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A Few More Bubbles Fin254f: Spring 2010 Lecture notes 2.3-2.4 Readings: Shiller 1-2, Kindleberger and Aliber, 8, "What Moves Stock Prices"
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Outline The U.S. stock market summary The U.S. real estate market Three recent events Japan 1980's East Asia 1990's U.S: dot.com 90-2000's
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Real U.S. Stock Prices
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Shiller's P/D plots
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and U.S. Price/Earnings Ratio 1881-2009
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Unusual Periods for U.S. Twentieth century peak, June 1901, P/E = 25.2 Real earnings double over previous 5 years Real return 10 years after this = 4.4% per year, 20 years = -0.2% (includes dividends) Sept 1929: P/E = 32.6, Real index does not return to this price level until mid 1950’s Real price drop into early 1930’s = -80.6% Real return = -1.4% over 10 years, 0.4% over next 20 years (includes dividends)
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Unusual Periods for U.S. January 1966: P/E = 24.1, Kennedy/Johnson peak Earnings up over previous 5 years 36% Real stock prices do not return to this level until 1992 Real return over next 10 years = -1.8%, 1.9% over the next 20 years
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Market Crashes and News "What moves stock prices" Largest moves and news Oct 19, 1987 (-20) Oct 21, 1987 (+9) (4) Sept 3rd, 1946 (-6.7) no basic reason (6) Sept 26, 1955 (-6.62) Eisenhower heart attack Some other important days Dec 8, 1941 (-4.4) Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor Oct 23, 1962 (-2.7) Cuban missile crises Nov 22, 1963 (-2.8) Kennedy assassinated
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U.S. Interest Rates
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Few obvious movements with stock prices
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International Comovements Figure 1.2
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Outline The U.S. stock market summary The U.S. real estate market Three recent events Japan 1980's East Asia 1990's U.S: dot.com 90-2000's
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U.S. House Prices (long)
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U.S. Real Estate Prices Shiller figure 2.1 Predictability (R2 = 0.5) Run ups are small than stocks Past not informative (nonstationary??) Statistics difficult Fundamentals not well connected (fig. 2.1)
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Other Data Features Several major declines Small run up in the 1920’s Many regional bubbles Geography is important Figs 2.2, 2.3 Not all cities move together, but more so now? Large (and permanent) increase after WWII GI Bill of rights Home construction restricted during the war, then expands
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Why Do People Think Home Prices Always Rise? Two possibilities Infrequent transactions Inflation Example House bought in 1948 for $16,000, and sold for $190,000 in 2004 Total real return = 48% Real return per year = 1% Also, property probably improved a lot over time (different goods) - also in index too
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Special Things about Real Estate Long term comparative data Difficult Hard to find Curious features about Care and owner/renter incentives Special tax breaks Leverage Cross country differences
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Outline The U.S. stock market summary The U.S. real estate market Three recent events Japan 1980's East Asia 1990's U.S: dot.com 90-2000's
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Bubbles in Asia (80’s-90’s) Kindleberger/Aliber (8) Japan 1980’s Land values: Imperial palace = California Market value of Japanese land = 2 x U.S. (land area = 5 percent of US) Stock market: Twice the market val of US 7/10 largest banks are Japanese (assets) Japanese firms acquiring “trophy” properties Rockefeller center Pebble Beach Golf course
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Japanese Growth History Late 1800’s begins to industrialize Adopting foreign institutional models Early industry built around feudal families Large multi-industry holding companies General MacArthur outlaws at end of WWII Firms replace this with “cross-holdings” Holding of other firm’s shares 1950’s-1960’s, Japan starts to catch up Growth rates near 10 percent per year
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Japan in 1980’s Global economic power World leader in Cars Electronics Photo optics Industrial planning: “Japan Inc.” Financial structures: bank lending
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Financial Regulation Restrictions on interest rates Negative real returns Leaves only real estate and stocks with positive returns Mid 80’s begins to deregulate Begins to financially become more global Real estate and stock markets continue rising Bank assets increase, collateral increases, lending increases Cross holdings magnify changes in asset values: Buy shares of other firms rather than investing
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Three Factors in the Japanese Real Estate Bubble Long term positive returns (lots of scarce land?? Phoenix versus Tokyo) Financial liberalization: Opens up more real estate lending Monetary growth Bank of Japan intervenes to keep value of Yen low relative to the dollar Money supply expands Banks increase reserves : can lend more
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Stock Market Bubble Continues Cross holdings drive firm and investor wealth As value of Japanese market rises, international funds allocate larger amounts to Japan Drives prices higher (Same in dot com bubble: Passive funds part of problem.)
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Peaks in 1989 Some real estate buyers in cash bind Rentals smaller than interest payments Think “Ponzi”! Distressed selling starts Land and stock prices begin falling Downward spiral Property sales, price drops Bank capital falls Lending falls - > more price drops
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Japan
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Japan in the late 90’s and early 2000’s Japan has some periods of deflation Near zero interest rates Bankruptcies rise Banks in trouble Depositors do not withdraw Belief government will step in Too big to fail Foreign lenders to Japanese banks believe government will not help them Japanese lenders and firms move to foreign banks
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Shift Away from Japan Exports increase/Imports fall Yen appreciates Investors shift to China, Malaysia, Thailand where labor costs were lower
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Early 1990's East Asian "tigers" Beginning in the 1960's and 70's Key aspects Transformations Growth (often near 10%) Stock markets in Thailand and Malaysia take off in the early 90's (300 - 500%)
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Foreign Capital Foreign direct investment Setting up manufacturing Real estate booms Consumer lending takes off 1996: Consumer finance companies experience losses, begin to fail Foreign creditors nervous Capital inflows suddenly stop Thai Baht can no longer be managed on a dollar peg, currency collapses
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Regional Contagion Triggers crisis across region Other currencies collapse Indonesia loses 70 percent of value Stock prices down 30-60 percent Large number of banks fail
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"Miracle" Comments Disappear Crony capitalism Destabilizing speculation
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Ending in Asia, Starting in the U.S. (late 90's) Current account deficits shift to surplus (Central bank reserves increase) Exports to U.S. rise U.S. trade deficits rise U.S. dot com bubble gets really heated
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Dot Com World VC's, Entrepreneurs, IPO's First day "Price Pop" December 1996: Greenspan "Irrational Exuberance" Dow = 6300, NASDAQ = 1300 End of 1999 Dow = 11700, NASDAQ = 5400 NASDAQ value = 80% NYSE value Initially "new economy" stocks Eventually all stocks
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“Our proprietary portfolio of New Economy stocks was up over 80.2% in 1998!” “At this rate, $10,000 turns into $3.4 million in 10 years or less!”
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When Did the Bubble Start? 1995? 1998?
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S&P and NASDAQ
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Bubble Persists 1999: Fed obsessed with Y2K Increases bank liquidity After 2000 Fed reduces liquidity Stock market falls 40%, NASDAQ 80%
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International Aspects of Dot.com Capital inflows to U.S. Dollar appreciates Import prices fall in U.S. U.S. inflation low U.S. savings rates fall
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Summary: The Three Recent Bubbles Japan: 1980's East Asia: 1990's US dot com: late 90's early 2000's How do they fit into the Minsky taxonomy? Ponzi??
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