NEW YORK (AP) — Andrew Neitlich is the last person you'd expect to be rattled by the stock market.
He
once worked as a financial analyst picking stocks for a mutual fund. He
has huddled with dozens of CEOs in his current career as an executive
coach. During the dot-com crash 12 years ago, he kept his wits and did
not sell.
But he's selling now.
"You have to trust your
government. You have to trust other governments. You have to trust Wall
Street," says Neitlich, 47. "And I don't trust any of these."
Defying
decades of investment history, ordinary Americans are selling stocks
for a fifth year in a row. The selling has not let up despite
unprecedented measures by the Federal Reserve to persuade people to buy
and the come-hither allure of a levitating market. Stock prices have
doubled from March 2009, their low point in the Great Recession.
It's
the first time ordinary folks have sold during a sustained bull market
since relevant records were first kept during World War II, an
examination by The Associated Press has found. The AP analyzed money
flowing into and out of stock funds of all kinds, including relatively
new exchange-traded funds, which investors like because of their low
fees.
"People don't trust the market anymore," says financial
historian Charles Geisst of Manhattan College. He says a "crisis of
confidence" similar to one after the Crash of 1929 will keep people away
from stocks for a generation or more.
The implications for the
economy and living standards are unclear but potentially big. If the
pullback continues, some experts say, it could lead to lower spending by
companies, slower U.S. economic growth and perhaps lower gains for
those who remain in the market.
Since they started selling in
April 2007, eight months before the start of the Great Recession,
individual investors have pulled at least $380 billion from U.S. stock
funds, a category that includes both mutual funds and exchange-traded
funds, according to estimates by the AP. That is the equivalent of all
the money they put into the market in the previous five years.
Selling during both a downturn and a recovery is unusual because Americans almost always buy more than they sell during both.
Since
World War II, nine recessions besides the Great Recession have been
followed by recoveries lasting at least three years. According to data
from the Investment Company Institute, a trade group representing
investment funds, individual investors sold during and after only one of
those previous downturns — the one from November 1973 through March
1975. And back then a scary stock drop around the start of the
recovery's third year, 1977, gave people ample reason to get out of the
market.
The unusual pullback this time has spread to other big
investors— public and private pension funds, investment brokerages and
state and local governments. These groups have sold a total of $861
billion more than they have bought since April 2007, according to the
Federal Reserve.
Even foreigners, big purchasers in recent years, are selling now — $16 billion in the 12 months through September.
As
these groups have sold, much of the stock buying has fallen to
companies. They've bought $656 billion more than they have sold since
April 2007. Companies are mostly buying their own stock.
On Wall Street, the investor revolt has largely been dismissed as temporary. But doubts are creeping in.
A
Citigroup research report sent to customers concludes that the "cult of
equities" that fueled buying in the past has little chance of coming
back soon. Investor blogs speculate about the "death of equities," a
line from a famous BusinessWeek cover story in 1979, another time many
people had seemingly given up on stocks. Financial analysts lament how
the retreat by Main Street has left daily stock trading at low levels.
The investor retreat may have already hurt the fragile economic recovery.
The
number of shares traded each day has fallen 40 percent from before the
recession to a 12-year low, according to the New York Stock Exchange.
That's cut into earnings of investment banks and online brokers, which
earn fees helping others trade stocks. Initial public offerings, another
source of Wall Street profits, are happening at one-third the rate
before the recession.
And old assumptions about stocks are being
tested. One investing gospel is that because stocks generally rise in
price, companies don't need to raise their quarterly cash dividends much
to attract buyers. But companies are increasing them lately.
Dividends
in the S&P 500 rose 11 percent in the 12 months through September,
and the number of companies choosing to raise them is the highest in at
least 20 years, according to FactSet, a financial data provider. Stocks
now throw off more cash in dividends than U.S. government bonds do in
interest.
Many on Wall Street think this is an unnatural state
that cannot last. After all, people tend to buy stocks because they
expect them to rise in price, not because of the dividend. But for much
of the history of U.S. stock trading, stocks were considered too risky
to be regarded as little more than vehicles for generating dividends. In
every year from 1871 through 1958, stocks yielded more in dividends
than U.S. bonds did in interest, according to data from Yale economist
Robert Shiller — exactly what is happening now.
So maybe that's normal, and the past five decades were the aberration.
People
who think the market will snap back to normal are underestimating how
much the Great Recession scared investors, says Ulrike Malmendier, an
economist who has studied the effect of the Great Depression on
attitudes toward stocks.
She says people are ignoring something
called the "experience effect," or the tendency to place great weight on
what you most recently went through in deciding how much financial risk
to take, even if it runs counter to logic. Extrapolating from her
research on "Depression Babies," the title of a 2010 paper she co-wrote,
she says many young investors won't fully embrace stocks again for
another two decades.
"The Great Recession will have a lasting
impact beyond what a standard economic model would predict," says
Malmendier, who teaches at the University of California, Berkeley.
She
could be wrong, of course. But it's a measure of the psychological blow
from the Great Recession that, more than three years since it ended,
big institutions, not just amateur investors, are still trimming stocks.
Public
pension funds have cut stocks from 71 percent of their holdings before
the recession to 66 percent last year, breaking at least 40 years of
generally rising stock allocations, according to "State and Local
Pensions: What Now?," a book by economist Alicia Munnell. They're
shifting money into bonds.
Private pension funds, like those run
by big companies, have cut stocks more: from 70 percent of holdings to
just under 50 percent, back to the 1995 level.
"People aren't
looking to swing for the fences anymore," says Gary Goldstein, an
executive recruiter on Wall Street, referring to the bankers and traders
he helps get jobs. "They're getting less greedy."
The lack of greed is remarkable given how much official U.S. policy is designed to stoke it.
When
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke launched the first of three
bond-buying programs four years ago, he said one aim was to drive
Treasury yields so low that frustrated investors would feel they had no
choice but to take a risk on stocks. Their buying would push stock
prices up, and everyone would be wealthier and spend more. That would
help revive the economy.
Sure enough, yields on Treasurys and many
other bonds have recently hit record lows, in many cases below the
inflation rate. And stock prices have risen. Yet Americans are pulling
out of stocks, so deep is their mistrust of them, and perhaps of the Fed
itself.
"Fed policy is trying to suck people into risky assets
when they shouldn't be there," says Michael Harrington, 58, a former
investment fund manager who says he is largely out of stocks. "When this
policy fails, as it will, baby boomers will pay the cost in their
401(k)s."
Ordinary Americans are souring on stocks even though
stock prices appear attractive relative to earnings. But history shows
they can get more attractive yet.
Stocks in the S&P 500 are
trading at 14 times what companies earned per share in the past 12
months. Since 1990, they rarely traded below that level — that is,
cheaper, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. But that period is
unusual. Looking back seven decades to the start of World War II, there
were long stretches during which stocks traded below that.
To
estimate how much investors have sold so far, the AP considered both
money flowing out of mutual funds, which are nearly all held by
individual investors, and money flowing into low-fee exchange-traded
funds, or ETFs, which bundle securities together to mimic the
performance of a market index. ETFs have attracted money from hedge
funds and other institutional investors as well as from individuals.
At
the request of the AP, Strategic Insight, a consulting firm, used data
from investment firms overseeing ETFs to estimate how much individuals
have invested in them. Based on its calculations, individuals accounted
for 40 percent to 50 percent of money going to U.S. stock ETFs in recent
years.
If you assume 50 percent, individual investors have put
$194 billion into U.S. stock ETFs since April 2007. But they've also
pulled out much more from mutual funds — $580 billion. The difference is
$386 billion, the amount individuals have pulled out of stock funds in
all.
If you include the sale of stocks by individuals from
brokerage accounts, which is not included in the fund data, the outflow
could be double. Data from the Federal Reserve, which includes selling
from brokerage accounts, suggests individual investors have sold $700
billion or more in the past 5½ years. But the Fed figure may overstate
the amount sold because it doesn't fully count certain stock
transactions.
The good news is that a chastened stock market doesn't necessarily mean a flat stock market.
Bill
Gross, the co-head of bond investment firm Pimco, has probably done
more than anyone to popularize the notion that stocks will prove
disappointing in the coming years. But he says what is dying is not
stocks, but the "cult" of stocks. In a recent letter to investors, he
suggested stocks might return 4 percent or so each year, about half the
long-term level but still ahead of inflation.
And if America's obsession with stocks is over, some excesses associated with it might fade, too.
Maybe
more graduates from top colleges will look to other industries besides
Wall Street for careers. Of every 100 members of the Harvard
undergraduate Class of 2008 who got jobs after graduation, 28 went into
financial services, such as helping run mutual funds or hedge funds,
according to a March study by two professors at the university's
business school. The average for classes four decades ago was six out of
100.
Of course, those counting the small investor out could be wrong.
Three
years after that BusinessWeek story on the "death of equities" ran, in
1982, one of the greatest multi-year stock climbs in history began as
the little guys shed their fear and started buying. And so they will
surely do again, the bulls argue, and stock prices will really rocket.
Neitlich, the executive coach, has his doubts.
Instead
of using extra cash to buy stocks, he is buying houses near his home in
Sarasota, Fla., and renting them. He says he prefers real estate
because it's local and is something he can "control." He says stocks
make up 12 percent his $800,000 investment portfolio, down from nearly
100 percent a few years ago.
After the dot-com crash, it seemed as
if "things would turn around. Now, I don't know," Neitlich says. "The
risks are bigger than before."