Are
Businesses Quietly Preparing for a Financial Apocalypse?
by
Dan Steinhart
Casey
Research
US corporations
are sitting on more cash than at any point since World War 2.
That's without
including banks. I'm only talking about nonfinancial corporations
– the ones that sell goods and services and make the economy go.
Those businesses
hold $1.4 trillion. In absolute terms, that's the most ever.
In relative terms, it's the most since World War II.

(Click
on image to enlarge)
As investors,
we can infer quite a bit from corporations' inability (or unwillingness)
to deploy their cash.
For one, it
indicates that business have assumed a very defensive stance.
Cash, of course,
is a buffer against uncertainty the uncertainty that business
slows for any reason. Management wants a healthy cash reserve with
which to pay the bills and remain liquid should anything unexpected
happen. I think we can all agree that this is prudent, and a good
business practice.
But $1.4
trillion? That tells me that businesses are not just a
little jittery about the future. They're prepared for an apocalypse.
Think
about this, it’s important;
- If these
businesses could conjure up even the most marginal of projects
to earn a meager 1% return, they would generate $14 billion
profit. Instead, they're sitting on the cash and earning
near zero for a guaranteed after-inflation loss.
It's a bad
omen that corporate management would forego a collective $14b per
year. Clearly, by their judgment, the risk of investing in new projects
outweighs the reward – the exact opposite of the conditions needed
to produce healthy economic growth.
That's
the bad news. But here's the good, if paradoxical, news:
Even with all
of this corporate slack, earnings and profit margins are very healthy,
and stocks have performed quite well. Case in point, the S&P
500 is up 15% YTD.
Why the disconnect?
Well, the rising
margins and earnings are easy to explain: corporations have cut
costs over the past few years, becoming leaner and more efficient.
This also partially explains higher stock prices.
But I think
there's another contributing factor to rising stock prices: the
downright terrible outlook for bonds. Our
analysis of stocks vs. bonds indicates that stocks are by
far the better investment today.
“The
overriding reason is simple: at near zero interest rates, bonds
offer almost no upside and catastrophic downside”
Simply by virtue
of not being bonds, stocks have done well.
Back to that
pile of corporate cash. There's no question that it's a waste today.
But today's waste is tomorrow's potential.
Corporations
aren't going to sit on that cash forever. Eventually conditions
will be such that they'll either want to or have to invest
in new projects.
Perhaps inflation
will be the catalyst – corporations can tolerate losing 1.7% per
year today. But if the inflation rate heats up to, say, 4%, you
can bet that corps will be scrambling to deploy that now idle cash
into whatever mediocre projects they can rustle up.
“When
that happens, they have $1.4 trillion in cash ready to go. No
need to negotiate a loan. No need to issue equity to raise funds.
They have all the fuel they need. The gas tank is full.
So while the
economy has plenty of problems, and stocks
are a far better bet than bonds, lack of cash is not one of
them.
Companies are
ready to invest and grow. They just need an economic and political
environment conducive to doing so.
October
12, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
and Associates
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