World Week Ahead: Who let the bears out?
World Week Ahead: Who let the bears out?
July 5 (BusinessDesk) - There’s a First Nations’ saying in Canada that appears to capture the mood on markets from bonds to equities to currencies to commodities: “When a pine needle falls in the forest, the eagle sees it, the deer hears it and the bear smells it.’’
Bears are out in full swing right now and there are few assets offering much cover. One money manager told Bloomberg News that we’re in a “psychological” bear market, a sentiment that is rising.
On Friday, Barton Biggs told Bloomberg
Television that he dumped almost all of his technology
shares because of increasing concern that the U.S. economy
would contract.
He wasn’t alone.
The
Nasdaq 100 Index, which gets 63% of its value from
computer-related companies such as Microsoft Corp and Apple
Inc, has declined 9.7% after slumping 10 consecutive days,
Bloomberg data shows. Microsoft has tumbled 26% since
peaking on April 22, while Apple has fallen 9.9% in two
weeks.
Voices of concern also are being raised in
the wake of several weeks of disappointing economic data
from China to Europe to the U.S., including last week’s
manufacturing reports and the June payrolls report released
in Washington on Friday.
As we’ve seen several
times since the global financial crisis took effect,
momentum turns on a dime and every data point, no matter its
historical relevance, is interpreted as either the end of
the world or the start of a new bull market.
The
reality is - as expected - the U.S. labour market is
struggling to gain traction. The latest report showed that
private companies hired just 83,000 last month, below the
112,000 forecast in a Reuters poll. The jobless rate dipped
but because more people stopped looking.
President Barack Obama, who is positioning the
Democrats for November congressional elections on hope for
jobs growth, said the recovery wasn’t moving fast
enough.
That’s exactly why investors weren’t
impressed either with the data.
All three major U.S.
indices ended lower on Friday and for the week, the Dow fell
4.5%, the S&P lost 5% and the Nasdaq shed 5.9%.
The
mood was equally bleak in Europe, where the Stoxx Europe 600
shed 4.5% for the week, its biggest drop in six.
Europe is making progress on addressing sovereign debt
issues but it’s going to take time and more countries are
going to put asking for some help, extending wariness about
what lies ahead. Uncertainty feeds the bears more than bad
news itself.
Ukraine is set to be the latest
euro-zone nation to tap the International Monetary Fund for
financial help, according to weekend reports - about US$14.9
billion worth of help.
The challenge for global
policymakers is how to rein in spending to keep deficits
from rising at unsustainable rates and yet not turn off the
taps too fast and stall growth. Not an easy task at any time
yet alone in the current environment.
China, which
has powered the global recovery through its purchases of
mostly raw commodities, can’t keep expanding at
double-digit rates. Chinese authorities themselves are
trying to ease back on the throttle.
In fact,
Goldman Sachs Group lowered its 2010 forecast for growth in
China’s real gross domestic product to 10.1% from 11.4%.
Quarter-on-quarter real GDP growth will “slip to 8% or
below” in the second half of 2010 before rebounding, the
brokerage said in a note as reported by Bloomberg. Goldman
kept its forecast for 2011 GDP growth unchanged at 10%.
Biggs, the 77-year-old money manager, is more
pessimistic.
“I’m worried that we could have not
just a soft patch, but a double dip which lasts two or three
quarters and where nominal GDP is only up 2 or 3%, and
that’ll have a big effect on profits,” he said.
“It’ll scare everybody and I’m afraid the market goes
down another 10 or 15% if that happens.”
"There is
growing concern over the possibility of a double-dip
recession in developed markets," Rob Carnell, chief
international economist at ING Commercial Banking, told
Reuters. "In consequence, people want to keep their money as
liquid as possible in case things start to turn down."
This week the focus will be on what central bankers have
to say in England and Europe, though no one is expecting any
change in interest rates. There’s not much else on tap.
The inverse relationship between the U.S. dollar and
equities showed signs of breaking down last week, as both
Wall Street and the greenback fell. For the past several
weeks, the dollar has tended to rise when stocks fell on
safe haven bids.
The 25-day correlation coefficient
between the S&P 500 index and the U.S. dollar index was
positive 0.04 on Friday, Reuters data showed, showing almost
no relationship. In mid-May, the correlation was a strong
negative 0.91.
Some analysts said the breakdown
suggests market players are perhaps pricing in a greater
risk of a double-dip recession in the United States, which
could erode the dollar's appeal.
The euro may rise
above US$1.27 in the near term, with US$1.2770 seen as
resistance, some analysts say. A break of that level may
push the euro/dollar towards US$1.2950 and US$1.30,
reflecting weakness in the U.S. dollar rather a rethink of
the euro’s outlook.
At the end of the day - and
that which plays into the hands of bears - is the strength
of the U.S. economy, or perceptions of it. The week ahead is
a shortened one for U.S. markets, with the July 4th
Independence Day celebrations putting Wall Street on the
sidelines on Monday.
Headwinds are blowing from
every direction it seems. Is it the start of a stormy summer
Western Hemisphere? Bears, on the prowl, are hopeful.
(BusinessDesk)