Market Update May 17, 2012
Déjà vu (French for "Already seen")
In both 2010 and 2011, the years commenced with an enthusiastic stock market rally, only to sag into serious corrections during the spring and summer months. Last year’s market entered a period of torrid recovery from the heavy sell-off during the summer of 2011, thanks largely to “goosing” by the Federal Reserve and loosening credit policies by the European Central bank. New recovery highs were seen for indexes and many stocks chalked up new all time price highs in recent weeks. Corporate balance sheets are generally healthy and the improved balance sheets of American consumers have sustained healthy revenues for companies ranging from Verizon to Intel, from PPG (a glass and coatings company) to Simon Property, the shopping mall giant. But it seems we have again entered the season of market correction. And while I’ll leave the “why” to the quoted economists below, I cannot help but worry when commodity indexes and the new high/new low equity indicator are cascading downward while bond yields are registering new all time lows (and the price of older bonds is rising).
The conservative way in which we at Trusted Financial invest, in the “Value/balanced” style,should serve our clients well in the current darkening environment. There are many Big Picture reasons for the current sell off, and I’ve selected three analysts from whom to quote for your reading pleasure, below. Why do I quote others? Because my job and talent is not in assessing Macro economic trends but in reacting to them appropriately when deciding what to buy, what to sell and what to hold. Still, I do have a sneaking suspicion that we may be living through a replay of the 1930’s, in which a rapacious market crash, 1929, gave way to a healthy market rally, only to slump once again under the weight of unwise government policies, a persistent unwinding of real estate excesses and strangulation by over-regulation. The 1930’s became known as the Great Depression, but the decade was, in fact ,a series of recessions, interspersed with meaningful market rallies. The best investment during this era high was quality government and corporate bonds.
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