Why 2012 Should Be Better Than 2011!
BEING STREET
SMART
by Sy Harding
Why 2012 Should Be Better
Than 2011!
December 23, 2011.
A year ago there was widespread confidence that with the
recession having ended in June, 2009, the economy continuing to recover, further
QE2 easing underway, and the stock market clearly in a new bull market, that
2011 was going to be a great year.
In my annual forecast last December I agreed the year would
be positive in the early months, but that the economy would begin to slow again
once the effects of the Fed’s QE2 program expired. I expected that would spook
the stock market into a substantial correction during the market’s often
unfavorable summer months, and only after that correction would a subsequent
rally produce the expected positive year.
And that’s pretty much how it has worked out.
As we approach the new year this year, sentiment is just
about opposite to a year ago. Gone is the confidence for both the economy and
stock market, replaced by worries about the debt crisis in Europe, and the
budget deficits and dysfunctional politicians in Washington.
The consensus expectations this year are for a serious
recession in Europe that will drag the rest of the world, including the U.S.,
into a serious global recession, and that the U.S. stock market will roll over
into its next bear market early next year on those fears.
Once again this year I disagree with the popular
expectations.
Here’s why.
After its first half slowdown this year, the U.S. economy
has been in recovery mode and steadily gaining momentum. More importantly,
unlike the recovery that was underway last fall, the economy is now recovering
impressively on its own, without a boost from some sort of QE3 stimulus from the
Fed.
It’s also not just that so many economic reports have been
coming in positive for several months now, nor even that most are soundly
beating economists’ forecasts. It’s where the surprising improvements are taking
place.
Historically, the two main driving forces of the economy in
both directions have been the housing and auto industries. That makes sense
since both have long coattails, taking so many other industries that supply them
along for the ride, whether it’s to the upside or downside.
And
we’re seeing home sales and new construction starts at multi-month highs, the
inventory of unsold homes at multi-month lows.
Regarding the auto industry, it was reported this week that
global auto sales and production are at record highs, fed by demand that was
pent up during the Great Recession. And the recovering global car and truck
market in the U.S. grew faster this year (9%) than in China (5%).
No wonder then that employment reports have been showing
upside surprises for several months now, with new jobs creation up, the
unemployment rate surprisingly declining, and new unemployment claims still
falling as recently as last week.
Meanwhile, the Rockefeller Institute of Government reported
that total tax revenues of 48 states in the U.S., have returned to pre-recession
levels, a potential positive for the jobs picture going forward.
In order to produce the impressive improvements in overall
jobs creation of recent months, new jobs being created in the private sector had
to outweigh government lay-offs at the Federal, State, and Municipal levels.
With state tax revenues recovered to pre-recession levels will that mean fewer
lay-offs at the State level, perhaps even re-hiring to begin?
And then there is the potential progress being made on the
eurozone debt crisis.
The initial reaction to the new containment plan announced
after the recent European Union summit meeting was skepticism, even derision.
But as the details are being fleshed out, it is gaining some grudging
recognition as having potential.
And this week the European Central Bank added to hopes with
a surprise announcement.
For months the ECB has been talking tough, insisting that
individual eurozone governments had to impose tough austerity measures and bring
their debt and deficits under control on their own, that the ECB wasn’t going to
bail them out with massive purchases of their bonds as markets had been hoping
they would.
But on December 8 the bank announced it would offer
unlimited, low-cost, three-year loans to European banks. It opened the vaults
for the first wave on Wednesday and 523 banks showed up to borrow 489 billion
euros ($640 billion), well above expectations.
The intention, or hope, is that European banks will use the
money to buy the high-yielding bonds of Greece, Italy, Spain, etc., providing
the troubled banks with the profit from the spread, while helping to alleviate
the eurozone debt crisis.
That ($640 billion) is a big chunk of money being thrown at
the problem, and perhaps will alleviate some of the crisis of confidence in
markets, by indicating that although talking tough, the ECB does have the
eurozone’s back.
That was the approach taken by the U.S. Fed in its efforts
to pull the U.S. out of the 2008 financial meltdown, talk tough but open the
vaults.
These developments do raise the odds that the eurozone debt
crisis and a European recession will begin fading into the background after the
first of the year, and allow markets to focus more on the U.S. economic
recovery.
With that background, I am expecting a quite positive market
next year, with only a minor pullback in the unfavorable season of the summer
months.
However,
that’s just a target and given how easy it is for conditions to change, again
this year, as for the last 25 years, I will depend on technical analysis to
navigate through the ups and downs within the year.
Sy Harding is
president of Asset Management Research Corp, and editor of
www.StreetSmartReport.com,
and the
free market blog,
www.streetsmartpost.com.
Editors: You are welcome to quote from this article, or use
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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.
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