October 14, 2000

Why The 10,000 Point Dow Doesn’t Matter

The Dow is at 10,000.  Reporters glow.  Retirees relax.  Investors sigh: “Whew, we’ve made it.”

They’re wrong.  This purported milestone isn’t a victory.  It’s nonsense. 

The market is the wrong place to look when measuring the health of our economy.  The collective wisdom of mutual fund analysts was wrong in 1999, wrong in 2006, and it’s wrong right now. 

The best investor in the United States basically ignores Wall Street.  Warren Buffett has billions he could trade in and out of stocks.  Thousands of analysts would clamor to give him hot tips.  But Buffett ignores it all.  Serene, he sits in his office, reading annual reports, newspapers, and thinking about opportunities for growth.  He isn’t drinking champagne tonight.  And you shouldn’t be either.

We are far from out of the woods.  Large companies are still laying off employees.  When we cross the 10% unemployment line, consumer spending (now down to 70% of GDP) may contract even further.  It should probably should.  Consumer spending in the UK is 65% and in China it’s only 40%. 

Haven’t we learned something from this crisis??  Wall Street sold the world worthless securities, trillions of dollars of wealth evaporated, and now Wall Street is cheering this “new” bull market.  Now the bulls say it’s all okay again?! 

What you’re watching now is a bull market on government spending.  What you should be watching is the real report card: 

Yes, we have stepped back from the abyss.  But some very smart people thought the same thing in 1932.  Then 1933 happened.  Not so fast, Wall Street…

This battle is far from over.  Let’s dig deep, focus on the long haul, and make the substantive policy and business improvements the economy needs to really rebuild.  Then, the Dow will take care of itself.