Monday, August 22, 2011

The Economy Doesn’t Drive the Stock Market, the Stock Market Drives the Economy

The Economy Doesn’t Drive the Stock Market, the Stock Market Drives the Economy

Link to Financial Highway

The Economy Doesn’t Drive the Stock Market, the Stock Market Drives the Economy

Posted: 22 Aug 2011 04:00 AM PDT


My first article for this site was titled The Shiller Revolution — The New Way to Invest. I believe that all of us would become Valuation-Informed Indexers if we understood it well. The trouble is — it's very different from what we are used to. Valuation-Informed Indexing stands most of the core beliefs of Buy-and-Holders on their heads. It takes some time getting used to this new way of thinking about stocks.

Buy-and-Holders believe that economic changes determine stock prices. If we go into a recession, the profits of the companies we are invested in are diminished. So stock prices drop. It makes sense.

At least it seems to make sense.

NewYork586
Creative Commons License photo credit: Royal Olive

I don't believe anymore that this is how it really works. As a Valuation-Informed Indexer, I believe that the Buy-and-Holders have it exactly backwards. It's not that the economy drives the stock market. It's that the stock market drives the economy.

Say that a friend of yours is a secret alcoholic. Because you are close to him, you know he has a problem. But the guy is successful and on the surface appears to be a happy, healthy fellow.

Over time, though, his drinking problem worsens. He begins missing deadlines at work. He is fired.

Now he gives in to drink entirely. His wife leaves him. He ends up in the gutter.

Outsiders who knew nothing about the drinking problem until they saw what happened after he lost his job might conclude that it was the job loss that caused all his troubles. If only he hadn't been fired, he never would have turned to drink and lost his wife. Those who are better informed understand that it was the drinking that caused the job loss, not the job loss that caused the drinking.

So it is with stocks.

The market didn't crash until September 2008. But it became a time bomb in January 1996, when prices reached levels so insanely high that a crash became inevitable. If you check out Shiller's book (Irrational Exuberance), you will see that he predicted the stock crash and the economic crisis years before they happened. So did all other Valuation-Informed Indexers.

None of the Buy-and-Holders saw these dark days coming. What is it that the practitioners of the one investing strategy know that practitioners of the other investing strategy do not?

What we know is that stock prices always return to fair value. This is an Iron Law of the stock market. It is the very purpose of a market to set prices properly. So there is zero chance that stock prices could ever rise to the levels that applied in the late 1990s and early 2000s and then just remain there indefinitely. Stocks priced at those levels always crash hard. There's never been one exception in the historical record. There never will be one.

If you want to know whether a stock crash and an economic crisis are on the way within a few years, just do the math. Stocks were priced at $12 trillion above fair value at the top of the bubble. We knew with certainty that that $12 trillion in pretend wealth would be disappearing from the U.S. economy over the course of 10 years or so. And it is of course simple common sense that an economy that loses $12 trillion in buying power is going to crash. When people don't have money to buy things, businesses fail and workers lose their jobs.

Why is it that the Buy-and-Holders see it the other way around?

At the time Buy-and-Hold was developed (the 1960s and early 1970s), we did not know that valuations affect long-term returns. People believed in those days that the market is efficient, that stocks are always properly priced. It was not until 1981 that Shiller published his research revealing the realities.

Most of us believe today that economic developments determine stock prices only out of habit. That was once state-of-the-art thinking on the topic and we haven’t updated our thinking to reflect the research of the past 30 years. Once we do, most of us will believe precisely the opposite — that it is the stock market that determines where the economy is headed.

This is an exciting development.

We have had four economic crises in U.S. history. All four of them were preceded by a time when stock prices reached insanely high levels. There has never been a time when stock prices reaches insanely high levels and we did not experience an economic crisis and there has never been a time when we experienced an economic crisis not having first experienced insanely high stock prices. The correlation is perfect.

What if we warned people of the dangers of high stock prices?

There's reason to believe that we would never again experience the kind of economic crisis we are all enduring today.

That's Valuation-Informed Indexing. Valuation-Informed Indexers don't stick with the same stock allocation when prices rise to insanely high levels. We don't lose large portions of our wealth in stock crashes. So we don't stop spending following stock crashes.

It's not just that we now know of a way to help investors earn far higher returns at greatly reduced risk. If the bull market of the late 1990s was the true cause of the current financial crisis, we can stop future crises by stopping future bull markets. That's what Valuation-Informed Indexing (which teaches investors to sell stocks when prices get out of hand) is all about.

Things look bleak today. But underneath the surface there are some highly encouraging developments taking place.

How-to Streamline the Rebate Process

Posted: 22 Aug 2011 04:00 AM PDT


Manufacturers love rebate programs. That’s because a whopping 60 percent of customers never follow through to get their money back.

Retailers love rebates because they attract shoppers in search of good deals.

Consumers, however, usually find rebates to be too much of a hassle to deal with after they’ve purchased a product, yet they still get fooled into looking only at the “after rebate” price.

Sure it takes some work to track all that paperwork and make sure the manufacturer follows through on its offer, but money you get back is worth the extra bit of time.

Here are 11 tips to make the rebate process run smoothly.

1. Run the Numbers
Consider whether a $100 product with a $20 rebate is really worth the hassle if you can buy it elsewhere for $85. Not to mention, with so many discounts and promo codes available from sites like PromoCodes.us, it might be worth shopping online for a better deal and saving a stamp.

2. Check the Expiration Date
Verify the deadline by which you must file for a rebate. If the expiration date is unreasonable, skip it. If you can make the deadline, then hop to it and start the paperwork immediately.

3. Read The Rules
You’re going to need specific paperwork to get your money back, so don’t throw anything away until you read the details. You’ll likely need the UPC from the package, your store receipt and the rebate slip. Some manufacturers like to hide the rules on the inside of a product box so you have to purchase it first. You might want to give these “offers” a pass.

4. Follow The Directions
If the instructions require you to stand on your head while filling out the forms, then Ally Oop! Also make sure you fill out every line on the application.

5. One Rebate Per Transaction
Since you usually have to submit the original receipt, don’t combine rebate purchases on one receipt.

6. Mark The Date
Note on your calendar the date for the check’s estimated arrival, the offer name, address, amount and date submitted. If you frequently apply for rebates, you might want to use the Rebate Reminder freeware.

7. Make Copies
Scan or copy all paperwork before mailing and staple the packet together for future reference. Keep your notes on deadlines, problems, etc. with this packet.

8. Know The Status
Many rebate houses provide a URL so you can track your redemption.

9. Watch The Mail
Rebate checks sometimes look like junk mail. Make sure you don’t toss them out.

10. Stay On Top Of Things
If you haven’t received a check by the due date, begin to document your tracking calls and searches and keep this paper with the previously mentioned packet.

11. File A Complaint
If you encounter major problems that can’t be resolved, report the situation to the Better Business Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission. You also might want to write the state attorney general office in your state or the state in which the rebate-sponsor is located.

Andrea Woroch is a consumer and money-saving expert for Kinoli Inc. As a nationally recognized media source, Andrea has been featured on Good Morning America, NBC Today Show, MSNBC, New York Times Bucks Blog, Kiplinger Personal Finance, CNNMoney and many more. To view recent interviews or for more savings tips visit AndreaWoroch.com.

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