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BEING STREET SMART by Sy Harding Consumers and Investors Confident Even As Global Recession Threatens Anew ! It’s been a most unusual - some say crazy - year for global
stock markets, certainly including that of the U.S. The global economic recovery from the 2007-2009 financial
collapse stalled last year and continues to worsen this year, with the
International Monetary Fund cutting its forecasts for global economic recovery
yet again, including for the U.S., and warning four days ago that risks of the
world dropping back into a global recession
“are alarmingly high”, and that
“no significant improvements appear in the
offing.” That certainly sounds like the IMF doesn’t have much
confidence that the ‘Troika’ (the IMF, EU, and ECB) will be successful with the
euro-zone rescue plans and stimulus measures announced a month ago. Meanwhile the stock markets of China and Japan, the world’s
second and third largest economies, are in serious bear markets due to their
economic slowdowns and fears of the worsening global economic conditions.
China’s stock market is down 40% from its peak in 2009. Japan’s market is down
22% from its 2010 peak and still 51% beneath its peak in 2007. Clearly neither of those extremely important global
economies have any more confidence than the IMF that improvements are in the
offing. U.S. corporations seem to be preparing for the possibility
of unusually difficult times ahead. They have salted away a record $1.4 trillion
in cash, refusing to invest it in their futures, earning near zero on it, the
purpose for hoarding the cash rather than using it apparently being to make sure
they can pay their bills and survive anything that might lie ahead. The fear of corporate managements could also be seen in the
way that corporate insiders did not agree with the optimism that created the big
stock market rally off the June low. They sold into its strength at an unusually
heavy pace. According to the latest Vickers Weekly Insider Report, their selling
has continued even after the Fed announced its QE3 stimulus measures. Like the
IMF, and China and Japan’s markets, they apparently have little confidence that
the new rescue efforts by the ECB in Europe and the U.S. Fed, will produce
economic improvement anytime soon. Usually savvy hedge-fund managers likewise did not
participate in the June rally, instead selling into it. According to the Wall
Street Journal, that has them experiencing their worst year since 1997. The
opinion of hedge fund Comstock Partners, revealed in a report this week, is that
the economy and stock market face “severe
headwinds in the period ahead”. It cites
“the ongoing European sovereign debt
crisis, significant slowing of growth in China and emerging markets, ongoing
problems in Japan, an anemic U.S. recovery, dysfunction in Washington, the
coming fiscal cliff, and the first decline in S&P 500 earnings in three years.”
Its conclusion is that “while these
problems are fairly well-known, they have not been factored into the market
since investors have been focusing on other factors they regard as highly
bullish.” They cite those factors as mainly being investor confidence that
the Fed has their backs and “will prevent
anything terrible from happening.” Private-equity funds are having a similar under-performing
year, up on average of only 4%. As the Journal says, that is not what their
investors planned on. The funds were also suspicious of the rally, and are
sitting on close to $1trillion in cash. However, U.S. investors remain bullish and confident as
evidenced by the resilience in the U.S. stock market. For instance, while
China’s stock market is in a bear market and at a 4-year low, the S&P 500
reached a four-year high in mid-September, and has settled back less than 3%
since. That’s quite a contrast to the worsening worries of the IMF,
China and Japan, U.S. corporations, company insiders, professional hedge fund
and other institutional managers. But it’s not just U.S. investors that are confident and
bullish, but U.S. consumers as well. The University of Michigan – Thomson Reuters Consumer
Sentiment Index was released Friday. It shows that consumer confidence has
jumped to 83.1 in October from 78.3 in September. That’s much better than
forecasts that it would decline to 78.0. And at 83.1, consumer confidence is getting close to the 87
level it averaged in the year prior to the 2008-2009 recession. That’s a lot
more recovery than global economies have achieved, including that of the U.S. Is it just due to the pixie dust being puffed out by Wall
Street and the Fed, about to be blown away by the gathering storm others see
coming. Or has Main Street got it right this time, while the
so-called ‘smart money’ is refusing to inhale the magic? We are likely to soon know the answer.
Sy Harding is president of Asset Management Research Corp, and editor of www.StreetSmartReport.com, and the free market blog, www.streetsmartpost.com. He can also be followed on Twitter @streetsmartpost Editors: You are welcome to quote from this article, or use it in its entirety, in your publication or on your website, as long as the credit in the above paragraph is also included. Readers are also welcome to e-mail, or print and snail-mail it to friends. These reports reflect our opinions and are based on our best judgment, but no warranty is given or implied as to their accuracy. Past performance does not guarantee future performance. Back to the Top Home Subscribe to RSS Feed
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