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Charles P. Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management, Eleventh Edition, John Wiley & Sons

The document discusses using a top-down approach to analyze the stock market, beginning with examining the influence of the general economy and then analyzing specific industries and companies, noting the relationship between economic growth and stock prices and the difficulty in consistently forecasting short-term market movements but the importance of analyzing interest rates, inflation, and expected corporate profits.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
291 views23 pages

Charles P. Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management, Eleventh Edition, John Wiley & Sons

The document discusses using a top-down approach to analyze the stock market, beginning with examining the influence of the general economy and then analyzing specific industries and companies, noting the relationship between economic growth and stock prices and the difficulty in consistently forecasting short-term market movements but the importance of analyzing interest rates, inflation, and expected corporate profits.

Uploaded by

Reza Cahya
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Chapter 13

Charles P. Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management,


Eleventh Edition, John Wiley & Sons

13-1
Objective
Understand the relationship between the
stock market & the economy
Analyze conceptually the determinants of the
stock market
Make some basic forecasts of possible
changes in the level of the market

13-2
Top-down Approach
An Overview of the Valuation Process
Three-Step Top-Down
Process
 First examine the
influence of the general
economy on all firms and
the security markets
 Then analyze the
prospects for various
global industries with the
best outlooks in this
economic environment
 Finally turn to the analysis
of individual firms in the
preferred industries and
to the common stock of
these firms.
13-3
Top-down Approach
 Analyze economy-stock market  industries 
individual companies
Need to understand economic factors that affect
stock prices initially
Use valuation models applied to the overall market
and consider how to forecast market changes
Stock market’s likely direction is of extreme
importance to investors
Should also take a global perspective because of
linkages

13-4
Top-down Approach
Investors begin with the economy and the overall
market
Understand economic factors that affect stock prices
GDP (real vs nominal)
Inflation
Labour
Use economy-stock market relationship to apply
valuation models to stock market
 Stock market’s likely direction is of extreme
importance to investors

13-5
• Same analysis can generally be applied to foreign
markets
• Currency changes can affect
⇒Should also take a global perspective because of linkages
• Ie; how is the euro currency performing, and how will
expected movements in the euro affect return to U.S
investors?
• Ie rise in euro mean that the dollar depreciated against the
euro. A falling dollar helps the earnings of the US corporation
with significant international operation. ⇒ US investors
benefited from the dollar decline

13-6
Assessing the economy***
• A basic measure of the economy is GDP
• DEFINITION: Market value of final goods and services
produced by economy, usually in a year
GDP = C + I + G + Net Export
• Real and nominal measures
• Real GDP is equal to the economic output adjusted for the
effects of inflation.
• Nominal GDP is economic output without the inflation
adjustment
• Real GDP is single best measure of overall economic
activity
• Increases and decreases directly affect companies
• If growth GDP is slow  corporate revenue will slow and
profits will slow  the stock market reacts to this prospect
negatively

13-7
Economy and the Stock Market
Direct relationship between the two
Economic business cycle
Recurring pattern of aggregate economic
expansion and contraction
Cycles have a common framework
 trough  peak  trough
Can only be neatly categorized by length and
turning points in hindsight

13-8
Business Cycle
National Bureau Economic Research
Is a private nonprofit organization, measures
business cycles and officially decides on the
economic” turning points”
 Monitors economic indicators
 Dates business cycle when possible

Composite indexes of general economic activity


Series of leading, coincident, and lagging indicators
of economic activity to assess the status of the
business cycle
Used to indicate peaks and troughs in business cycle

13-9
Composite indexes
Leading indices:
 stock prices
 consumer expectations
 money supply
 interest rate spread

Coincident indicators:
 industrial production
 manufacturing
 trade sales

Lagging indicators:
 duration of unemployment
 commercial and industrial loans outstanding
13-10
The global perspective
Economies around the world are now more
integrated and linked to each other because
of increased trade and capital flows among
countries.
The most important reason for synchronized
recession among many countries is a common
shock
 1970 oil price shock
2001 collapse of technology sector and with it
the technology stocks…

13-11
Stock Market and Business Cycle

Stock prices lead the economy


 Historically, the most sensitive indicator
 Stock prices consistently turn before the economy
 If the economy is doing badly, most companies will
also be performing badly, as will the stock market
 If the stock price are falling sharply, confidence is
impacted and spending power is decreased.
How reliable is the relationship?
 The ability of the market to predict recoveries is much
better than its ability to predict recessions
Expansions typically end for one of the following
reasons:
 Overheating of the economy with rising inflation (Fed comes in to control)
 External shock—such as sharp rise in oril prices or a financial crash following a break
in an speculative bubble

13-12
Macroeconomic Forecasts of the Economy

How good are available forecasts?


Prominent forecasters have similar predictions
and differences in accuracy are very small
 Investors can use any such forecasts
Does monetary activity initiated by the FED
forecast economic activity?
Changes due to shifts in supply or demand
Actions of Federal Reserve important

13-13
Forecast of the economy***
• Monetary policy assumed to have important
effect on economy,
• Increases in money supply (demand) tend to
increase (decrease) economic activity •
• Federal Reserve’s impact •
• Affects monetary policy and interest rates

13-14
Reading Yield Curves
Shows relationship between bond yields and
time, holding issuer constant
Upward sloping and steepening curve implies
accelerating economic activity
Flat structure implies a slowing economy
Inverted curve may imply a recession

13-15
• The economy and stock market booms
• Most stock market booms have occurred during
periods of relatively economic growth and
productivity growth

• Economic slowdowns and bear markets


• When economic activity slowdown possibly
resulting a recession,
⇒ bear market: a decline in a major market index
of at least 20%

13-16
Understanding the Stock Market

Market measured by index or average


Most indexes designed for particular market
segment (ex. blue chips)
Most popular indexes
Dow-Jones Industrial Average
S&P 500 Composite Stock Index
 Favored by most institutional investors and money
managers

13-17
Uses of Market Measures
• Shows how stocks in general are doing at any time
• Gives a feel for the market
• Many investors are encouraged to invest if stocks
are moving upward,
• Downward trends, may encourage some to liquidate
their holding and invest
• Shows where in the cycle the market is and sheds
light on the future
• Aids investors in evaluating downside
• Helps judge overall performance

13-18
Determinants of Stock Prices
Corporate earnings and expected inflation
affects expected real earnings
Interest rates and required rates of return also
affected by expected inflation
Stock prices affected by earnings, rates
If economy is prospering, earnings and stock
prices will be expected to rise

13-19
Determinants of Stock Prices
• From constant growth version of Dividend
Discount Model
P0 =D1/(k-g)
• Inverse relationship between interest rates
(required rates of return) and stock prices is
not linear
• Determinants of interest rates also affect
investor expectations about future

13-20
Forecasting Changes in the Market
• Difficult to consistently forecast the stock market,
especially short term
• future cannot be predicted based on past information
• Can not forecast the market using available information
• Reasonable estimates of the future involves analyzing the
overall economy
• To understand the stock market and make reasonable
judgment about future movements in stock price,
Investors must analyze:
• Interest rates
• Expected corporate profit

• Investors tend to lose more by missing a bull market


than by dodging a bear market

13-21
Using the Business Cycle to Make Forecasts

Leading relationship exists between stock


market prices and economy
Can the market be predicted by the stage of the
business cycle?
Consider business cycle turning points well in
advance, before they occur
Stock total returns could be negative (positive)
when business cycle peaks (bottoms)
Stock price decline in recession ,and the
steeper the recession the steeper the decline.

13-22
Using the Business Cycle to Make Market Forecasts

If investors can recognize the


bottoming of the economy
before it occurs, a market
rise can be predicted
Switch into stocks, out of
cash
As economy recovers, stock
prices may level off or even
decline
Based on past, the market
P/E usually rises just before
the end of the slump
13-23

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