Jim Jubak

To print article, click Print on your browser's File menu.

Go back


Posted 11/15/2005

Jubak's Picks
Check out Jim's top stocks for the next 12 months


50 Best Stocks Today

See Jim's list of the 50 best stocks in the world for the long term.


Future Fantastic 50 Stocks

See Jim's reader-assisted Future Fantastic 50 portfolio.




Cool Tools
Get market news by e-mail
See if refinancing works
Personal finance bookshelf
Letters from MSN Money readers
Find It!
Article Index
Fast Answers
Tools Index
Site map
MSN Money









Jubak's Journal

Recent articles:
• 5 value stocks for a momentum market, 11/11/2005
• 5 energy stocks for the cold of winter, 11/9/2005
• How to beat the short-term traders, 11/8/2005
More...



 Jubak's Journal
Why the greenback is back

Remember all those dire predictions about the dollar crumbling in 2005? Fact is, it's been rising all year. Here's why -- and why the rally may stall in 2006.

By Jim Jubak

The U.S. trade deficit for September: $66.1 billion.

A new record and up almost $7 billion from August. With the U.S. now importing 63% more than it exports, nobody is projecting that the trade deficit will drop below $60 billion a month anytime soon. For the year, the total could well pass $700 billion, easily trumping the record $665 billion trade deficit of 2004.

And yet the U.S. dollar rallied on Nov. 10 in the face of the day's bad news of this soaring trade deficit. The U.S. dollar now stands near a two-year high against the euro, the European currency that was supposed to supplant it. And you have to go back to September 2003 to find the last time the U.S. dollar was this strong against the Japanese yen.

Remember back at the end of 2004, when pundits were falling over themselves to predict disaster for the U.S. dollar in 2005? I sure do, because I was one of the folks predicting a dollar decline in 2005. I had seen the error of my ways and reversed my opinion on the dollar in my June 14 column, "Why we were so wrong about 2005." So, I was only wrong on the dollar for half a year. But I still never imagined the dollar would post something like a 15% gain against the euro at this point in the year.
See the news
that affects your stocks.

Check out our
new News center.



A method to the dollar madness
So what's going on? Currencies are supposed to tumble in price when trade deficits climb this high.

There is a logic to the dollar's rally, though. I'll spell it out for you and then tell you how I think this logic will play out for the tail end of 2005. And explain why you should look out for a turn in the dollar's fortunes in 2006. I'll finish with some suggestions on how to profit from the dollar's current strength and the turn I see ahead in 2006.


Related news and commentary on MSN Money
Related resources image
5 reasons the Fed will fumble in 2006
5 stocks safe from rising rates
How the Fed lost the inflation fight
Why gold is gleaming again
Funds for the currency cowboy in you


Three reasons explain the dollar's surprising rally this year:

The dollar's up because the euro is down
The U.S. dollar doesn't have to be a perfect currency; it just has to be better than the competition, the euro. (The yen, given Japan's negative real interest rates, isn't a starter in this race.) And it would be hard over the last six months to find a currency that's suffered more body blows than the euro.

There's the France problem: The country's immigrant population has risen up in protest against problems that include 40% youth unemployment, and the French government has shown itself startlingly clueless about how to stop the rioting and fix the underlying problems.

There's the German problem: Everyone (well, investors and economists, anyway) got excited that the fall's election might sweep a new government to power with a mandate to transform the country's rigid economy. Instead, the vote went just about straight down the middle, leaving the country to be governed by a grand coalition that doesn't agree on much of anything.

There's the Italy problem: The country's budget deficit is way, way above the rules set by the European Union, and, with the Italian economy struggling to grow at all, nobody in Rome really wants to propose budget cuts.

And finally, there's the United Kingdom problem: The Tony Blair government saw its anti-terrorist legislation go down to brutal defeat in the House of Commons on Nov. 9, just in time to undermine Blair's ability, as president of the European Union for six months, to broker a deal on the EU budget. Talks on the budget collapsed in June with Britain and France at loggerheads.

That's enough to make anyone think twice about buying euros, no?

The Fed has made it pay to buy dollars
Alan Greenspan may find it painfully puzzling that the Federal Reserve's interest-rate increases, which have taken short-term rates from 1% in June 2004 to 4% currently, haven't pushed up long-term interest rates significantly. But, at the Nov. 10 close of 4.56%, the yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note is significantly higher than investors collect on either European or Japanese bonds. That day, the 10-year German bond was yielding 3.51%, and the Japanese government's 10-year bond was paying 1.57%. (The U.S. bond market was closed on Nov. 11 for Veterans Day.)

Any wonder, then, that the U.S. Treasury's auction of 10-year notes on Nov. 10 was massively oversubscribed, with $29 billion in bids for the $13 billion in bonds offered? If foreigners are so willing to buy our IOUs, why is the size of the trade deficit something to worry about? Pretty much sums up the attitude on Wall Street.

High oil prices aren't just a problem; they're also a solution
High oil prices added about $1.5 billion to the trade deficit in September, even as the volume of imported oil dropped by about 2%. The U.S. imported about $23.8 billion in petroleum and petroleum products in September, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis report (.pdf file). That put a lot of money in the hands of Middle Eastern central banks and investors, who immediately put those dollars (remember, oil trades in dollars) to work earning interest by buying dollar denominated assets such as Treasury bonds.

The future is likely to bring major changes in direction to all three of the trends now driving the U.S. dollar higher against the euro and the yen. The shift is likely to be gradual. But by mid-2006 -- six to nine months from now, I think, is a reasonable time frame -- we're likely to see the dollar in at least modest decline against both the euro and the yen.

It's hard to imagine that, in a year, the political and economic chaos in Europe will be worse than it is now. For one thing, with the EU's four largest economies in one kind of crisis or another, the union has run out of economies big enough to get the financial world's knickers in a knot if they joined the parade down the road to perdition. No disrespect meant, but a crisis in Belgium or Portugal isn't going to alarm many on Wall Street.

Six months from now, the French government is likely to have muddled its way to some kind of reduction in violence, the failures of the German grand coalition will have gone from alarming headlines in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung to the butt of Berlin cabaret comics. Without the British prime minister in the hot seat, the French will be less interested in publicly humiliating the opposition.

And the interest-rate gap between the U.S. and the rest of the world is likely to narrow, or at least stop expanding. The Bank of Japan has started to pave the way for reversing course with predictions of rising economic growth and joyous proclamations of a return of barely measurable inflation. Sometime in 2006, the Federal Reserve will stop raising short-term interest rates -- the betting on Wall Street is on an end to interest rate hikes at 4.75% to 5.5%. The lower end of that range is just a December, January and March rate hike away. If the Fed stops raising rates, that will give euro and yen rates a chance to catch up -- or at least stop them from looking less competitive with each passing Fed meeting.

From U.S. homes to Saudi hands
The shifts in these two trends won't send the dollar into a tailspin unless the great U.S. real-estate ATM seriously flags in 2006. The global flow of dollars currently goes from real-estate-rich U.S. consumers, via gas pumps, to the portfolios of Middle East (and other oil-exporting) nations and then back into U.S. Treasurys.

But that's not a closed system. It requires the U.S. oil consumer to come up with a steady supply of new dollars to feed into the dollar pipeline. Since the Federal Reserve started pumping up real-estate prices to cushion the blow of the bursting of the stock market bubble in 2000, U.S. consumers have found those dollars by refinancing their mortgages or borrowing against the equity in their homes.

Home prices don't have to fall to reduce the flow of dollars from those sources: The regular flow of dollars from real estate to gas pump to the Treasury market has depended on a constant rise in real-estate prices. There's evidence now that price increases are starting to slow in many of the most overheated markets. That will mean fewer dollars for the pipeline and at some point a reduction in demand for U.S. Treasurys.
I'm not looking for a collapse in the dollar in 2006, just a gradual reversal of the recent price gains in the currency and then a drift lower.

Playing 2006
I think there are two ways to position your portfolio for that possibility in 2006.

  • Buy stocks -- especially those of exporters -- denominated in yen and euros. These exporters will benefit in the short term as a stronger dollar makes their products cheaper in the U.S. market. And your portfolio will benefit in the longer run if the yen or the euro appreciate against the dollar, making stocks denominated in those currencies worth more in dollars to U.S. investors. I added an ETF, iShare MSCI Japan (EWJ, news, msgs), to Jubak's Picks recently to pick up exposure to Japan's big exporting companies. With Europe, I'd like to be a little more selective and target companies in the European Union's biggest exporting economy, Germany. To gain exposure to the German export sector, I'm adding Siemens AG (SI, news, msgs) to Jubak's Picks with this column. (I'm also selling a U.S. exporter, Joy Global (JOYG, news, msgs), out of Jubak's Picks with this column out of a belief that a rising dollar has eroded the competitive position of U.S. exporters.)
    Jim Jubak's newsletter
    Get the latest from Jim Jubak. Sign up to receive his free weekly newsletter.

    Your e-mail address:
     

    Learn more about newsletters
     


  • Put back on some of the hard-asset plays. These worked especially well when the market was trying to cope with currency, interest rate and inflation volatility. With this column, I'm also adding a third stock to the gold position in Jubak's Picks.

    In my next column, I'll take a look at the recent warning from Toll Brothers (TOL, news, msgs) of a slowdown in housing deliveries. If it is a sign of tough times to come for the mortgage sector, who will wind up holding the bag? (Hint: Thanks to the derivative market, it's not the usual suspects.) 



    Updates

    Sell Joy Global (JOYG, news, msgs)
    The strong dollar gives and the strong dollar takes away. With the dollar up against the euro, Joy Global is selling into a headwind. I don't think that spells doom for sales growth, but it does spill some wind out of the company's sails for the next six months or so. The stock has looked relatively weaker in the last month or so -- partly on the pull back in the energy sector, which I think has another couple of months to run -- and so I'm taking my profits here and shifting my investment into Siemens AG (SI, news, msgs), a German exporter that gets an edge with U.S. customers from the strong dollar. Joy Global is up 31% since I added it to Jubak's Picks on June 7, 2005.

    Buy Siemens AG (SI, news, msgs)
    With Siemens AG you get three trends for the price of one. First, this German exporter (power generation and medical equipment, for example) gets a competitive advantage, good until the middle of 2006 in my opinion, as a weak euro and a stronger dollar price its products more competitively for U.S. and other dollar-denominated customers. Second, as the dollar's strength and the euro's weakness reverse in the end of 2006, U.S. based investors will pick up gains from the European currency's appreciation. And, third, the company is in the midst of a turnaround that should result in a series of quarters in 2006 dominated by special charges but that should still drive the stock upwards as investors start to anticipate improved performance in 2007 as a result of these fixes. A sign of things to come, I believe: for the company's fiscal fourth quarter, ended on September 30, sales climbed 13%, orders were up 16%, and income from continuing operations dropped almost 40%. As of November 15, I'm adding the shares to Jubak's Picks with an October 2006 target price of $83 a share.

    Buy Glamis Gold (GLG, news, msgs)
    I'm adding Glamis Gold to Jubak's Picks on weakness. The third quarter, reported on November 1, was expected to be weak due to lower production and higher fuel costs and Glamis Gold didn't disappoint. The company reported earnings of 2 cents a share, below the consensus of 4 cents for the quarter. The price of gold itself has corrected recently on strength in the U.S. dollar (investors flock to gold when the dollar looks weak and sell when it looks strong) and on selling by hedge funds and other investors who had bet on gold climbing in the wake of this fall's hurricanes and run-away energy prices. But the company increased its forecast for 2005 production, indicating that the fourth quarter is likely to be strong, to 425,000 ounces from the prior 400,000 ounces. Production will increase further in 2006 to a projected 650,000 ounces of gold. Cost should drop in 2006 as well (to $153 per ounce total cash operating cost from $196 in 2005), as two key mines move from startup status to full production. That will produce a startling swing in the company's cash flow to $149 million in 2006 from $70 million in 2005 and $46 million in 2004. Combining that increase in production, with the drop in cost per ounce, and the likelihood that the dollar will weaken toward the end of 2006 as the Federal Reserve stops raising interest rates, leads me to a target price of $25 a share by May 2006.

    New developments on past columns

    Merck's future rides on jury verdict
    More fall out from Merck's (MRK, news, msgs) victory in the second Vioxx trial -- and it sure doesn't make the company's survival any more likely. New Jersey judge Carol Higbee, who heard the recent trial and who has 3,500 Vioxx suits before her, has said that she wants the next 10 or so trials to involve plaintiffs who took the drug for 18 months or longer. In the first two trials -- one big loss in Texas and the New Jersey win -- Merck was able to argue that the plaintiffs took Vioxx for such a short time that the drug couldn't be blamed for their heart attacks. That defense will go out the window if Higbee's lets her order stand. And that would, in turn, dash Merck's hopes of racking up a string of victories that might reduce the number of suits against it or lead to a settlement on terms favorable to the company.

    5 reasons the Fed will fumble in 2006
    I added Coach (COH, news, msgs) to Jubak's Picks back in April to up my exposure to the retail sector. Despite the slump in some parts of that sector, Coach has shown no signs of slowing: earnings for the first quarter of fiscal 2006 came in at 26 cents a share, a penny ahead of expectations. Total sales grew 30% from the same quarter of fiscal 2005. Since then, the revival of the Japanese economy has given me another reason to own Coach. Sales in Japan grew 23% (in dollars or 24% corrected for exchange rate shirts) from the same quarter in fiscal 2005. Best of all, the company increased its earnings guidance for fiscal 2006 to a minimum $1.18 per share, up from $1.15. (The company is also buying back its own shares: it bought 920,000 shares in the just completed quarter at a cost of $30 million and has $220 million remaining for share repurchases in fiscal 2006.) As of November 15, I'm increasing my target price to $40 a share by May 2006. (Full disclosure: I own shares of Coach.)

    Editor's Note: A new Jubaks Journal is posted every Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday. Please note that Jubak's Picks recommendations are for a 12-to-18 month time horizon. See Jubak's CNBC Picks for shorter six month recommendations. For picks with a truly long-term perspective see Jubak's 50 best stocks in the world or Future Fantastic 50 Portfolio.

    E-mail Jim Jubak at jjmail@microsoft.com.

    At the time of publication, Jim Jubak owned of controlled shares in the following equities mentioned in this column: Coach and IShares MSCI Japan. He does not own short positions in any stock mentioned in this column.

  •  

    MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances.