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For those of us who have been predicting an equity market correction in 2006,
this year has been a humbling experience. The Dow Jones Industrials average
is up 12.9% for the year and is at nominal record highs. Meanwhile, the
NASDAQ is up better than 8% and the S&P 500 is 10.5% higher than where
it started the year. These numbers should send most bears into hibernation
and few will have the temerity to go against the trend.
What the stock market is missing however, is how slow the economy will become
in 2007 and how slow the Fed will be to address that malaise with monetary
stimulus. There is a disconnect that exists between the paltry growth
of G.D.P. and the strength in pro-forma earnings profit growth. The robust
returns of the major stock averages remain unconfirmed by economically-sensitive
commodities and by the bond market, as well. All the while, the yield
curve has remained in its unnatural state of inversion, yet equities defy this
reliable harbinger of recession.
It is my thesis that the Fed will cut rates in 2007, but only in response
to concrete evidence that the U.S. economy is in recession, which should occur
in the first or second quarter. If stocks finally acknowledge such economic
weakness and correct substantially, that may mark the time when equities should
be bought, albeit with more caution than we are seeing today. Keep in
mind, all voting members of the Fed are not in agreement regarding where rates
should go next, which indicates the market may be premature in believing the
Fed stands ready to lower rates at the first signs of economic trouble.
What will throw the economy beyond just slowing growth and into recession
are the delayed effects of 17 interest rate hikes, slowing monetary growth
rates and the crumbling housing market, which is far from putting in a bottom
(despite proclamations from the former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan). As
I have indicated in previous commentaries, home price to income ratios are
at a record of 5.3:1, the inventory of existing homes are at a 10-year high
of 7.3 months and new home construction rates continue to be above intrinsic
population increases, all of which forebode a protracted and painful correction
in real estate prices. These conditions have been slow to retard consumer spending
but should continue to manifest themselves in pernicious fashion throughout
2007.
Recent Government statistics indicate that the U.S. economy is already teetering
on the brink of recession, with the 3rd quarter G.D.P. growth rate of 1.6%
and Tuesday's October retail trade data indicating sales decline of .3%
for standing merely as recent examples of this slowing trend. How much
longer the equity market can ignore this data and anticipate the continuation
of double digit earnings growth is unknown, but manias can, of course, last
longer than expected. Eventually, however, weak economic data will cause
investors to worry about earnings rather than cheering a quiescent Fed. It
should prove to be prudent strategy not to chase this over-extended domestic
market rally and instead focus on foreign opportunities that offer both dividends
and a hedge against a falling U.S. dollar.
**Speaking of U.S. Dollar hedges, we have gained the exclusive right to bring
you a special report on the recent Canadian royalty trust tax announcement
from Roger Conrad, one of the leading commentators on this industry. His
report contains a discussion of many individual energy trusts and can be downloaded
here: http://www.deltaga.com/reportForm.asp?rep=4.
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