| Reversal
of the Mean: dogs become stars overnight
IndexFunds.com Staff
July 15, 2003 |
|
Rebounds are rarely as dramatic as the one high-technology sector
funds are staging. Hammered worst in 2002, they have bounded back
fastest so far in 2003.
"You could say the market has been like a coil in the past 18
months. Companies that were compressed the most in 2002 are now
springing back the most so far in 2003," said Sanjay Arya, head
of Morningstar Indexes. "The more speculative stocks and sectors
- telecom and tech - are leading the recovery in 2003. Many of
the stocks that skyrocketed in Q2 2003 were companies that were
on the verge of bankruptcy in 2002. Low interest rates helped
some of these companies survive, and they've had good performance
in 2003."
A surprising negative correlation of -77% exists between last
year poor results and this year's shining ones so far for the
following high-tech ETFs that comprise the worst performing ETFs
in 2002:
| ETF Name |
Ticker |
Annual Return 2002 (%) |
YTD 2003 (%) - as of 7/4/03 |
| iShares Goldman Sachs Networking |
AMEX:IGN |
-55.73 |
50.85 |
| iShares Goldman Sachs Semiconductor |
AMEX:IGW |
-47.85 |
30.88 |
| iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology |
AMEX:IBB |
-45.80 |
38.60 |
| iShares Goldman Sachs Software Index |
AMEX:IGV |
-44.41 |
25.49 |
| streetTRACKS Morgan Stanley Internet |
AMEX:MII |
-44.07 |
43.63 |
| Morgan Stanley Tech Index |
AMEX:MTK |
-43.93 |
31.55 |
| iShares Goldman Sachs Technology Index |
AMEX:IGM |
-40.74 |
24.53 |
| Fortune e-50 Index |
AMEX:FEF |
-39.79 |
31.77 |
| iShares Dow Jones US Telecom |
AMEX:IYZ |
-39.11 |
11.23 |
| iShares Dow Jones US Technology |
AMEX:IYW |
-38.91 |
22.62 |
source: Morningstar
Why is this happening? A recent study by Merrill Lynch shows
that forecast P/E has described 78% of the variation of ETF returns
during the first half of 2003.
"The fact that the best performing segments of the market were
clearly those with the highest forecast P/E indicates the extent
to which the market has been making a strong bet on an across
the board increase in future economic growth rather than revaluing
individual stocks or sectors based on current results," Merrill's
analysts state.
"However, making strong bets on future growth and a willingness
to bid up those ETFs trading on the highest (or even negative)
forecast P/E's seems quite similar to the market's mode of operation
pre-2000," they conclude ominously.
Changes in fortunes of an asset class is often referred to as
reversion to the mean, a phenomenon in which deviations from historical
growth rates tend to return to the norm. In this year's unusual
variation, the market's behavior might be described as reversal
of the mean.