The Long, Ugly Decline in Stocks Has Ended

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Libuda:

The Long, Ugly Decline in Stocks Has Ended

 
15.06.09 18:46
The Long, Ugly Decline in Stocks Has Ended
Volatility remains and most of this year's gains have been made, but a return to normalcy is just around the corner.
By Jerome Idaszak, Associate Editor, The Kiplinger Letter

June 12, 2009RELATED FORECASTS Commodity Prices Won't Go Much Higher
HELPFUL LINKS Market analysis
EDITOR'S PICKS Higher Rates Won't Sink Home Sales
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The bear market in stocks is over. That's worth celebrating. Benchmark indexes are unlikely to revisit their lows of early March. However, little gain seems likely from now to year-end.

The big rebound is likely past. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is up about 40% since its March 9 trough. A decline of 10% or so wouldn't be unexpected, and if oil prices and bond yields continue to rise, the risks outweigh the benefits in the short term. "A correction is lurking out there," says Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist with Standard & Poor's.

For all of 2009, expect the major indexes to rise 5% to 8%, including dividends. Our current judgment is for a modest economic recovery in 2010 with gross domestic product up about 2%, which spells similar stock market gains next year as well.

Over the longer term, the story gets better. After this decade's scalding, with stocks down on average 3% a year, there will be a return to normalcy over the next decade: a 10-year annual average in the neighborhood of 10%.

Make sure you rebalance your portfolio. Don't let the scars of recent months dictate your allocation by driving you out of the stock market. Stovall says that many investors took on too much risk in the past few years. "We had retirees 75% invested in stocks," he said, instead of around 30% to 40%, a more prudent ratio for older investors.

Stocks should continue to play a key role. Look for sector titans in solid financial condition. In retailing, Staples (SPLS) and Best Buy (BBY). Conglomerate ITT (ITT). Payroll services firm Automatic Data Processing (ADP). Equipment makers Graco (GGG) and Emerson Electric (EMR). Consulting firm Accenture (ACN). And in tech, Google (GOOG) and CA (CA). In financial services, still battered despite recent gains, consider Wells Fargo (WFC) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM). Also, PNC Financial Services (PNC) and First Niagara Financial Group (FNFG).

Or go the mutual fund route. For large cap stocks, consider Fidelity Contrafund (FCNTX) and Vanguard Primecap Core Fund (VPCCX). For small caps, Baron Small Cap (BSCFX) and FBR Focus (FBRVX).

Tap fast growing foreign economies for 20% to 40% of your equities' stake. Mutual funds will help spread the risk. T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets (PRMSX), Dodge & Cox International (DODFX) and Matthews Asian Growth & Income (MACSX) are worth a look.

There are appealing options for investing in commodities, including: Pimco CommodityRealReturn Strategy D (PCRDX). Vanguard Energy (VGENX) and T. Rowe Price New Era (PRNEX) are two funds that capitalize on commodity price movements. Or stocks, such as Marathon Oil (MRO) and ConocoPhillips (COP).

Real estate investment trusts, still cheap, help hedge against inflation. Invest in REITs that are stashing away money to buy up properties at fire-sale prices.

As for bonds, look at municipal bonds, which are yielding above 4%. Since picking issues is tricky, consider the Fidelity Intermediate Municipal Income Fund (FLTMX). Some investment grade corporate bonds yield a juicy 7%, but defaults are rising. One approach would be to invest in iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund [LQD]. For higher yields, junk bonds are alluring. To lessen the impact from increasing defaults, consider T. Rowe Price High-Yield Fund (PRHYX).

Treasuries are still unattractive, and they will continue to be under stress until policymakers convince investors that they're serious about taming soaring federal budget deficits.

For weekly updates on topics to improve your business decisionmaking, click here.
Libuda:

Die Botschaft

 
15.06.09 21:13
For all of 2009, expect the major indexes to rise 5% to 8%, including dividends. Our current judgment is for a modest economic recovery in 2010 with gross domestic product up about 2%, which spells similar stock market gains next year as well.

Over the longer term, the story gets better. After this decade's scalding, with stocks down on average 3% a year, there will be a return to normalcy over the next decade: a 10-year annual average in the neighborhood of 10%.
Libuda:

Rechner auf Eurem Rechner aktivien

 
15.06.09 21:21
und 1,1 hoch 10 eingeben =2,59.

Wenn Ihr jetzt 100.000 Euro in Aktien (DAX) investiert, habt Ihr in im Jahr 2019 259.000 Euro - vermutlich sogar mehr - denn wir starten ja nicht vom Normalniveau, sondern von einer extremen Unterbewertung, sodass ich den Wert eher in der Nähe von 400.000 Euro vermute.

Vermutlich wird man aber die größten Gewinne in den nächsten Monate machen, deshalb sollte man jetzt einsteigen.
Reinyboy:

Und,.............

 
15.06.09 21:28
wie hoch ist in 2019 die Kaufkraft verglichen mit Heute?

95000 €?
Je genauer du planst, umso härter trifft dich der Zufall
Libuda:

Das kann man nur behaupten, wenn man

 
15.06.09 22:06
schwach im Kopfrechnen ist oder eine Inflationsrate von 11% unterstellt.
Reinyboy:

Why not?

 
15.06.09 23:14

Escalating inflation could reduce the amplitude of the next bear market phase by virtue of the fact that stocks could become inflation hedges, just as in the late 1970s. Then stock prices would rise in nominal terms, but not in inflation-adjusted terms. In other words, the value of the currency declines and stocks become a hedge against the declining purchasing power of the currency. With the massive money creation we are seeing, this is a possibility.

 

 

Market Commentary
The Bear Market Never Ended
By Bert Dohmen
Street.com Contributor
6/15/2009 2:31 PM EDT


The stock market has had an eye-catching rally. Everyone is talking about the S&P 500 gaining 40% since the March 6 low. But we have to put that into perspective. The index dropped 46% from the October 2007 top to the March low. Just to get back to the level of October 2007, it needs almost a 100% gain. So far, it is quite short of that. In fact, I believe it will take a decade or much longer to get back to the 2007 top.

During the Great Depression, the first phase of the bear market ended in 1930. Then the Dow Jones Industrials rallied 51%. But after that, the Dow plunged another 64% into the 1932 low.


The bulls say that we have already seen the equivalent of the 1932 bottom. To me, that seems improbable. At the 1932 bottom, the Dow had lost 89%. Therefore, the bottom this March doesn't qualify as "the bottom" at all. In fact, given that we had the greatest speculative bubble of modern times, using the highest degree of leverage, and creating $1.2 quadrillion of derivatives which are being "delevered," the final bear market bottom should be much, much lower. At a minimum, the economic contraction will be much longer. We expect it to last at least until 2017, of course with periodic rallies.

The Great Depression bear market bottom was three years after the prior bull market top. That would give us at the earliest a bottom in 2010. But remember, the 1932 bottom didn't end the Depression.


Escalating inflation could reduce the amplitude of the next bear market phase by virtue of the fact that stocks could become inflation hedges, just as in the late 1970s. Then stock prices would rise in nominal terms, but not in inflation-adjusted terms. In other words, the value of the currency declines and stocks become a hedge against the declining purchasing power of the currency. With the massive money creation we are seeing, this is a possibility.

 

 

In our view, we are currently seeing a typical bear market rally. In the last bear market that started in March 2000, there was a rally late in the year going into January 2001. Many high-profile analysts proclaimed it to be the start of the new bull market and advised "loading up the truck." We gave a new sell signal late in January 2001. That was right on target. And that's when the bear market really got serious.

In early March this year, when we called the exact day of the bottom, we said the rally would go into late summer but it would be very volatile. We also said that it would be a bear market rally. We don't have a crystal ball, but we depend on our indicators to give us the clues as to the top. If we are right, this could turn into a painful trap for the bulls. It would present another great opportunity to sell short at the top.

Sentiment right now is approaching euphoric levels among the analysts. The bullish consensus of index traders is now at the level last seen at the bull market top in October 2007.

Furthermore, corporate insider selling vs. buying, by the people who know how their business is likely to be over the next year, is at one of the highest levels on record. The sell/buy ratio is over 8, meaning that for every share purchased, they have sold eight. Obviously, they are not that optimistic.

The global financial crisis was caused by an implosion of excessive debt, due to uncredibly high leverage employed by financial institutions. The banking system has so far written off about $1.3 trillion of bad stuff. One very knowledgeable investment firm [T2 Partners? Deren Chart hatte ich in letzter Zeit mehrmals gepostet... - A.L.] estimates that there is another
$3.8 trillion to be written off. Geithner's PPIP plan has been shelved because no bank was interested in selling its bad assets. Why not? Because this would create a "market value," which other assets would have to be valued at. Evidence suggests that the banks are carrying some assets at almost three times current market value.


The government is trying to resolve the excessive debt problem by creating trillions of dollars of more debt. That's always a strategy doomed to fail. You see, the current problem is that the excessive debt cannot be serviced. Therefore, creating even more debt which cannot be serviced only worsens the problem, especially in a deteriorating economic environment. A burst bubble can not be reflated. Be prepared.

 

 

Je genauer du planst, umso härter trifft dich der Zufall
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