Words from the (Investment) Wise for the Week That Was (January 4-10, 2010)
by Prieur du Plessis
Back from the festive season break, traders pushed stock market indices to
new highs for the rally, logging a full house of five up-days for the S&P
500 Index and pushing the CBOE Volatility (VIX) Index - also referred to as
the "fear gauge" of the US stock markets - down to levels last seen pre-Lehman
in 2008.
Pundits shrugged off Friday's unexpected decline in non-farm payrolls, as
well as mixed economic data earlier in the week, focusing instead on the Federal
Open Market Committee's (FOMC) communiqué for
its December 15-16 meeting which maintained its "extended period" stance for
easy monetary policy, i.e. more "juice" for risky assets.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust)
said: "The details and tone of the December employment report indicate that
labor market conditions remain bothersome. A meaningful pace of hiring is unlikely
in the next few months given the structural unemployment in the economy, the
shortened workweek, and the large number of part-time workers. In other words,
the December employment report reinforces expectations of the FOMC on hold
in the near term. The Fed is unlikely to undertake a reduction of monetary
accommodation until the unemployment rate has peaked."
The past week's performance of the major asset classes is summarized by the
chart below - a set of numbers that indicates renewed investor appetite for
risky assets. Silver (+9.5%), "the poor man's gold", and platinum (+7.0%) were
the stars of the week, playing catch-up on historically cheap ratios relative
to gold bullion. The yellow metal (+3.7%) also resumed its uptrend with a so-called "upward
price dynamic" on Monday. Bonds performed poorly as Pimco and BlackRock, among
others, cut holdings of US and UK debt as the two nations' borrowings hit record
levels.
A summary of the movements of major global stock markets for the past week
and various other measurement periods is given in the table below.
The MSCI World Index (+2.5%) and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (+2.7%) experienced
a strong first week of 2010. Only three emerging markets - the Shanghai Composite
Index (-2.5%), the Russian Trading System Index (-0.4%) and the Venezuela Caracas
General Index (-1.2%) - bucked the broader uptrend.
Notwithstanding solid gains since the March lows, only the Chile Stock Market
General Index, one of the week's strongest performers, has been able to reclaim
its 2007 pre-crisis peak - now trading 6.5% higher. Mexico and Brazil could
be the next countries to eliminate the bear market losses.
As far as the US indices are concerned, Wall Street managed to hit 15-month
highs on Friday. This means that the S&P 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial
Index have now retraced 55% and 54% respectively of their crisis losses. After
the thin festive season period, volume on the NYSE came close to the one-year
average.
Nine of the ten economic sectors (as measured by the SPDR exchange-traded
funds [ETFs]) closed higher for the week, with the cyclical sectors in general
outperforming the defensive sectors. Materials (+5.9%), Energy (+5.8%), Financials
(+5.7%) and Industrials (+5.3%) all returned handsome gains, whereas Utilities
(-1.0%) was the only sector in the red.
Top performers among stock markets this week were Latvia (+13.2%), Peru (+12.3%),
Luxembourg (+6.1%), Greece (+6.0%) and Cyprus (+5.4%). At the bottom end of
the performance rankings, countries included Slovakia (-14.1%), Bermuda (-2.5%),
China (-2.5%), Nepal (-2.2%) and Venezuela (-1.2%).
The declines in the Shanghai Composite Index came in the wake of investors'
concerns about a flood of initial public stock offerings (IPOs) and the authorities'
actions to slow down lending. Of all the major indices, the Shanghai Composite
is the only one trading marginally below its 50-day moving average. Also, as
shown by the declining green line in the bottom portion of the chart below,
Chinese stocks have since July been underperforming the S&P 500 Index -
a reversal of roles since China turned the bear market corner five months before
most other markets in November 2008. Interestingly, Marc Faber told CNBC (via MoneyNews): "My
feeling is that the US will outperform emerging economies in the first six
months of 2010."
Of the 96 stock markets I keep on my radar screen, 79% recorded gains, 15%
showed losses and 6% remained unchanged. The performance map below tells the
past week's rather bullish story.
Emerginvest world markets heat map
Source: Emerginvest (Click here to
access a complete list of global stock market movements.)
John Nyaradi (Wall Street
Sector Selector) reports that, as far as ETFs are concerned, the winners
for the week included SPDR S&P Metals & Mining (XME) (+13.8%), Claymore/Delta
Global Shipping (SEA) (+12.3%) and Market Vectors Coal (KOL) (+11.4%).
At the bottom end of the performance rankings, ETFs included ProShares Short
Oil and Gas (DDG) (-4.6%), HOLDRS Merrill Lynch Telecom (TTH) (-3.1%) and Vanguard
Extended Duration Treasury (EDV) (-2.9%).
Referring to the issue of financial reforms, the quote du jour this week comes
from Nobel economist Joseph
Stiglitz. He recently warned (via MarketWatch): "Unless
Wall Street's incentive system is drastically reformed, 'the financial sector
will only try to circumvent whatever new regulations we put in place. We will
simply have a short respite before the next crisis.' Warning: nothing's changed,
it's worse: Lobbyists run Obama, Congress and the Fed."
To this, former IMF chief economist Simon
Johnson added (according to MarketWatch): "Yes,
'we're running out of time ... to prevent a true depression'. The 'financial
industry has effectively captured our government' and is 'blocking essential
reform', and unless we break Wall Street's 'stranglehold' we will be unable
prevent the Great Depression 2."
On a related note, The
Wall Street Journal reports that the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission,
formed by Congress in 2009 to investigate the causes of the economic turmoil,
will have public hearings on Wednesday and Thursday in Washington with top
Wall Street bankers.
Next, a quick textual analysis of my week's reading. This is a way of visualizing
word frequencies at a glance. The usual economic terms ("economy", Fed", "rate",
etc.) feature prominently, but "bonds" and "silver" also mustered some attention.
Will we perhaps look back at these assets a year from now and see one of the
worst and one of the top performers respectively for 2010? A long silver, short
Treasuries trade makes perfect sense to me.
Back to the stock markets: The major moving-average levels for the benchmark
US indices, the BRIC countries and South Africa (where I am based in Cape Town)
are given in the table below. With the exception of the Shanghai Composite
Index (discussed above), the indices in the table are all trading above their
50-day moving averages, with all the indices also comfortably above their respective
key 200-day moving averages.
As far as the S&P 500 Index is concerned, the next upside target will
be at the upper end of its upwardly sloping price channel at 1,250. A break
below the lower level of the channel at 1,085 (and the December low of 1,092)
could signal a deeper pullback.
"Anecdotally investors remain very skeptical of the continued advance which
suggests the 'wall of worry' is still in place," said Kevin Lane of Fusion
IQ.
Casting his eye on 2010, David Fuller (Fullermoney)
said: "Stock market action continues to confirm a bull market in every respect.
Downside risk is probably limited to periodic mean reversions towards the rising
200-day moving averages.
"The main danger signs to look for will be an eventual, persistent tightening
of monetary policy and an inverted yield curve. When this next happens, and
both tend to be lead indicators, I will focus on introducing trailing stops
for all equity positions, actual or mental, and ideally use strength to reduce
equity exposure. Currently, I maintain that we are still in the second psychological
perception stage of the bull market, characterized by the 'wall of worry'.
With any luck, we can look forward to the third and climactic stage of a bull
market cycle, in which investors become euphoric.
"The time to start thinking about closing long portfolios in anticipation
of the next bear market, I suggest, will be when the yield curve (US 10-year
yields over 2-year yields) next inverts by moving below zero. However, the
lead was so early last time (early 2006) that some of us became complacent
about it."
While on the topic of long-term charts, when considering S&P 500 monthly
data, three momentum-type oscillators (RSI, MACD and ROC)
all still signal a bullish trend. (As an aside, the long-term picture for US
government bonds is in bearish mode as highlighted in a post a
few days ago.)
"Where breadth goes, the market usually follows," goes an old market saw.
Analyzing market internals, the number of NYSE stocks trading above their respective
50-day moving averages has increased to 86% from 30% in October (see chart
below). "The fact that breadth has caught up with the new highs in the overall
market is a good thing for the health of the bull market. If it gets up near
90%, however, there won't be much more room for upside in the short term," remarked Bespoke.
For a primary uptrend to be in place, the bulk of the index constituents also
need to trade above their 200-day averages. The number at the moment is 89%
- somewhat down from its September peak of 93%, but nevertheless firmly in
bullish terrain.
Not everybody shares Fuller's optimism. Having pinpointed the bottom in March, GMO's
Jeremy Grantham now warns that our irrational nightmare will repeat. "A year
ago we came dangerously close to the Great Depression 2. Unfortunately, we've
learned nothing ... condemning ourselves to another serious financial crisis
in the not-too-distant future," he is quoted by MarketWatch. "We
had our bear-market rally. Next, historical cycles plus our irrational behavior
guarantees another, bigger global meltdown. We learned nothing."
It goes without saying that the strong rally since March is bound to be followed
by a correction at some stage. But rather than pre-empting (and more often
than not getting it wrong as a result of short-term noise), I will be guided
by the longer-term charts and the yield curve to identify a major top. Meanwhile,
I am watching valuations carefully, and specifically how the Q4 earnings reports
stack up. Although I am treading with caution after the 74% rally in the mature
markets and 109% in emerging markets, I am not ignoring good old stock-picking,
and specifically those companies with strong balance sheets that will be growing
their dividends over time with a reasonable degree of certainty.
Twitter and Facebook
I regularly post short comments (maximum 140 characters) on topical economic
and market issues, web links and graphs on Twitter. For those readers not
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Economy
The Recession Status Map below, courtesy of Dismal
Scientist Economy.com, aggregates growth statistics from around the world
and allows one to see at a glance which economies are in recession, at risk,
recovering or expanding. Click on the map to link to the interactive version.
"Business sentiment around the globe remains about where it has been since
last summer - consistent with a tentative global economic recovery. Businesses
are most upbeat when responding to broad questions about current conditions
and expectations through the middle of this year. However, they remain cautious
when responding to specific questions about sales, pricing, inventories and
hiring," according to the results of the latest Survey of Business Confidence
of the World by Moody's Economy.com.
Importantly, the survey results suggest that the global recovery is holding
its own, but provide no indication that the recovery is gaining significant
traction.
Released on Monday, purchasing managers' surveys for December exceeded expectations
from China to Europe and the US, reported the Financial
Times. "Across the world, the combined scores of national purchasing managers'
indices, compiled by JP Morgan, rose to 55 in December, the highest since April
2006, with the index for new orders at a 5½ year high."
The global economic rebound is likely to be even stronger than many have anticipated
and developed markets have the potential to outperform emerging markets, Jim
O'Neill, head of global economic research at Goldman Sachs, told CNBC. "I
think what we've seen since the turn of the year ... is actually really strong," he
said.
Goldman Sachs analysts estimate that the world economic growth will be 4.4%
this year and 4.5% in 2011.
A snapshot of the week's US economic reports is provided below. (Click on
the dates to see Northern Trust's
assessment of the various data releases.)
Wednesday,
January 6, 2010
• Minutes of December FOMC meeting - vulnerable aspects of economic recovery
and inflation dynamics dominated deliberations
• ISM non-manufacturing survey shows improvement
Tuesday,
January 5, 2010
• Auto sales advanced in December, but declined in Q4
• Decline of Pending Home Sales Index partly due to original expiration
date of homebuyer tax credit program
• Factory inventories advance; noteworthy revision of shipments of non-defense
capital goods
Monday,
January 4, 2010
• Factory sector survey sends a strong positive signal
• Construction outlays dip in November, but Q4 residential construction
spending could be noteworthy
The minutes of
the FOMC's December 15-16 meeting also point to few changes in monetary policy
over the next few months. There was a consensus that near-term growth would
be only slightly above the economy's potential, but the minutes show a growing
divide between FOMC members less worried about inflation, and thus arguing
for more aggressive monetary policy steps, and those more worried about inflation.
As shown below, there is a significant and positive correlation (0.73) between
the composite ISM purchasing managers' index and the year-to-year change in
US real GDP. According to Asha Bangalore,
the noteworthy gains in the ISM survey over the past few months "suggest that
an impressive headline reading of GDP for the fourth quarter should not be
surprising".
Click here for
a summary of Wells Fargo Securities' weekly economic and financial commentary.
The European Central Bank (ECB) will make an interest rate announcement on
Thursday (January 14). US economic data reports for the week include the following:
Tuesday, January 12
• Trade balance
Wednesday, January 13
• Fed Beige Book
• Treasury budget
Thursday, January 14
• Jobless claims
• Retail sales
• Import and export prices
• Business inventories
Friday, January 15
• CPI
• Empire manufacturing
• Capacity utilization
• Industrial production
• Michigan sentiment
Markets
The performance chart for various financial markets usually obtained from the Wall
Street Journal Online is unfortunately not available this week.
Final words
Bertrand Russell, English logician and philosopher (1872-1970)
said: "What a man believes upon grossly insufficient evidence is an index into
his desires - desires of which he himself is often unconscious. If a man is
offered a fact which goes against his instincts, he will scrutinize it closely,
and unless the evidence is overwhelming, he will refuse to believe it. If,
on the other hand, he is offered something which affords a reason for acting
in accordance to his instincts, he will accept it even on the slightest evidence.
The origin of myths is explained in this way." (Hat tip: David
Fuller.)
Let's hope the news items and quotes from market commentators included in
the "Words from the Wise" review will prevent the readers of Investment
Postcards from falling into this trap, allowing them to build considerable
wealth with their investment portfolios.
That's the way it looks from Cape Town (whose balmy weather I will leave behind
on Thursday for the snowy environs of Switzerland).
David Fuller (Fullermoney): Themes for 2010
"Our favourite investment themes throughout 2009 were Asian-led emerging markets,
South American-led resources markets and information technology. We were bullish
of commodities, favouring precious metals, industrial resources and the agricultural
sector subject to weather-related shortages.
"How will these Fullermoney themes perform in 2010?
"I receive at least as many bearish or cautionary stock market reports as
bullish forecasts. I am inclined to regard these as contrary indicators, suggesting
that we are still in the lengthy 'wall of worry' portion of this bull market.
Crucially, monetary policy remains extremely accommodative as we approach 2010,
although no one knows for how long these stimulative measures will persist,
not even the central bankers. I will take my cues on monetary policy from the
central banks, not the pundits.
"I am content to ride the stock market uptrends, with some provisos. For instance,
most share indices have spent the last few months in a corrective phase. Having
seen some partial mean reversion towards the rising 200-day moving averages,
it is important that stock market indices sustain upwards breaks where sideways
trading ranges are currently evident.
"Conversely, downward breaks from trading ranges would signal at least a further
correction. I will give the upside the benefit of the doubt, at least while
leading indices maintain their progressions of higher reaction lows. You do
not need to watch them all, although I do, but I suggest monitoring the technical
consistency where you have investments, and also China and the US, given their
powerful leash effects.
"Incidentally, while China and India currently show additional upside scope
following lengthy consolidations, Brazil may need some further ranging mean
reversion towards its MA before another meaningful advance can be sustained.
"As for precious metals, they have underperformed since gold's steepening
advance was checked by a large downward dynamic on December 4. The US Dollar
Index's rally also provided a headwind, although this did not trouble many
other commodities which were less overstretched on the upside than gold. Interestingly,
platinum has subsequently rebounded and appears capable of extending its upward
trend before long. Gold and silver appear oversold and have lost downward momentum
recently, although they have yet to show reassuring upward dynamics. [PduP:
This happened on Monday, January 4.] Seasonal conditions will remain favourable
for precious metals through at least 1Q 2010.
"Among industrial metals, copper is the most influential and it is extending
its ranging upward trend."
Source: David Fuller, Fullermoney,
December 31, 2009.
CNBC: Jim O'Neill - recovery will be stronger than forecast
"The global economic rebound is likely to be even stronger than many have anticipated
and developed markets have the potential to outperform emerging markets, Jim
O'Neill, head of global economic research at Goldman Sachs, told CNBC Tuesday
[January 5] ."
Financial Times: Rise in factory orders spurs markets
"Manufacturers around the world are at their most optimistic for almost four
years after booking a sharp rise in new orders in December as Asia's recovery
spread to the US and Europe.
"Surveys of purchasing managers from China to Europe and the US in the final
month of 2009 released on Monday [January 4] exceeded expectations, sending
stock markets higher in advanced economies.
"Across the world, the combined scores of national purchasing managers' indices,
compiled by JP Morgan, rose to 55 in December, the highest since April 2006,
with the index for new orders at a 5½ year high.
"Manufacturers' intentions on employment rose above 50 for the first time
since March 2008, signalling that the brutal shake-out of factory jobs over
the past two years is coming to an end.
"David Hensley of JP Morgan said: 'If a rebound in the manufacturing labour
market can be maintained, this should aid with sustaining the broader recovery.'
"The surveys have long been good predictors of manufacturing output, the most
volatile part of the economy.
"Although there were a few pockets of gloom, notably Australia and Spain,
the strength of Asia's recovery was underlined by sharply better sentiment
in China and India, and steady improvements in South Korea and Taiwan. Brighter
prospects were also recorded in the US, UK and the eurozone. The US Institute
of Supply Management manufacturing report stood at 55.9 in December, its highest
since April 2006."
CNBC: John Taylor on the real crisis culprit
"Insight on whether monetary policy is not the problem, with John Taylor, Stanford
University economics professor."
Reuters: Rate hikes not best way to burst bubbles - Bernanke
"Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Sunday that vigorous financial
regulation would have been the best way to restrain the housing bubble that
helped cause the deep recession, but said policy makers can no longer rule
out monetary policy to curb the buildup of risk.
"In a speech defending the Fed's rock-bottom interest rates in the early 2000s,
a policy many say fueled a runaway housing boom that triggered a devastating
crisis when it went bust, Bernanke said regulatory and supervisory actions,
rather than rate hikes, would have been more effective ways to check the run-up
in house prices.
"Bernanke and the Fed face sharp criticism over actions leading up to the
crisis. Bernanke's renomination as Fed chairman faces an unusual degree of
opposition, and the Fed's responsibilities stand to be curtailed if congressional
proposals become law.
"Bernanke said, however, in a speech to the American Economic Association,
that policy makers can no longer eliminate rate increases from their arsenal
to prevent future crises.
"'If adequate reforms are not made, or if they are made but prove insufficient
to prevent dangerous buildups of financial risks, we must remain open to using
monetary policy as a supplemental tool for addressing those risks,' he said.
"Bernanke conceded that efforts by the Fed and other regulators beginning
in 2005 came too late or were insufficient to slow the housing bubble.
"'The lesson I take from this experience is not that financial regulations
are ineffective for controlling emerging risks, but that their execution must
be better and smarter,' he said.
"The US Senate is poised to begin debate over financial rules reforms that
would peel away the Fed's authority for regulating large financial firms. The
US central bank would be charged instead with focusing on monetary policy.
"Bernanke and other Fed officials have argued that such a change would hurt
the Fed and oversight of the system in general by removing a crucial monitor
from the pulse of the financial system.
"Analyzing the Fed's decisions to keep rates low for an extended period in
the early 2000s, the Fed chairman argued that those policies were a response
to the worry about a possible deflationary spiral that hobbled the Japanese
economy through much of the previous decade.
"Bernanke pointed to adjustable-rate mortgages and overconfidence that house
prices would continue to rise as the main culprits behind the catastrophic
housing bubble."
Source: Mark Felsenthal, Reuters,
January 3, 2010.
Time: Pimco's Bill Gross sees 2010 as year of reckoning
"Pimco managing director Bill Gross not only oversees the world's biggest bond
fund, his views often sway markets. In a late December interview with TIME's
John Curran, Gross pointed to the second half of 2010 as a period when investors
large and small will reckon with a new reality of poor economic growth and
a Federal Reserve that is hard pressed to offer much help.
TIME: Where do you see the economy going over the next 6 to 12 months?
Bill Gross: The economy should be relatively strong in the first half of 2010
then weaken in the second half. That's not to say we'll return to recession
but we'll see weakness as opposed to a continuation of what will probably
be a decent first half.
What will make the first half of 2010 so good?
The first half will be dominated by government stimulus and by inventory accumulation
or a lack of [inventory] liquidation among businesses. I expect nothing from
consumer [spending] and nothing really from housing or really any of the
standard cyclical leading sectors. It's hard to put a number on GDP growth
rates, but let's say 4% in the first half and then 2% in the second half,
which would basically call for some additional help.
You're talking about a second shot of federal stimulus?
Yes, something else is probably needed if the [government's] thrust is really
reducing unemployment below double digits and re-normalizing the economy.
What does this say about the Federal Reserve's hopes to start pulling its
added liquidity out of the markets, either by raising short-term rates or
just getting out of buying bonds, which has been keeping long rates low?
I think the Fed's statements suggest that they really want to exit in some
fashion from the buying program. The first step in that direction, logically,
would be to stop buying and our sense is that they're at least going to try
that. But based on our forecasts for the second half of the year they may have
to re-initiate it, and that will be difficult to do once they stop because
it then becomes a political hot potato.
All that said, I think they'll stop buying mortgage agency securities, and
the trillion-and-a-half dollar check that's been written over the past 9 to
12 months basically disappears. It's significant from the standpoint of interest
rates and interest rate spreads in certain sectors. And I would even go so
far as to say it might be a mistake.
Because they might have to restart the buying program later?
Yes, I think the Fed wonders about this as well. But you have to understand
that the Fed's probably under political pressure - such as the hearings for
new regulation of the Fed, the growing public unease about the supersized
Fed balance sheet, etc. The Fed's expanded balance sheet is not something
that I consider to be a problem, but I think the market does - and so the
Fed will probably be working in the direction of pulling some of the liquidity
out of the marketplace. They won't sell - it's a near impossibility to unload
what they've purchased over past 12 months. But they'll at least stop buying.
Won't that put upward pressure on interest rates?
I think it will. I mean the mortgage market would be your first place to look
in terms of something that's overvalued that would become normalized. Nobody
knows what the Fed's buying is worth - we think about half a percentage point
on rates, but we don't know."
Bloomberg: Krugman sees 30-40% chance of US recession in 2010
"Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman talks with Bloomberg's Steve Matthews
about likelihood the US economy will slide into a recession during the second
half of the year as fiscal and monetary stimulus fade. Krugman, an economics
professor at Princeton University, also said the Federal Reserve's plan to
end purchases of $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities and about $175
billion of federal agency debt in March could spur an increase in mortgage
rates and lead to declines in home sales and prices."
MoneyNews: Rosenberg - economy is in post-bubble collapse
"David Rosenberg, chief economist for Gluskin Sheff & Associates, takes
issue with the consensus view that a sustained economic recovery has begun.
"'We are in a post-credit bubble credit collapse that is ongoing,' he writes
on The Big Picture.
"And that doesn't bode well for financial markets, though the recent rally
might continue for a while, Rosenberg says.
"'Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you
think, but they do not correct by going sideways.'
"Economists err in calling this downturn 'The Great Recession', Rosenberg
writes.
"'This is truly a gentle way of saying 'Depression."
"So first we must acknowledge that we indeed experienced a depression.
"'Then ... we can draw a conclusion that a sustainable recovery will not get
under way until the ratio of household credit to personal disposable income
reverts to the mean - and goes to an excess in the opposite direction,' Rosenberg
says.
"'I know it sounds harsh, but we shall endure - believe it. Transition is
rarely without pain.'"
Bloomberg: Stiglitz says Wall Street "talking up" recovery
"Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz said investors are 'talking up' signs of a
global economic recovery in a bid to boost equities.
"'Wall Street is talking up the recovery because it would like to sell stocks,'
Stiglitz told reporters at a conference in Paris today [Thursday, January 7].
"The MSCI World Index of stocks has surged 73% since its low of last March
even while the economies of advanced nations grow below their potential rates
following the worst recession since the Great Depression.
"Stocks are rallying because interest rates are low and companies have been
cutting costs by reducing payrolls, factors that suggest economies remain weak,
said Stiglitz, a professor at Columbia University in New York.
"'Whenever rates are low, stock markets are often high,' he said. By contrast,
economists are 'almost universally pessimistic'.
"Speaking at the conference, Stiglitz said US regulators haven't done enough
to address the risks posed by large banks, derivatives and executive compensation.
"He recommended a tax be introduced on financial speculation as a way of generating
revenue and forcing investors to focus on the longer-term."
Source: Isabelle Mas and Simon Kennedy, Bloomberg,
January 7, 2010.
Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust): Minutes of December FOMC meeting
"The FOMC left the federal funds rate unchanged at the close of the December
FOMC meeting. There is little doubt about the Fed staying on hold in the first-half
of 2010. There are different points of view about when the Fed will start reducing
the monetary accommodation in place. It is too early to find hints in the minutes
about when the Fed is likely to implement a change of course in its monetary
policy stance. The minutes of the December deliberations show varying points
of view among the members of the FOMC on different aspects about the economy
and monetary policy.
"Most members agreed that incoming economic data was consistent with forecast
of growth and inflation envisioned in the November meeting. Employment conditions
were seen to improve only gradually in 2010, in line with previous recoveries
following a financial crisis. There appeared to be a broad consensus about
the weakness in underlying labor market conditions. In addition to the high
unemployment rate, members noted that the significant decline in production
hours and the drop in the employment-population ratio as raising concern about
the labor market.
"In the residential real estate sector, although home prices were showing
signs of stability and sales and construction had moved up from their cycle
lows, the improvements were seen as tentative. The expiration of the home buyer
tax credit program in April 2010, likelihood of additional foreclosures leading
to lower home prices, and the possibility of pressure in mortgage markets as
the Fed winds down the mortgage securities purchase program were seen as factors
that could create unfavorable conditions in the housing sector once again.
"There were three opinions pertaining to inflation. The significant slack
in labor and product markets and contained inflation expectations were seen
as factors helping to keep inflation subdued in the near term. Most members
agreed about the forces keeping inflation under control but seemed to differ
about the relative role that each would play. Inflation expectations have moved
up in recent weeks and are holding at levels below the mark seen prior to the
onset of the crisis in August 2007.
"There were mixed views about the monetary accommodation necessary in the
future, which is evident in the following excerpt:
'A few members noted that resource slack was expected to diminish only
slowly and observed that it might become desirable at some point in the future
to provide more policy stimulus by expanding the planned scale of the Committee's
large-scale asset purchases and continuing them beyond the first quarter,
especially if the outlook for economic growth were to weaken or if mortgage
market functioning were to deteriorate. One member thought that the improvement
in financial market conditions and the economic outlook suggested that the
quantity of planned asset purchases could be scaled back, and that it might
become appropriate to begin reducing the Federal Reserve's holdings of longer-term
assets if the recovery gains strength over time.'
"All in all, 2010 will be a year of challenges for Fed and other policymakers."
Reuters: US Fed's Duke sees low rates for "extended period"
"The US Federal Reserve sees a moderate economic recovery continuing in 2010,
but needs to keep interest rates 'exceptionally low' for an 'extended period'
to foster job growth, a Fed policymaker said on Monday.
"Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke told an economic forum that slack in the economy
was likely to remain above historical norms for some time, helping to keep
inflation subdued.
"'In the current environment, the FOMC continues to anticipate that economic
conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds
rate for an extended period,' Duke said, referring to the US central bank's
policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee.
"'Such policy accommodation is warranted to provide support for a return over
time to more desirable levels of real activity and unemployment in the context
of price stability.'
"Fed watchers have focused on any changes in that language for clues to the
timing of a possible tightening of monetary policy as the economy recovers.
The FOMC maintained the 'extended period' stance in its last statement on December
15.
"In remarks to the Economic Forecast Forum in Raleigh, North Carolina, Duke
said recent data on production and spending suggested that economic activity
continued to increase at a 'solid rate' during the final months of 2009 after
real GDP turned positive in the third quarter.
"'I expect to see a continued moderate recovery in economic activity in 2010,
supported by a further healing in financial markets and accommodative monetary
policy,' Duke said.
"But echoing comments by Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn in Atlanta on Sunday
[January 3], Duke said constraints on lending would slow recovery."
Bloomberg: Hoenig says Fed should eventually lift main rate to 3.5%- 4.5%
"Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas Hoenig said the central
bank should move 'sooner rather than later' to reduce stimulus, with a goal
of eventually boosting the benchmark interest rate to 'probably between 3.5
and 4.5 percent'.
"'The process of returning policy to a more balanced weighing of short-run
and longer-run economic and financial goals should occur sooner rather than
later,' Hoenig, who votes on monetary policy decisions this year, said today
in a speech in Kansas City.
"'Maintaining excessively low interest rates for a lengthy period runs the
risk of creating new kinds of asset misallocations, more volatile and higher
long-run inflation, and more unemployment - not today, perhaps, but in the
medium- and longer-run.'
"Policy makers are considering how to exit from unprecedented stimulus and
emergency credit programs amid signs the US economy is rebounding. They pledged
at the end of their December 15-16 meeting to complete $1.25 trillion in purchases
of mortgage securities and $175 billion of agency debt by the end of March,
while holding the benchmark interest rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent
for an 'extended period'.
"'The Federal Reserve must curtail its emergency credit and financial market
support programs, raise the federal funds rate target from zero back to a more
normal level, probably between 3.5 and 4.5 percent, and restore its balance
sheet to pre-crisis size and configuration,' Hoenig said in remarks prepared
for a speech to the Central Exchange, a group that promotes leadership development
opportunities for women.
"Hoenig said he disagrees with economists who forecast the economy may falter
and predicted growth will exceed 3 percent this year.
"'Fiscal and monetary stimulus will continue to provide major support to the
economy,' he said. 'Much of the fiscal stimulus package announced last year
will have its impact in 2010, and it might well be more substantial than initially
projected due to delays in implementing spending programs.'"
Source: Steve Matthews, Bloomberg,
January 7, 2010.
Asha Bangalore: ISM non-manufacturing survey results show improvement
"The ISM non-manufacturing survey results showed an improvement in the service
sector, with the composite index climbing to 50.1 in December from 48.6 in
the prior month. The index measuring new orders slipped 3 points to 52.1 in
December but the level denotes an expansion in activity."
With
25 years' experience in investment research and portfolio management, Dr Prieur
du Plessis is one of the most experienced and well-known investment professionals
in South Africa. More than 1 000 of his articles on investment-related topics
have been published in various regular newspaper, journal and Internet columns.
He also published a book, Financial Basics: Investment, in 2002.
He holds the following degrees: BSc (Quantity Surveying)
(Cape Town), HonsB (B & A) (cum laude) (Stellenbosch), MBA (cum laude)
(Stellenbosch); and DBA (Doctor of Financial Management) (Stellenbosch).
Prieur is chairman of the Plexus group
of companies, which he founded in 1995. Previously he was general manager:
portfolio management at Sanlam, responsible for the management of investment
portfolios with total assets in excess of $5 billion.
Plexus is a pioneer
in the mutual fund industry and has achieved a number of firsts under Prieur's
leadership. These include the authoritative Plexus Survey, a quarterly analysis
of the consistency of the performance of unit trust management companies, the
Plexus Offshore Survey, the Plexus Unit Trust Indices, and the PlexCrown Fund
Ratings.
Plexus is the South
African partner of John Mauldin, American
author of the most widely distributed investment newsletter in the world, and
also has an exclusive licensing agreement with California-based Research
Affiliates for managing and distributing its enhanced Fundamental Index™ methodology
in the Pan-African area.
In 2001 Prieur received the Santam/AHI Business Leader
of the Year award for corporate leadership, business acumen and entrepreneurial
flair. He was also profiled in the book South Africa's Leading Managers (2006).
Plexus received the AHI/Old Mutual Enterprise of the Year award in 1997 and
was also included in the book South Africa's Most Promising Companies (2005).
Prieur is 52 years old and lives with his wife, TV producer
and presenter Isabel Verwey, and two children in Welgemoed, Cape Town. His
recreational activities include long-distance running, motor cycling and reading.
He belongs to the Cape Town Club, Johannesburg Country Club, Gordon's Bay Yacht
Club and Swiss Social & Sports Club.
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