frank Gunn / THE CANADIAN PRESS Lower interest rates have had a strong impact on market valuations, Pierre Chaigneau writes.

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