Stocks are simple. All you do is buy shares in a great business for less than the business is intrinsically worth, with management of the highest integrity and ability. Then you own those shares forever. I will tell you how to become rich. Close the doors. Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful.

Showing posts with label A. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A. Show all posts

October 17, 2008

Buy American. I Am.

Buy American. I Am.

By WARREN E. BUFFETT  from nytimes

Omaha

 

1974, NOV,1 fortune: now it's the time to invest and
1979, Aug,6 fortune:Those awaiting a 'better time' for equity investing are highly likely to maintain that posture until well into the next bull market

1999 NOV,22 fortune:expecting too much

he strictly look at price - he was buying -400 from up 400 he stops buying.

 

THE financial world is a mess, both in the United States and abroad. Its problems, moreover, have been leaking into the general economy, and the leaks are now turning into a gusher. In the near term, unemployment will rise, business activity will falter and headlines will continue to be scary.

So ... I’ve been buying American stocks. This is my personal account I’m talking about, in which I previously owned nothing but United States government bonds. (This description leaves aside my Berkshire Hathaway holdings, which are all committed to philanthropy.) If prices keep looking attractive, my non-Berkshire net worth will soon be 100 percent in United States equities.

Why?

A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful. And most certainly, fear is now widespread, gripping even seasoned investors. To be sure, investors are right to be wary of highly leveraged entities or businesses in weak competitive positions. But fears regarding the long-term prosperity of the nation’s many sound companies make no sense. These businesses will indeed suffer earnings hiccups, as they always have. But most major companies will be setting new profit records 5, 10 and 20 years from now.

Let me be clear on one point: I can’t predict the short-term movements of the stock market. I haven’t the faintest idea as to whether stocks will be higher or lower a month — or a year — from now. What is likely, however, is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turns up. So if you wait for the robins, spring will be over.

A little history here: During the Depression, the Dow hit its low, 41, on July 8, 1932. Economic conditions, though, kept deteriorating until Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in March 1933. By that time, the market had already advanced 30 percent. Or think back to the early days of World War II, when things were going badly for the United States in Europe and the Pacific. The market hit bottom in April 1942, well before Allied fortunes turned. Again, in the early 1980s, the time to buy stocks was when inflation raged and the economy was in the tank. In short, bad news is an investor’s best friend. It lets you buy a slice of America’s future at a marked-down price.

Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.

You might think it would have been impossible for an investor to lose money during a century marked by such an extraordinary gain. But some investors did. The hapless ones bought stocks only when they felt comfort in doing so and then proceeded to sell when the headlines made them queasy.

Today people who hold cash equivalents feel comfortable. They shouldn’t. They have opted for a terrible long-term asset, one that pays virtually nothing and is certain to depreciate in value. Indeed, the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts.

Equities will almost certainly outperform cash over the next decade, probably by a substantial degree. Those investors who cling now to cash are betting they can efficiently time their move away from it later. In waiting for the comfort of good news, they are ignoring Wayne Gretzky’s advice: “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.”

I don’t like to opine on the stock market, and again I emphasize that I have no idea what the market will do in the short term. Nevertheless, I’ll follow the lead of a restaurant that opened in an empty bank building and then advertised: “Put your mouth where your money was.” Today my money and my mouth both say equities.

 

http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2001/12/10/314691/

By Warren Buffett; Carol Loomis

December 10, 2001

(FORTUNE Magazine) – Two years ago, following a July 1999 speech by Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, on the stock market--a rare subject for him to discuss publicly--FORTUNE ran what he had to say under the title "Mr. Buffett on the Stock Market" (Nov. 22, 1999). His main points then concerned two consecutive and amazing periods that American investors had experienced, and his belief that returns from stocks were due to fall dramatically. Since the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 11194 when he gave his speech and recently was about 9900, no one yet has the goods to argue with him.

So where do we stand now--with the stock market seeming to reflect a dismal profit outlook, an unfamiliar war, and rattled consumer confidence? Who better to supply perspective on that question than Buffett?

The thoughts that follow come from a second Buffett speech, given last July at the site of the first talk, Allen & Co.'s annual Sun Valley bash for corporate executives. There, the renowned stockpicker returned to the themes he'd discussed before, bringing new data and insights to the subject. Working with FORTUNE's Carol Loomis, Buffett distilled that speech into this essay, a fitting opening for this year's Investor's Guide. Here again is Mr. Buffett on the Stock Market.

The last time I tackled this subject, in 1999, I broke down the previous 34 years into two 17-year periods, which in the sense of lean years and fat were astonishingly symmetrical. Here's the first period. As you can see, over 17 years the Dow gained exactly one-tenth of one percent.

--DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE Dec. 31, 1964: 874.12 Dec. 31, 1981: 875.00

And here's the second, marked by an incredible bull market that, as I laid out my thoughts, was about to end (though I didn't know that).

--DOW INDUSTRIALS Dec. 31, 1981: 875.00 Dec. 31, 1998: 9181.43

Now, you couldn't explain this remarkable divergence in markets by, say, differences in the growth of gross national product. In the first period--that dismal time for the market--GNP actually grew more than twice as fast as it did in the second period.

--GAIN IN GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT 1964-1981: 373% 1981-1988: 177%

So what was the explanation? I concluded that the market's contrasting moves were caused by extraordinary changes in two critical economic variables--and by a related psychological force that eventually came into play.

Here I need to remind you about the definition of "investing," which though simple is often forgotten. Investing is laying out money today to receive more money tomorrow.

That gets to the first of the economic variables that affected stock prices in the two periods--interest rates. In economics, interest rates act as gravity behaves in the physical world. At all times, in all markets, in all parts of the world, the tiniest change in rates changes the value of every financial asset. You see that clearly with the fluctuating prices of bonds. But the rule applies as well to farmland, oil reserves, stocks, and every other financial asset. And the effects can be huge on values. If interest rates are, say, 13%, the present value of a dollar that you're going to receive in the future from an investment is not nearly as high as the present value of a dollar if rates are 4%.

So here's the record on interest rates at key dates in our 34-year span. They moved dramatically up--that was bad for investors--in the first half of that period and dramatically down--a boon for investors--in the second half.

--INTEREST RATES, LONG-TERM GOVERNMENT BONDS Dec. 31, 1964: 4.20% Dec. 31, 1981: 13.65% Dec. 31, 1998: 5.09%

The other critical variable here is how many dollars investors expected to get from the companies in which they invested. During the first period expectations fell significantly because corporate profits weren't looking good. By the early 1980s Fed Chairman Paul Volcker's economic sledgehammer had, in fact, driven corporate profitability to a level that people hadn't seen since the 1930s.

The upshot is that investors lost their confidence in the American economy: They were looking at a future they believed would be plagued by two negatives. First, they didn't see much good coming in the way of corporate profits. Second, the sky-high interest rates prevailing caused them to discount those meager profits further. These two factors, working together, caused stagnation in the stock market from 1964 to 1981, even though those years featured huge improvements in GNP. The business of the country grew while investors' valuation of that business shrank!

And then the reversal of those factors created a period during which much lower GNP gains were accompanied by a bonanza for the market. First, you got a major increase in the rate of profitability. Second, you got an enormous drop in interest rates, which made a dollar of future profit that much more valuable. Both phenomena were real and powerful fuels for a major bull market. And in time the psychological factor I mentioned was added to the equation: Speculative trading exploded, simply because of the market action that people had seen. Later, we'll look at the pathology of this dangerous and oft-recurring malady.

Two years ago I believed the favorable fundamental trends had largely run their course. For the market to go dramatically up from where it was then would have required long-term interest rates to drop much further (which is always possible) or for there to be a major improvement in corporate profitability (which seemed, at the time, considerably less possible). If you take a look at a 50-year chart of after-tax profits as a percent of gross domestic product, you find that the rate normally falls between 4%--that was its neighborhood in the bad year of 1981, for example--and 6.5%. For the rate to go above 6.5% is rare. In the very good profit years of 1999 and 2000, the rate was under 6% and this year it may well fall below 5%.

So there you have my explanation of those two wildly different 17-year periods. The question is, How much do those periods of the past for the market say about its future?

To suggest an answer, I'd like to look back over the 20th century. As you know, this was really the American century. We had the advent of autos, we had aircraft, we had radio, TV, and computers. It was an incredible period. Indeed, the per capita growth in U.S. output, measured in real dollars (that is, with no impact from inflation), was a breathtaking 702%.

The century included some very tough years, of course--like the Depression years of 1929 to 1933. But a decade-by-decade look at per capita GNP shows something remarkable: As a nation, we made relatively consistent progress throughout the century. So you might think that the economic value of the U.S.--at least as measured by its securities markets--would have grown at a reasonably consistent pace as well.

That's not what happened. We know from our earlier examination of the 1964-98 period that parallelism broke down completely in that era. But the whole century makes this point as well. At its beginning, for example, between 1900 and 1920, the country was chugging ahead, explosively expanding its use of electricity, autos, and the telephone. Yet the market barely moved, recording a 0.4% annual increase that was roughly analogous to the slim pickings between 1964 and 1981.

--DOW INDUSTRIALS Dec. 31, 1899: 66.08 Dec. 31, 1920: 71.95

In the next period, we had the market boom of the '20s, when the Dow jumped 430% to 381 in September 1929. Then we go 19 years--19 years--and there is the Dow at 177, half the level where it began. That's true even though the 1940s displayed by far the largest gain in per capita GDP (50%) of any 20th-century decade. Following that came a 17-year period when stocks finally took off--making a great five-to-one gain. And then the two periods discussed at the start: stagnation until 1981, and the roaring boom that wrapped up this amazing century.

To break things down another way, we had three huge, secular bull markets that covered about 44 years, during which the Dow gained more than 11,000 points. And we had three periods of stagnation, covering some 56 years. During those 56 years the country made major economic progress and yet the Dow actually lost 292 points.

How could this have happened? In a flourishing country in which people are focused on making money, how could you have had three extended and anguishing periods of stagnation that in aggregate--leaving aside dividends--would have lost you money? The answer lies in the mistake that investors repeatedly make--that psychological force I mentioned above: People are habitually guided by the rear-view mirror and, for the most part, by the vistas immediately behind them.

The first part of the century offers a vivid illustration of that myopia. In the century's first 20 years, stocks normally yielded more than high-grade bonds. That relationship now seems quaint, but it was then almost axiomatic. Stocks were known to be riskier, so why buy them unless you were paid a premium?

And then came along a 1924 book--slim and initially unheralded, but destined to move markets as never before--written by a man named Edgar Lawrence Smith. The book, called Common Stocks as Long Term Investments, chronicled a study Smith had done of security price movements in the 56 years ended in 1922. Smith had started off his study with a hypothesis: Stocks would do better in times of inflation, and bonds would do better in times of deflation. It was a perfectly reasonable hypothesis.

But consider the first words in the book: "These studies are the record of a failure--the failure of facts to sustain a preconceived theory." Smith went on: "The facts assembled, however, seemed worthy of further examination. If they would not prove what we had hoped to have them prove, it seemed desirable to turn them loose and to follow them to whatever end they might lead."

Now, there was a smart man, who did just about the hardest thing in the world to do. Charles Darwin used to say that whenever he ran into something that contradicted a conclusion he cherished, he was obliged to write the new finding down within 30 minutes. Otherwise his mind would work to reject the discordant information, much as the body rejects transplants. Man's natural inclination is to cling to his beliefs, particularly if they are reinforced by recent experience--a flaw in our makeup that bears on what happens during secular bull markets and extended periods of stagnation.

To report what Edgar Lawrence Smith discovered, I will quote a legendary thinker--John Maynard Keynes, who in 1925 reviewed the book, thereby putting it on the map. In his review, Keynes described "perhaps Mr. Smith's most important point ... and certainly his most novel point. Well-managed industrial companies do not, as a rule, distribute to the shareholders the whole of their earned profits. In good years, if not in all years, they retain a part of their profits and put them back in the business. Thus there is an element of compound interest (Keynes' italics) operating in favor of a sound industrial investment."

It was that simple. It wasn't even news. People certainly knew that companies were not paying out 100% of their earnings. But investors hadn't thought through the implications of the point. Here, though, was this guy Smith saying, "Why do stocks typically outperform bonds? A major reason is that businesses retain earnings, with these going on to generate still more earnings--and dividends, too."

That finding ignited an unprecedented bull market. Galvanized by Smith's insight, investors piled into stocks, anticipating a double dip: their higher initial yield over bonds, and growth to boot. For the American public, this new understanding was like the discovery of fire.

But before long that same public was burned. Stocks were driven to prices that first pushed down their yield to that on bonds and ultimately drove their yield far lower. What happened then should strike readers as eerily familiar: The mere fact that share prices were rising so quickly became the main impetus for people to rush into stocks. What the few bought for the right reason in 1925, the many bought for the wrong reason in 1929.

Astutely, Keynes anticipated a perversity of this kind in his 1925 review. He wrote: "It is dangerous...to apply to the future inductive arguments based on past experience, unless one can distinguish the broad reasons why past experience was what it was." If you can't do that, he said, you may fall into the trap of expecting results in the future that will materialize only if conditions are exactly the same as they were in the past. The special conditions he had in mind, of course, stemmed from the fact that Smith's study covered a half century during which stocks generally yielded more than high-grade bonds.

The colossal miscalculation that investors made in the 1920s has recurred in one form or another several times since. The public's monumental hangover from its stock binge of the 1920s lasted, as we have seen, through 1948. The country was then intrinsically far more valuable than it had been 20 years before; dividend yields were more than double the yield on bonds; and yet stock prices were at less than half their 1929 peak. The conditions that had produced Smith's wondrous results had reappeared--in spades. But rather than seeing what was in plain sight in the late 1940s, investors were transfixed by the frightening market of the early 1930s and were avoiding re-exposure to pain.

Don't think for a moment that small investors are the only ones guilty of too much attention to the rear-view mirror. Let's look at the behavior of professionally managed pension funds in recent decades. In 1971--this was Nifty Fifty time--pension managers, feeling great about the market, put more than 90% of their net cash flow into stocks, a record commitment at the time. And then, in a couple of years, the roof fell in and stocks got way cheaper. So what did the pension fund managers do? They quit buying because stocks got cheaper!

--PRIVATE PENSION FUNDS % of cash flow put into equities 1971: 91% (record high) 1974: 13%

This is the one thing I can never understand. To refer to a personal taste of mine, I'm going to buy hamburgers the rest of my life. When hamburgers go down in price, we sing the "Hallelujah Chorus" in the Buffett household. When hamburgers go up, we weep. For most people, it's the same way with everything in life they will be buying--except stocks. When stocks go down and you can get more for your money, people don't like them anymore.

That sort of behavior is especially puzzling when engaged in by pension fund managers, who by all rights should have the longest time horizon of any investors. These managers are not going to need the money in their funds tomorrow, not next year, nor even next decade. So they have total freedom to sit back and relax. Since they are not operating with their own funds, moreover, raw greed should not distort their decisions. They should simply think about what makes the most sense. Yet they behave just like rank amateurs (getting paid, though, as if they had special expertise).

In 1979, when I felt stocks were a screaming buy, I wrote in an article, "Pension fund managers continue to make investment decisions with their eyes firmly fixed on the rear-view mirror. This generals-fighting-the-last-war approach has proved costly in the past and will likely prove equally costly this time around." That's true, I said, because "stocks now sell at levels that should produce long-term returns far superior to bonds."

Consider the circumstances in 1972, when pension fund managers were still loading up on stocks: The Dow ended the year at 1020, had an average book value of 625, and earned 11% on book. Six years later, the Dow was 20% cheaper, its book value had gained nearly 40%, and it had earned 13% on book. Or as I wrote then, "Stocks were demonstrably cheaper in 1978 when pension fund managers wouldn't buy them than they were in 1972, when they bought them at record rates."

At the time of the article, long-term corporate bonds were yielding about 9.5%. So I asked this seemingly obvious question: "Can better results be obtained, over 20 years, from a group of 9.5% bonds of leading American companies maturing in 1999 than from a group of Dow-type equities purchased, in aggregate, around book value and likely to earn, in aggregate, about 13% on that book value?" The question answered itself.

Now, if you had read that article in 1979, you would have suffered--oh, how you would have suffered!--for about three years. I was no good then at forecasting the near-term movements of stock prices, and I'm no good now. I never have the faintest idea what the stock market is going to do in the next six months, or the next year, or the next two.

But I think it is very easy to see what is likely to happen over the long term. Ben Graham told us why: "Though the stock market functions as a voting machine in the short run, it acts as a weighing machine in the long run." Fear and greed play important roles when votes are being cast, but they don't register on the scale.

By my thinking, it was not hard to say that, over a 20-year period, a 9.5% bond wasn't going to do as well as this disguised bond called the Dow that you could buy below par--that's book value--and that was earning 13% on par.

Let me explain what I mean by that term I slipped in there, "disguised bond." A bond, as most of you know, comes with a certain maturity and with a string of little coupons. A 6% bond, for example, pays a 3% coupon every six months.

A stock, in contrast, is a financial instrument that has a claim on future distributions made by a given business, whether they are paid out as dividends or to repurchase stock or to settle up after sale or liquidation. These payments are in effect "coupons." The set of owners getting them will change as shareholders come and go. But the financial outcome for the business' owners as a whole will be determined by the size and timing of these coupons. Estimating those particulars is what investment analysis is all about.

Now, gauging the size of those "coupons" gets very difficult for individual stocks. It's easier, though, for groups of stocks. Back in 1978, as I mentioned, we had the Dow earning 13% on its average book value of $850. The 13% could only be a benchmark, not a guarantee. Still, if you'd been willing then to invest for a period of time in stocks, you were in effect buying a bond--at prices that in 1979 seldom inched above par--with a principal value of $891 and a quite possible 13% coupon on the principal.

How could that not be better than a 9.5% bond? From that starting point, stocks had to outperform bonds over the long term. That, incidentally, has been true during most of my business lifetime. But as Keynes would remind us, the superiority of stocks isn't inevitable. They own the advantage only when certain conditions prevail.

Let me show you another point about the herd mentality among pension funds--a point perhaps accentuated by a little self-interest on the part of those who oversee the funds. In the table below are four well-known companies--typical of many others I could have selected--and the expected returns on their pension fund assets that they used in calculating what charge (or credit) they should make annually for pensions.

Now, the higher the expectation rate that a company uses for pensions, the higher its reported earnings will be. That's just the way that pension accounting works--and I hope, for the sake of relative brevity, that you'll just take my word for it.

As the table shows, expectations in 1975 were modest: 7% for Exxon, 6% for GE and GM, and under 5% for IBM. The oddity of these assumptions is that investors could then buy long-term government noncallable bonds that paid 8%. In other words, these companies could have loaded up their entire portfolio with 8% no-risk bonds, but they nevertheless used lower assumptions. By 1982, as you can see, they had moved up their assumptions a little bit, most to around 7%. But now you could buy long-term governments at 10.4%. You could in fact have locked in that yield for decades by buying so-called strips that guaranteed you a 10.4% reinvestment rate. In effect, your idiot nephew could have managed the fund and achieved returns far higher than the investment assumptions corporations were using.

Why in the world would a company be assuming 7.5% when it could get nearly 10.5% on government bonds? The answer is that rear-view mirror again: Investors who'd been through the collapse of the Nifty Fifty in the early 1970s were still feeling the pain of the period and were out of date in their thinking about returns. They couldn't make the necessary mental adjustment.

Now fast-forward to 2000, when we had long-term governments at 5.4%. And what were the four companies saying in their 2000 annual reports about expectations for their pension funds? They were using assumptions of 9.5% and even 10%.

I'm a sporting type, and I would love to make a large bet with the chief financial officer of any one of those four companies, or with their actuaries or auditors, that over the next 15 years they will not average the rates they've postulated. Just look at the math, for one thing. A fund's portfolio is very likely to be one-third bonds, on which--assuming a conservative mix of issues with an appropriate range of maturities--the fund cannot today expect to earn much more than 5%. It's simple to see then that the fund will need to average more than 11% on the two-thirds that's in stocks to earn about 9.5% overall. That's a pretty heroic assumption, particularly given the substantial investment expenses that a typical fund incurs.

Heroic assumptions do wonders, however, for the bottom line. By embracing those expectation rates shown in the far right column, these companies report much higher earnings--much higher--than if they were using lower rates. And that's certainly not lost on the people who set the rates. The actuaries who have roles in this game know nothing special about future investment returns. What they do know, however, is that their clients desire rates that are high. And a happy client is a continuing client.

Are we talking big numbers here? Let's take a look at General Electric, the country's most valuable and most admired company. I'm a huge admirer myself. GE has run its pension fund extraordinarily well for decades, and its assumptions about returns are typical of the crowd. I use the company as an example simply because of its prominence.

If we may retreat to 1982 again, GE recorded a pension charge of $570 million. That amount cost the company 20% of its pretax earnings. Last year GE recorded a $1.74 billion pension credit. That was 9% of the company's pretax earnings. And it was 2 1/2 times the appliance division's profit of $684 million. A $1.74 billion credit is simply a lot of money. Reduce that pension assumption enough and you wipe out most of the credit.

GE's pension credit, and that of many another corporation, owes its existence to a rule of the Financial Accounting Standards Board that went into effect in 1987. From that point on, companies equipped with the right assumptions and getting the fund performance they needed could start crediting pension income to their income statements. Last year, according to Goldman Sachs, 35 companies in the S&P 500 got more than 10% of their earnings from pension credits, even as, in many cases, the value of their pension investments shrank.

Unfortunately, the subject of pension assumptions, critically important though it is, almost never comes up in corporate board meetings. (I myself have been on 19 boards, and I've never heard a serious discussion of this subject.) And now, of course, the need for discussion is paramount because these assumptions that are being made, with all eyes looking backward at the glories of the 1990s, are so extreme. I invite you to ask the CFO of a company having a large defined-benefit pension fund what adjustment would need to be made to the company's earnings if its pension assumption was lowered to 6.5%. And then, if you want to be mean, ask what the company's assumptions were back in 1975 when both stocks and bonds had far higher prospective returns than they do now.

With 2001 annual reports soon to arrive, it will be interesting to see whether companies have reduced their assumptions about future pension returns. Considering how poor returns have been recently and the reprises that probably lie ahead, I think that anyone choosing not to lower assumptions--CEOs, auditors, and actuaries all--is risking litigation for misleading investors. And directors who don't question the optimism thus displayed simply won't be doing their job.

The tour we've taken through the last century proves that market irrationality of an extreme kind periodically erupts--and compellingly suggests that investors wanting to do well had better learn how to deal with the next outbreak. What's needed is an antidote, and in my opinion that's quantification. If you quantify, you won't necessarily rise to brilliance, but neither will you sink into craziness.

On a macro basis, quantification doesn't have to be complicated at all. Below is a chart, starting almost 80 years ago and really quite fundamental in what it says. The chart shows the market value of all publicly traded securities as a percentage of the country's business--that is, as a percentage of GNP. The ratio has certain limitations in telling you what you need to know. Still, it is probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment. And as you can see, nearly two years ago the ratio rose to an unprecedented level. That should have been a very strong warning signal.

For investors to gain wealth at a rate that exceeds the growth of U.S. business, the percentage relationship line on the chart must keep going up and up. If GNP is going to grow 5% a year and you want market values to go up 10%, then you need to have the line go straight off the top of the chart. That won't happen.

For me, the message of that chart is this: If the percentage relationship falls to the 70% or 80% area, buying stocks is likely to work very well for you. If the ratio approaches 200%--as it did in 1999 and a part of 2000--you are playing with fire. As you can see, the ratio was recently 133%.

Even so, that is a good-sized drop from when I was talking about the market in 1999. I ventured then that the American public should expect equity returns over the next decade or two (with dividends included and 2% inflation assumed) of perhaps 7%. That was a gross figure, not counting frictional costs, such as commissions and fees. Net, I thought returns might be 6%.

Today stock market "hamburgers," so to speak, are cheaper. The country's economy has grown and stocks are lower, which means that investors are getting more for their money. I would expect now to see long-term returns run somewhat higher, in the neighborhood of 7% after costs. Not bad at all--that is, unless you're still deriving your expectations from the 1990s.

March 13, 2008

华尔街股市神童:中国股市只是MINI熊

华尔街股市神童:中国股市只是MINI熊 此刻并非抄底良机http://stock.hexun.com/2008-03-11/104357568.html
2008年03月11日09:00  来源: 证券时报 作者:胡立阳发表评论(12)支持(4)反对(2)机构强力推荐4只潜力股 如何捕捉短线暴涨股 主力强攻哪几只个股 4000之下如何抄底?   胡立阳:美国加州圣塔克拉大学会计学士、企管硕士,33岁时担任美国最大的证券公司美林证券第一位华裔副总裁兼硅谷分公司总经理,公认的华尔街"股市神童"。1986年应邀到台湾任多所大学教授,教授股票投资学,并担任证券市场发展基金会秘书长,任期中因推广股票投资并教育投资大众,带动了空前的投资热潮。1987年在台股只有800多点时,胡立阳就大胆预测指数将冲上8000点,并迅速以名嘴之姿带动了台湾空前的投资热,形成"胡立阳旋风",被誉为"亚洲股市教父"。他曾以惊人的说服力在一年内演讲1100多场,听他演讲的听众人数至今仍是世界纪录。记者上周末致电台湾连线胡立阳,听听他关于本时点的"抄底"策略。
  A股"MINI熊"不会超半年
  "现在正是在牛、熊市的交界点,4000点到4300点的这段距离,是多空交战的一级战场,此刻,正是他们战斗最激烈的时刻。如果多方不幸在这个区域失守,就步入熊市。"胡立阳说,即使如此,投资者也不必过于担心。通过三十年来对各国市场的观察,胡立阳独创了一个略显调皮的名称"MINI熊",他说,中国今年即使出现熊市,也是由于投资者信心不足而造成的,与经济景气度无关,这个"MINI熊"逗留的时间,通常不会超过半年。
  他解释,如果"一般性熊市"来临,可能会相当麻烦,因为它一般会持续两年甚至更久。而至于因为市场心理造成的"MINI型熊市",是由于股市涨得太猛,大家过于紧张,只要绊一跤,就会摔得鼻青脸肿。由于很多人都在高位买进,市场只要有个风吹草动,追高者就会自己吓唬自己,造成持股松动,即便原来是正常的拉回调整也会恶化成疯狂的"多杀多"。
  去年10月,当乐观情绪充斥市场之时,胡立阳的声音显得与众不同。"牛市已经进入下半场。"根据他对全球新兴市场的统计结果,如果开户人口达到总人口的百分之十,"僧多粥少"的情况就会发生,投资者这个时候就应当相当小心。
  而时至今日,胡立阳认为,尽管美国次级贷的影响颇深,但由于问题暴露得很早,不至于令美股崩盘,而中国也会慢慢摆脱美国股市的影响。不过,美股和全球股市的狂欢派对无疑已经结束了,美股很可能会不冷不热地维持一段时间。胡立阳说,全球股市里,除了少数几个新兴市场以外,90%的市场可能都要有长达一年的调整时间。
  相比而言,他对A股的判断则要乐观得多。"牛市的平均长度不过3年零10个月而已,现在欧美的超级牛市已经长了四五年,而中国的牛市也才两年而已。新兴市场的股市,完全是由经济带动的,2年的时间就完全走进熊市,并不是那么容易的事。"此刻并非抄底良机
  虽然胡立阳仍然看好中国A股的未来走势,但他并不认为此时是建仓的良机。
  "行情在一波大跌之后,终于略有起色,好比久旱逢甘霖。很多人会心急地问:'可以进场了吗?股价已经很便宜了呢!'我知道,大家都在高档套牢了不少,现在最想做的就是在低点赶紧把钱赚回来。要小心,此时若过于急躁,只会让你越套越多。"
  一如胡立阳的演讲风格,他将股市比作一个病人,"股市在久病之后突然又爬了起来的头两三天,仍然很虚弱,还须留在加护病房继续观察,而这个观察期短则十天,长则需要一个月以上,才能确认行情已经转危为安。但是,这并不是说,大家什么都不能做。"
  "真正的专家,在股市下跌的时候,都会手忙脚乱,因为他们在研究股票。"对于此刻的操作建议,他认为,应利用这段期间,密切注意过去一再错失买进良机那些好股的表现,机会或许会再度光临,先做好"换股操作"的准备。"在股市有逐渐走稳迹象的初期,我从不建议手中已有套牢持股的投资朋友再掏腰包来做加码,只会鼓励以等量资金来换股操作。"
  "行情高涨的时候,100%的投资人都自动会换股操作,因为卖出股票赚到了钱之后,总是会兴高采烈地又匆匆投进另一支股票的怀抱,如果你卖出了甲,却又买进了乙,高价换高价,根本是在自掌嘴巴。其实,在暴跌行情中,才是换股操作的真正好时机,要积极做好准备工作。"
  "现在,投资者应该做的就是,先把手中最差的股票淘汰掉,但是卖掉之后,不要立刻去买,而是用至少两三个星期的时间,每天观察未来想买进的股票,看哪只股票可能进入底部区域,再进行买进动作。"
  不过,很多投资者的股票已经被套上了,此时"换股",岂不是会陷入更惨的境地?胡立阳说,经过连续的下跌,市场的"筹码"非常乱,需要经过不断探底,即使是反弹,也不会出现V形反弹,今天跌停明天又涨停的情况几乎不可能存在,而最可能出现的,是缓缓上升的"锅底"形反弹。"所以,投资者不用担心卖在最低点,因为这种概率只有万分之一。"
  "新手套高档,老手套摸底。"他说,不要担心错失买在最低价的机会,因为,行情走空了一段时间,底部也只会逐步形成,最可能出现的是,缓缓上升的"锅底"形态。换句话说,宁愿慢半拍,也不能因心急而二度套牢,以后想买也没有钱了。
  胡立阳说:"30年的投资经验告诉我,这种时候仍然充满信心,具有乐观精神,而且'手忙脚乱'的人,才是未来股市的大赢家。"

February 17, 2008

4200点或成底部之一系列分析文章

底部逐渐清晰 4200或成年内最低点
鼠年第一个交易日,受春节期间周边市场持续走低,国内发生冰雪灾害,及巨量限售流通股集中解禁上市等诸多不利因素的影响,沪深股市双双跳空下行,迎来多年不见的“开门绿”。周五,两市再度出现深幅下探,几乎将节前拉出的历史上最大的单日长阳线吞噬殆尽,不过在第二次逼近年线的当口,再度遭到多方的狙击,尾市出现放量反弹。
  自元月14日5522点开始,上证指数连续急挫,最大调整幅度已达24%。美国次贷危机引发全球股市纷纷破位暴挫,特别是香港市场的下跌,无疑使与其关系密切的A股市场受到拖累。同时,国内爆发了五十年一遇的大雪灾,因持续时间长,影响范围广,危害程度深,给电力、交通运输等带来巨大的破坏,许多上市公司也因此连累其中。而春节长假后的首个交易日,A股市场迎来了27家上市公司的限售股集中解禁,这是股改以来单日“大小非”解禁公司数量最多的一个交易日,亦对市场产生一定的压力。
  不过,目前这一系列不利因素都出现了好转,美国次贷危机经过各方努力正在逐渐缓解,继美联储在短短8日内两次降息后,股神巴菲特也出手救市,最终刺激美国及周边股市全线反弹。与此同时,国内大雪也逐渐停止,近日国务院总理温家宝主持召开了国务院常务会议,会议指出,在党中央、国务院的领导下,抗击历史罕见的低温、雨雪和冰冻灾害工作取得重大的阶段性胜利。全国交通运输恢复正常,大部分受损电力线路和变电站得到修复,居民生活用电基本恢复正常,电厂煤炭库存稳步回升,受灾群众生活得到及时安置,灾区市场基本稳定,社会秩序井然,并开始研究部署灾后重建工作。另一方面,近几日大小非解禁的市值超过3000亿元,但未见解禁股的成交量出现异动现象,而从新年首日解禁的27只个股的表现看,竟有22只个股跑赢大盘,并没有对市场形成明显冲击。
  短期的利空虽促成股市的调整,但深入分析A股市场的本质,无论从政策面、基本面还是技术面看,中国股市的牛市周期并没有结束。始自2007年10月6124点的调整,应是牛市中一轮大级别的调整,其理论下调点位大约在4100点附近,眼下已基本到达,种种迹象表明,当前大盘已进入底部区域,正处于反复筑底阶段。
  政策面·扶持意味明显
  (一)有多少利好值得期待
  宏观调控呈趋缓态势:上证指数跌破5000点后,从总书记胡锦涛、央行行长周小川等监管层领导,到人民日报、新华社等各大媒体,都频频在不同的场合发表了利好资本市场的言论。近日,著名学者樊纲等管理层重要高参接受人民日报采访,再次提出把握好宏观调控的节奏和力度,强调货币政策相机抉择的重要性。事实上,这是给宏观调控放缓做舆论铺垫,对于整个股市大环境是最大利好。
  灾后重建获政策扶持: 1998年中国南方的洪水灾害,A股市场下跌约25%,上证指数在九江决口之日暴跌 8.36%;2003年的SARS期间,A股市场下跌约15%,此后均展开不同程度的反弹。大的自然灾害对股市的冲击多是短期而且是恐慌性的,灾害过后经济仍将复归原有增长轨道,重建需求甚至将拉动经济短期景气,而股票市场基本上也都能回升到下跌前的开端。此次雪灾对具体行业的影响实际上相当有限,甚至可能成为管理层放松信贷与价格管制的契机。事实上,短期内A股市场因雪灾出现非理性恐慌抛售,已构成绝佳的买点。
  新股发行放缓、新发基金:春节前,新股发行明显放缓,像紫金矿业等大盘股均暂缓发行,相反,节后的第二个工作日,建信基金和南方基金旗下的两只股票型基金就宣布将在2月18日正式发行募集。4100点左右管理层放行两只新基金的发行和放缓发行新股,无疑都是积极的政策信号,似乎暗示着这一点位就是管理层认可的底部区域。
  加息可能性降低:美联储在短短的9天时间内两次大幅降息,导致中美利差倒挂,促进人民币加速升值,近日人民币汇率虽产生大幅震荡,但升值的趋势依旧势不可挡,进而压缩了中国加息的空间,管理层存在利用人民币加速升值替代加息调控的可能。而由于雪灾影响和周边市场的现实情况以及人民币存款利率倒挂等因素,现有的从紧货币政策也存在调整的预期。
  新股发行方式改革:中石油高市盈率发行,上市后一路走低,带来严重的恶果,给市场造成不良的影响。管理层已开始反思,前证监会主席周正庆表示,新股发行制度需要进一步研究,他指出一些新股上市首日价格、市盈率、换手率均居高位,但很快又大跌,他认为新股发行价格光靠市场询价并不一定适合。目前,新方案管理层开座谈会拟议中,应该会给市场带来积极的效果。
  印花税下调等预期:在大势低迷之际,各方均企盼下调证券交易印花税,在世界前六大市场中,除了内地市场征收高达0.3%的股票印花税外,港股每宗交易成本则包括0.1%印花税、0.004%证监征费、0.005%港交所征费及0.15至0.25%的经纪佣金,印花税支出占了总交易成本近30%至39%水平,其它4个主要市场实行零印花税多年。鉴于全球证券交易普遍实行低税率的潮流,由此市场普遍预期,管理层在适当的时机调低股票交易印花税或出台其它利好政策。从目前情况看,尽管这种市场预期很迫切,但短期内实施的可能性有限。
  (二)外围市场营造走暖氛围
  美国大举救市:从美国六大金融机构联手救市提供更长按揭宽限期,到巴菲特愿为其承保的价值8000亿美元市政债券提供再保险,再到美国总统布什2月13日签署一项为期两年、总额达1680亿美元的刺激经济方案,美国的救市频率和力度异常罕见,给次贷危机漩涡中的华尔街股市雪中送炭,最终刺激美股连续三日反弹,港股连续两日上涨,周边市场周四也都出现大幅上涨,鉴于国内外市场联动性增强,A股市场也有望受到带动。
  香港市场呼吁降低印花税:面对香港股市的连续调整以及成交量的不断下滑,港交所高层曾在不足一个月内二次公开向政府提出考虑调减印花税,港交所主席夏佳理表示,希望港府取消或降低股票交易印花税,促使港股成交更趋活跃,有利香港金融市场发展。港股因此展开绝地反击,市场有初步探低回升意味,由于港股印花税本来就低,此举当然会给大陆股市降印花税带来示范效应。
  基本面·牛市基础未变
  (一)国民经济高速增长奠定牛市根基
  目前我国上市公司总市值占GDP的比重已超过100%,已逐渐恢复国民经济“晴雨表”的功能,而我国经济仍保持高速增长的势头,预示上市公司的业绩也将维持较高的增速。像工行、中人寿、万科为代表的一批核心蓝筹股均出台了预增公告,表明市场主流群体仍保持良好的增长趋势。加之两税合并、新的会计制度的实施,以及股权分置改革后,上市公司大股东做大市值维护利益,纷纷展开整体上市或把优质资产注入,为上市公司提供了内生性业绩增长之外的盈利,随着其估值的进一步提高,市场的整体估值也得到进一步提升。实际上,按照2007年业绩计算,目前A股的平均市盈率已下降到30倍左右,对于一些优质的个股而言,已进入合理的投资价值区域。
  (二)人民币加速升值继续推升牛市运行
  美联储的降息政策刺激加速升值,今年以来人民币兑美元汇率急速走高,屡创汇改后新高,一度逼近7.16元,人民币升值带来了实质的资产重估机会,金融、地产、航空、造纸等板块都将因此而大幅受益。更重要的是,人民币升值对海外资产形成巨大的吸引力,可能引发全球资本通过各种渠道进一步流入A股市场,加剧我国流动性过剩的局面,从资金方面而言,将为A股市场提供强大的支持,进而推动牛市继续运行。
  技术面·底部特征突出
  根据波浪理论分析:上证指数从2007年10月开始展开本轮牛市爆发以来最大的一次调整,其中10月16日的6124.04点-11月28日4778.73点为A浪下跌,11月28日-2008年1月5522.78点的反弹为B浪反弹,此后至2月的下跌则为杀伤力最大的C浪下跌。这一轮大规模的调整已持续四个月,最大调整幅度也超过30%,无论从回调幅度还是时间周期看,都已到达结束的临界点。
  根据黄金分割率理论分析:本轮调整不像是针对7月6日3563低点开始的上涨空间为2561点上升行情的回调,而是针对998点~6124点累计共达5126点巨大上升幅度的调整,按其0.382黄金分割率计算,大约位于4165点,这与其2月1日下探的低点4195点已相差不大,且与C浪理论跌幅位置相近。
  根据缺口理论分析:5522点以来已出现了5405点-5396点和4891点-4818点两个向下跳空缺口,前者无疑是突破缺口,宣告了C浪调整的开始,后者则是中继缺口。按照缺口引力的理论,4891点缺口区域将可能成为后市反弹的第一目标,但在补缺或部分补缺甚至连缺口都不碰即止步之后,大盘将不得不面对4000点上方缺口的下行引力。目前07年8月3日的4431点~4438点已被回补,因此07年7月23日的4062点~4091点缺口成为唯一的隐患,这一缺口也与C浪理论跌幅位置相近。
  根据均线理论分析:年线和半年线往往被视为牛熊的分水岭,大盘已彻底突破半年线,按照破A线必然考验B线的运行规律,年线将构成下档最强有力的支撑。2月初沪综指年线被瞬间击穿,但随即引发买盘的涌入,此后出现报复性反弹,还创出沪市历史上最大的单日上涨点数,本周五股指又一次逼近该线时,同样有场外资金逢低买进。目前沪综指年线位于4422.82点,多空双方仍有激烈争夺的可能,从技术角度来说,一旦该线被有效突破,则预示熊市的来临,但就当前所处的宏观背景看,这一观点难以成立。事实上,回顾国内外大牛市的历程,美国、日本、印度等各国的股指,在大牛市中均于调整中数次跌破年线,但都在短时间内重新收复,并于其后不断创出历史新高。而我国著名的“5.19”行情,沪综指也曾于1999年12月,在年线下方运行了5个交易日,最后又重回年线上方,之后股指从1300多点上升到2100多点,至2001年2月,又于年线上下出现震荡,但终得以守住,最终上冲到2245点,因此,可以认为4100点附近应是一个重要的底部区域。
  根据成交量分析:近阶段市场成交量严重萎缩,沪深两市总成交额已连续三天低于1000亿。量能萎缩一方面表明增量资金处于观望状态,等待市场环境的进一步明朗,还不愿贸然进场拿筹码,经历前期的暴挫,投资者保持相当的谨慎也在情理之中;另一方面也表明持股者在目前点位不愿意再进行抛售,做空的力量处于衰竭状态。股谚云“地量见地价”,量能萎缩也是底部的特征之一。
  主流板块分析:在基本面的支撑下,沪深两市中的核心蓝筹股大多已没有调整的力度,从而也限制了指数的调整空间。像工行、中人寿、中国神华(601088行情,股吧)等龙头股大多处于底部构筑阶段,而中石化、大秦铁路(601006行情,股吧)资金回补的迹象更为明显,抛出巨额再融资方案的中国平安(601318行情,股吧)也止跌回稳。纵观两市各权重股,只有中石油创出上市新低,这是由于受10亿限售流通股解禁的影响,但其上市当日换手率却达到7.86%,创出历史第三天量,说明场外资金的承接力度也空前强大。
  对于A股市场2月走势,我们认为上证综指已回落至年线附近,这是自2005年底确立牛市行情以来的第一次,从技术上讲存在较强的支撑,跌破后将进入反弹阶段,不过,回升或许不会一蹴而就。但外围市场回暖、政策暖风频吹、暂停五个多月的股票型基金的发行再度开闸、雪灾之后高层把重建列为重点工作并召开的会议及相关部署等一系列利好因素,将逐渐化解市场的恐惧心态,重新挽回投资者的信心。因此,本轮牛市的第一次中期调整进入底部区域,已基本可以确立,也意味着4000-4500为难得的中线建仓区域,后市大盘有望在筑底充分后寻机发动新一轮反击。但应注意其后市的回升过程中,股指也将面临上档重重阻力的压制。技术上看,1月22日暴跌的缺口4891点附近为第一阻力区,半年线即5240点左右为第二阻力区,而C浪下跌的头部5500点区域则为第三阻力区。
  当前行情处于筑底整固阶段,短线出现反复肯定难免,但是继续大幅度下挫的空间已非常小了,恐慌已经没有必要,杀跌更不足取,用心甄别手中已经介入的品种,进行仓位结构调整,逢低吸纳未来的潜力股并耐心持有才是明智之举。鼠年需机警灵活,波段操作积小胜, 2、3月份主要为蓄势筑底期,可五至七成仓位波段参与,反复高抛低吸,以至积小胜为大胜,至二季度与7、8两月临近奥运期间,则有望爆发今年行情的主升段。
http://www.hongzhoukan.com/Article.aspx?id=4796
牛市征途不会在鼠年终结
【2008-2-16 20:31:50】 策划 《红周刊》编辑部  统筹 江涛
编者按:三个交易日要完成一本周刊的工作量,本周编辑部的压力自然不小,但将鼠年开市后的市场走势作为头条的制作内容,却是大家的工时。上证综指在年线附近反复纠缠,“本轮行情将进入熊市”的论调总是不时被人提起,投资者的信心也似乎在近4个月的下跌中消弥于无形。 6124点就要成为遥不可及的高峰吗?鼠年的机会到底在哪里?我们特邀四位投资风格各有特色的专家坐镇本期“头条文章”,尽管分析的方法不尽相同,但基本的结论几乎是趋于一致的:2008年虽不敢乐观,也不必悲观,很有可能将是一个承上启下之年,成长投资可能成为新热点。
投资攻略·之一
2008年:先破4000点 再试6000点
■ 本刊研发部 曹卫东
股权分置改革这一制度创新的大背景下,自2005年6月以来,中国A股市场走出了一轮前所未有的大牛市行情,沪深两市涨幅及持续上涨时间均创造新的历史纪录。自2007年“5·30”快速调整后,大盘股在机构投资者的强力推动下完成了阶段性的拔高行情。但从2007年10月16日开始,行情出现了近两年半以来的首次中级调整。
对于2008年大盘的整体运行过程,笔者认为,沪市将先破4000点完成此轮中级调整,之后出现年内主升行情,股指将再试6000点或略微突破6124点完成“双头”的构筑,年K线可能收出与1998年相似的形态。

3月底前可能完成调整
由于中国石油自计入上证综合指数以来,其自身的下跌作用于上证综指下跌幅度超过460点,这一现象使当前的所谓年线(即250日平均线)出现一定的异化。从2005年6月开始的本轮行情的运行时间看,上涨了29个交易月,中期调整一般在5~18个月之间,以当前相对猛烈的下跌速率来看,调整行情最快将于3月底前完成
短期看,从2月4日开始,两市正进入一个小级别的反弹。从时间上看,本月月K线收阳的概率较大。而以当前成交量看,几乎无法向上形成有效突破20天短期均线的可能,因此,2月份上证综指将在4000~4750点区域形成多空双方的短暂平衡,而对多方来说,这种无量反弹是消耗型行情。因此,自本月末或3月初开始,将出现年内最后一轮下跌的可能性较大
年内涨幅可能不超过50%
对于此次可能的调整幅度,笔者认为,当前上证综指年线在4400点一线,考虑到中国石油对股指的影响,其“真实”的下破年线相当下破4000点。即使如此,股指向下的幅度也只有10%。而股指要想突破6124点历史高点,也需要新的制度创新才能激发行情重归升途,而2008年这种类似于股权分置改革级别的大机会是不存在的。因此,年内自低位开始的行情,上证综指升幅也不会大到高于50%的幅度。即2008年的行情是对前两年飙升行情的一个整固年,同时也为未来两年的继续上行打好基础。
笔者认为,突破万点的新行情不会早于2009年的5月,即自2007年10月开始的调整、回升、整固的行情将有可能持续18个交易月,目前完成的时间不到四分之一。
猪年牵“白马” 鼠年寻“黑马”
对于当前大盘的调整,笔者认为这是本轮超级牛市中,以基金为代表的主流机构投资者两年来第一次全面地、主动地进行战略性的持股结构调整。在这一过程中,由于权重股的作用,两市出现2006年、2007年那种大级别的单边上涨行情的可能性甚微。因此,从博弈角度看,今年行情中个股选择的优劣就显得更加重要,投资者在前两年比得是谁拿得住股票,只要拿得住,收益不会差。而从今年起,股票选择的优劣将决定全年的投资收益率,如果选不好股,即使一路持有,一年下来亏损50%这样的幅度也是很正常的。
笔者认为,在所谓的蓝筹群体全面回归年线之后,也将出现一轮中级反弹,但这种反弹对大部分蓝筹股来说,仍是一个逃命行情。而作为主题投资来挖掘的新的活跃群体将再创获利神话,“二八”群体中,非基金重仓股即“八”的部分中,将有大量的股票创本轮牛市行情新高,其中,尤以低价重组股、小盘成长股表现最为突出。而从制度创新角度看,笔者坚持看好的创业板很有可能在年内推出,这将使得以主题投资为标志的2008年行情会呈现出“黑马”层出不断、个股热点频现的特征。

弱水三千 只取一瓢
2008年行情对于所有的投资人来说都是一个新的考验,大盘的宽幅震荡对于老股民来说可能会更加适应,而对于在前两年才入市的投资者来说,保住胜利成果将是您今年的首要任务。更何况对大盘的判断与个股的操作本来也是两个层面的问题,因此像什么股指期货、外汇、黄金的投资虽然看上去机会多多,但对于绝大多数投资者来说,仍是一个美丽的陷阱。
“弱水三千只取一瓢”,坚持主题投资,抓住创业板推出这一年内最大的完善证券市场多层次建设的机遇,同时,顺势参与奥运主题及部分中小市值股票的高送转题材的运作,我相信今年的证券市场仍会给您带来充满喜悦的期待和收获。
投资攻略·之二
跌出来的机会更值得重视
本刊特约作者广州证券 袁季
亟需鉴别跌出来的机会
在众多机构的2008年度投资策略中,寻找“跌出来的机会”成为颇具共识的话题,显得做多的底气已不是很足,但做多的意愿仍然强烈。不过,2008年首个交易月上证指数应声下跌16.69%,估计还是出乎多数人预料的。如果说当初对2008年的展望还更多地停留在纸上谈兵,那么,当下跌成为现实时,如何鉴别跌出来的机会已有了现实意义。
自2007年10月16日上证指数见阶段顶部回落以来,至2008年2月14日跌幅超过25%。经过这轮调整之后,各板块的估值水平发生了较大的变化,从这种变化之中应该可以发现市场发出的一些信号(表1)。



从估值变动情况分析,农林牧渔、家用电器、信息设备、医药生物和信息服务等板块在市场下跌区间逆势上涨,前三者市盈率提高了10%以上,显而易见,它们是当前最热门的品种;抗跌的还有餐饮旅游、电子元器件和食品饮料等板块。市盈率降幅超过10%的有9个板块,前四名分别为采掘、有色金属、金融服务和房地产,它们是这轮调整的重灾区,也是拖累指数下行的主要板块。
仅仅通过上述数据就可以发现一个很突出的矛盾,即目前的热门板块普遍估值偏高,PE位居各板块前列,而走势低迷的板块估值具有明显优势。尽管不能忽视主题投资机会的存在,但将眼光放长远些,跌出来的机会更重大,也更具安全边际,甚至可以说,如果具有估值优势的板块不能走稳、走好,其他板块的上涨很难具备持续性,因为市场中枢会继续下行。

自下而上进行选股
当然,投资是综合性决策行为,合理估值需要体系化的支持,而不能简单地依赖一两个指标。由于2008年上市公司的整体业绩增长水平较2007年将有所下降,这会对市场向上拓展空间形成一定制约。在这种情况下,自下而上可能成为多数机构投资者的选股思路,这时候上市公司的成长性就会显得更加重要。根据上述思路,通过WIND资讯系统进行统计,笔者将区间跌幅超过20%、2007年及2008年预测PEG均小于1、2008年预测市盈率低于30倍的个股遴选出来。其中,金融股和有色金属股占了较大份额(见表2)。



综合来看,2008年仍是值得期盼的一年,支持中国证券市场长期向好的基本因素未有根本变化,但2008年更是充满挑战的一年,无论是经济或是市场层面都存在众多不确定因素,我们面对的市场环境将日趋复杂,证券市场波动将进一步加剧,在此需要继续强调理性投资的重要性。在一个与全球金融环境联系越来越紧密、投资品种越来越丰富、机遇和风险并存的市场环境中,冷静分析、控制风险是投资制胜的基本法则。
就近期而言,由于次债问题仍将困扰证券市场,因此,对节前展开的强反弹不能有过高预期,预计较乐观的情况是封闭1月下旬留下的缺口,之后回档整理,但也应对反弹高度可能下滑有所准备,市场反复震荡以探明并构筑底部将是主要基调。
·技术判市·
中国股市陷入熊市论将不攻自破
——以波浪理论试解中国牛市
本刊特约作者深圳鑫鹏信 王伟臣
伴随着各种利多利空消息的蔓延,未来走势更显扑朔迷离,市场出现明显分歧。据此,笔者试图运用波浪理论这个颇具前瞻性的技术分析工具,来研判中国股市未来的可能路径,以求共同探讨。
6124点不会是历史大顶
笔者参照上证和深证指数周K线图判断,中国股市大的浪形结构可以把上证指数1993年2月的1558点作为Ⅰ浪的顶点,第Ⅱ浪回调的低点位于1994年7月的325点,自此开始运行第Ⅲ大浪(主升浪),第Ⅲ大浪由较小级别的五个子浪组成。其中,第一子浪的顶点以2001年的2245点为顶点,2005年6月的998点可作为第二子浪回调的终点。这一划分的结果,使目前自2005年运行以来的浪形结构成为第Ⅲ大浪的第三子浪。此种对中长期市场的波浪研判,我想应可获得多数技术派分析的认同。
但分歧往往发生在对中短期市场的波浪判断上,首先就是第Ⅲ大浪运行的高度问题。目前有一种分析观点认为,第Ⅲ大浪的顶部就是前期高点6124点,而另一种则判断6124点仅是牛市中的一个阶段性顶点,未来的顶点可能出现在7000点、10000点、13000点、17000点、23000点甚至30000点等等。具体哪种判断更可信?我们可以通过对各上升浪运行时间的比例关系来印证。
前文所判断第Ⅲ浪中的第一浪,运行了7年(1994年~2001年),而第Ⅲ浪更大级别的浪形才运行了2年(2005年~2007年),这显然不吻合第Ⅲ浪(主升浪)的时间周期。据此可推断,6124点不是第Ⅲ大浪的终点,而只是第Ⅲ浪中的第三子浪一个阶段性高点的概率更大些。那么,6124点是不是第三子浪的终点呢?笔者认为也不是。因为第Ⅲ浪中第一子浪的上升用了7年的时间,第三子浪的上升即使是等长周期,也需要7年的时间,那么10年后的第三浪高度有多高?只能是猜测了。在此种大的思维框架下,我们可以大致勾勒出未来中国股市的浪形结构图。



未来的第Ⅲ上升大浪目标,我们以乘数法计算(1558-95点)×10倍=15000点的升幅是可以见到的。即第Ⅲ大浪目标位应该在(15000+1000点)=16000点以上。
有了6124点不是第三大浪的终点的前提后,问题就变得相对简单了。我们目前仍处在上升三浪的途中,在上升三浪中,经常会出现“之”字型的调整浪。2007年6月曾经出现了一个小级别的浪型调整,而自2007年11月的调整则是一个相对周期较长的中等级别的调整了。
上证指数周K线图显示,此波调整时间已近4个月,时间区域已大大超过上次的40天调整(6月1日~7月6日),幅度上也大于上波调整。此波调整已经以abc的方式展开。a浪的下跌(6124-4778点)=1346点,如果b浪反弹至5522点的话,c浪下跌的目标位至少应在4176点附近。而通常c浪的杀伤力是比较大的,所以c浪出现延长性的下跌,可能落在3700~4100点的区间内。如果折中计算,c浪的下跌目标位在3900点可能性较大。




有望以4000点为基点展开B浪反弹
当大致清楚了下跌浪的调整后,我们就要开始展望下一个浪形的结构了,因为这才是投资者最为关心的!
笔者提供出现两种情况的可能性:第一种情况。如果将此波定义为大A浪下跌,那么很快会出现大B浪的反弹,目标位是6124点以下。我们假设以匀速的方式完成,诱多的位置应该突破5500点阻力位。如在5800~6000点左右再进行一次更大幅度的大C浪下跌的话,其目标位应是击穿A浪的下跌低点3900~4100点,则大C浪的延伸浪应跌至3000点附近,从而彻底完成对2005年~2007年牛市的调整,为新一轮的牛市奠定基础。
如果此结论成立,则时间范围大致在B浪时间周期(奥运会前)完成,大C浪的下跌在2008年下半年到2009年彻底完成,而2009年“大非”的减持是最为巨大的,市场以低点迎接解禁股的上市,或许是不错的选择。
第二种情况。笔者认为6124~4195点的下跌已经完成了牛市结构中的调整,下一个大级别的调整不是发生在2008年,而是2009年就会出现一个第五上升子浪的格局。如以4000点为基点,上升目标位要是超越6124点的话,则可以看到7000~8000点的位置,以此为基点再行展开A、B、C的下跌调整。
如此一来,C浪的下跌基数位应该会高于第一种分析判断,但是结合2009年“大非”的减持心理压力,似乎第二种的可能性相对较小。因为既然大家已经知道2009年“大非”将大量减持,谁会在7000~8000点接货呢?但是,仍然存在的一个变数是股指期货推出后,超级主力为了营造向下的空间,利用中石油的杠杆效应强行将指数上推至7000~8000点,从而制造多头陷阱,第二种假设就会成立。
综合基本面分析,从长期来讲(5~20年),中国的牛市连第Ⅲ浪都没有走完,“熊市论”不攻自破,调整也只是牛市内部的结构性调整。从中期分析(1~3年),笔者更倾向于第一种分析结果,即市场将会虚势迎“非”,用大级别的调整以时间换空间,营造新的上升大浪!从短期分析(1~6个月),后市将会以4000点为基点出现大B浪的反弹或五浪的上升。
总之,我们认为大盘从2007年10月开始的调整,在持续了4个多月后,走完ABC浪后将在近期结束。这时候迎来的上升行情,一般级别是比较高的,其上升幅度一般也应该是比较大的。
可以把握的几条投资主线
另外,由于中国资本市场的股票绝对数目越来越多,“赚了指数赔了钱”的现象会愈演愈烈。因此,投资者要采取重个股,相对轻指数的操作思路。把握美元贬值、通货膨胀、石油涨价等一系列主线派生出的投资机会,而具体参与的板块范围也可重点关注农业、煤炭、能源以及其他再生能源板块。
另外一条主线是股指期货的推出,股指期货的推出将为中国资本市场带来非常深刻的变化,引发市场的结构性调整,大量的资金将追逐指数权重股,从而使众多非权重股陷入边缘化的境地。这点对于机构投资者来说尤其要把握,进得去出不来将成为常态,著名的“空头司令”中国石油一旦止跌,反而存在较大机会。
·资金流量解析·
反弹能量一触即发 个股选择弃大抓小
■ 本刊记者 侯纯
从市场的资金流量变化,我们可以发现市场的运行趋势和轨迹。虽然在数据部分的“一周资金流量分析”栏目中,我们对每周市场的资金流量变化进行了持续的跟踪和分析,但节后第一周,相关数据显示尽管指数走势并不强劲,但资金流出总量并未创下2007年10月以来的新低,反弹能量正在不断积蓄中,而个股机会则更多地将是“弃大抓小”。
资金净流出未创新低
《红周刊》数据组从2007年7月20日开始,将户深两市每天的资金流入额进行累计,若是净流入则以加计,若是净流出则以减计,结果如图5所示。



我们发现,图中曲线明显可以分为四个阶段。第一阶段从7月20日至10月16日,整整3个月内,A股市场累计净流入达3602亿元,这些增量资金将上证综指从3912.94
点推升至10月16日收盘的6092点,涨幅达56%。第二阶段自2007年10月17日至11月28日,随着大盘权重股的调整,资金大规模从A股流出,至11月28日,累计净流入额只剩下2525亿元,上证综指收于4803点,跌幅达21%。第三阶段自11月29日至2008年1月14日,伴随着中小盘题材股的崛起,资金逐步回流。上证综指虽然只反弹到5497点,涨幅15%,两市资金累计净流入却创下3885亿元的新高。第四阶段自1月15日至2月1日,受美股与港股的暴跌的影响,市场连续3周重挫,上证综指也连续破位,到2月1日收于4320.77点,十几天的时间内下跌了1177点,跌幅与第二阶段相同,也为21%。但是,同期的市场资金累计净流入却并没下破11月28日的2525亿元,只跌到2783亿元后就不再继续流出,这说明12月开始做多的题材股多数已经回落到主力的成本区。如果继续杀跌,主力将被套,这显然是主力所不愿意做的。

机构投资者有望积极做多
从机构方面讲,偏股型基金过去6个月的收益不断减少。据统计,242只股票型与混合型基金,从2007年8月15至2008年2月14日半年的平均收益率仅5.61%,已经逼近亏损边缘,若再下跌,就很容易使2007年三季度入市的基民选择赎回,以避免出现亏损。为防止出现大规模的赎回,一季度后半段,做多提升净值当是基金公司的迫切任务。
从另一个层面看,春节前建信优势动力与南方盛元红利股票型基金同时拿到监管部门的发行批文,这是自2007年9月以来首次获准发行的股票型基金,明显透露出管理层对于市场态度由恐涨向恐跌转变。所以,政策面的变化也有助于股指的企稳。
除了分析基金后市可能的动作外,我们还不能忽视QFII这股力量。2006年以来,QFII基金一直是市场的先行者,公开资料显示,2007年5月份以来,QFII对A股的看法逐渐谨慎,其仓位比重较低。但最近知名基金评级机构理柏基金推出的QFII中国基金A股基金月报显示,QFII中国A股基金在去年11月批量减仓后,于12月开始大举补仓,当月平均加仓幅度就达到3个百分点,平均仓位再度上升,达到了93.16%。虽然再度进入高仓位区域,但是QFII额度由100亿美元增至2007年年底刚刚获批的300亿美元,已为其带来强大的资金储备,而目前A股的调整正好为其带来重新入市的机会。
所以,无论从市场面、资金面还是政策面看,股指继续下跌的空间已经很小了,而市场所累计的反弹能量将会越来越大。




弃大抓小 逢低介入
虽然2007年11月29日至今股指基本上走了个轮回,然而板块与个股的境遇却大不相同。表1~3显示了《红周刊》数据组对这一阶段板块与个股的资金流向统计,明显可以看出资金正从以601板块为代表的大盘权重股中流出,而以题材股为主的主题投资则是资金青睐的主要目标。建议投资者现阶段仍要“弃大抓小”,从主流题材股中挑选出几只逢低介入,也许不久之后就可能有所斩获。

December 21, 2007

高价、地量对称原则?

今天(2007-12-19)A大盘如期大涨100点以上,很多投资者不明白为什么王国强又可以准确的抓住这个时间,现在我就来揭密一下这次判断的时间之窗。
股市中的规律很多,但普通投资者很难洞察,这次的时间窗我用的就是股市对称的规律,当然不讲明的话,你是不会发现哪里有对称点的。11月23日是这次调整的地量日,当天沪市成交只有510亿,这个地量就是一个轴心,以这个轴心可以看到两个对称点,第一个是10月31日(这次调整的起跌点),10月31日距离11月23日是18个交易日,11月23日到昨天也是18个交易日,这个对称点是根据高价、地量对称原则发现的,所以只是看这一点就应该知道今天是个非常重要的时间,另外昨天大盘缩量40%,也是重要变盘信号,再结合一下成交量,今天的时间之窗自然就再次被我稳稳的抓住了。既然是对称点产生的时间窗,当然今天就是一个新重要拐点,今天向上,所以新拐点造就的新趋势是向上。

2007-12-21 别急 等待第2个启动点
19日800多亿的成交量推动大盘涨了100多点,20日900多亿的成交量同样推动大盘上涨了100多点,但是今天1000多亿的成交量却只推动大盘上涨了50多点,1000多亿成交量怎么还没有800多亿的成交量上涨的多呢,很显然,今天大盘表面繁荣,内在却有点弱了。成交量和价格是股市最基本的元素,但很多人却只是注意表面现象,对基本元素反倒忽略了。