Stocks & Bonds
Where to Invest in 2010
The long-term economic outlook remains gloomy, but stocks should still advance in the coming year.
By Andrew Tanzer, Senior Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, January 2010
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If you relish drama, 2009 had it all. In a cliffhanger, the very visible hand of government helped wrest the U.S. economy from the abyss. Following the longest and steepest recession since World War II, initial reports indicated gross domestic product grew 3.5% in the third quarter. Anticipating the end of the downturn, a nearly comatose stock market bottomed on March 9, then soared 60% in just seven months.
What’s in store for 2010? Recessions stemming from financial crises tend to be severe and are usually followed by relatively anemic economic recoveries. This time will be no exception, with one of the feeblest recoveries -- maybe 2% to 3% growth in GDP in 2010 -- to follow such a steep decline.
Moreover, Uncle Sam has extended enormous fiscal and monetary stimuli in order to stem the downward spiral. Low interest rates may benefit debtors, but they punish savers. Massive amounts of private-sector indebtedness have been shifted onto the shoulders of government -- and taxpayers. Eventually, the bill will come due.
The stock-market rally of 2009 had an artificial feel. It owed more to a sea of liquidity than to an improvement in the nation’s basic economic condition. When the Federal Reserve Board loosens monetary policy and short-term interest rates fall to zero, capital flows more quickly to risky assets, such as stocks and junk bonds, than it does to the real economy.
There may well be a day of reckoning for all the lingering structural imbalances, but we’re betting that it won’t come in 2010, a midterm election year. Somewhat surprisingly, then, this year may turn out to be a good one for the stock market.
With Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index selling in early November at about 15 times estimated 2010 earnings, the market’s price-earnings ratio is in line with the historical average. Driven by improving earnings in the new year and the prospect of more of the same in 2011, a broad index such as the S&P 500 could return about 10% over the next 12 months. In terms of the market’s best-known barometer, the Dow Jones industrial average could approach 11,000.
David Bianco, chief market strategist for Merrill Lynch, thinks earnings will be surprisingly strong given expectations of modest GDP growth. A weak dollar benefits many businesses, including resource producers. Industries such as technology, energy and materials now book more than half of their revenues overseas, where economic growth is stronger than at home. “The S&P 500 is beginning to outgrow the U.S.,” Bianco says.
Those scary deficits
But investors need to be aware of the many lurking risks. Let’s start with the federal budget deficit, which also intersects with currency, interest-rate and inflation risks. Goldman Sachs projects that outlays will exceed income by $1.6 trillion in the fiscal year that ends next September and by another $1.4 trillion the following year. Tax revenues at the federal level are running at only 60% of spending levels, and let’s not forget that nearly every state is running a deficit, too.
Those are frightening numbers, but just as scary is the domestic savings shortfall, which means that we must depend on the kindness of foreign strangers, such as the Chinese, Japanese and Russians, to purchase half of the Treasury bonds we sell at auction. Will they?
Maybe they will, but probably at the price of higher interest rates and a cheaper dollar. This is a high-stakes confidence game. Turner Investment’s David Kovacs says two nightmare scenarios for 2010 would be a foreign selloff of bonds and a Treasury-bond auction for which, figuratively speaking, no one showed up. Either would force the Fed to raise interest rates much sooner than it intended.
The fundamental problem is that we have massive budget deficits but artificially low interest rates. The Fed is keeping rates low to ease the strains of high unemployment, excessive consumer debt and a moribund residential real estate market, and to help ailing banks earn easy profits from the wide spreads between their cost of money and the interest rates they charge.
Economists at Goldman Sachs think that deflationary pressures in the economy are so potent that the Fed -- if left to its own devices -- will not start raising interest rates until 2011. Indeed, slashing debt is deflationary, and there are high levels of slack capacity in labor, real estate and industrial markets. For instance, rents -- which account for almost 40% of inflation calculations -- are declining.
Yet investors such as Rob Arnott, of Research Affiliates, are already fretting about looming risks of inflation and increased currency weakness as the government strains to reignite the economy. “It’s hard to imagine setting trillion-dollar bonfires in fiscal and monetary stimulus without triggering a pretty severe risk of inflation down the road,” says Arnott. He believes the Fed and the Treasury Department will encourage some inflation to ease the nation’s debt burden, while at the same time denying that they are doing so. He expects inflation, recently running at an annual rate of Ð1.3%, to top 3% by 2011.
Today, many of the vestiges of our epic credit and housing bubbles remain. The banking system, the lifeblood of our economy, is still convalescing. U.S. banks will have written down more than $1 trillion of bad loans by the end of 2010, projects the International Monetary Fund. Losses on commercial real estate loans are mounting. That will endanger numerous community and regional banks. Meanwhile, net lending by banks has declined sharply in recent months, and small enterprises, which depend heavily on bank credit, are having trouble securing loans. Banks seem more interested in rebuilding their balance sheets by borrowing cheap money and investing in Treasuries than in lending to small businesses.
Let’s not forget residential housing, the proximate trigger of the financial collapse. In recent months, housing prices have stabilized after a three-year downward spiral. But home prices may start declining again in 2010 if the government begins to ease some of the programs designed to prop up housing prices (see Glimmers of Light on Home Prices).
Amherst Securities calculates that seven million loans -- a truly staggering number -- are delinquent or in foreclosure, which creates a large overhang weighing on the market. And the meaning of delinquency has changed over the past decade. Amherst says that in 2005, before negative home equity entered our lexicon, two-thirds of delinquent loans were cured without resorting to foreclosure. Today, a loan delinquent for 60 days or more has a 95% chance of ending in foreclosure.
There is a silver lining for banks, however, in the process of clearing foreclosures, says Dave Ellison, manager of FBR Large Cap Financial fund. From the moment the homeowner stops paying his mortgage until foreclosure -- typically a span of more than a year -- banks receive no income from the property. But once a bank takes possession of a property, it regains value because the bank can sell the home to the highest bidder.
Falling housing values are at least partly to blame for the shift to thrift among U.S. consumers. Households are laboring to reduce heavy debts in a difficult environment of stagnant incomes, a poor job market and deflated net worth. “We think it will take three to five years for the consumer to fix his balance sheet,” says Charles de Vaulx, co-manager of IVA Worldwide Fund.
The jobs figures are awful -- a 10.2% unemployment rate at last report and more than seven million jobs lost during the recession. Economists at ING project that a return to full employment over the next five years would require 15 million new jobs, or 250,000 per month (from 1999 through 2008, the economy generated 50,000 new jobs monthly). That’s just not going to happen. Many of the jobs in bloated sectors, such as real estate, construction, finance and retail, are not returning anytime soon.
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Reader Comments (4)
Posted by: Valio Smith at 12/21/2009 04:55:08 AM
Non interest to short-term invest is normal reaction across the crisis situation. They will be most popular at the end of 2010. For me personally it's good to invest in niche at countries with good financial indicators at the moment (ex.: Bulgaria is a single country in the world with only 0.7% budget deficit - seeurope.net/?q=node/18632 ). My supposition is for increase the dollar price and I'm not scared from big runaway sells of bonds and stocks, which make the market to get 'crazy' . It is normal many countries to suppose bigger deficit for 2010 - it's still crisis time. Bad loans was expecting thing, but more loan secure will make low quantity of loans. Property and construction investing is still risky thing - market holds low positions and that kind of investing can transform invest to much long-term and invest with vague refundable, till food and agriculture (ex.: "business webdirectory agriculture") chemical industry and energy supply, mining and heavy industry are modern always. I don't give a hints for what to invest, there are much strong companies, but you know, that the risky invest in small companies is with much many profit. I think in 2010 long-term investing will be still preferred by bigger piece of investors. Anyway I'll suggest everyone to consult with experts (ex.: "db2b business directory financial and law expert") before start to invest, because the crisis is not gone yet.
Posted by: Gman at 01/22/2010 11:12:25 PM
Hand of the Government wrested economy from the Abyss? What a load of trash. For all the education in the world simple math has eluded you? In what world does taxpayer theft and goverment spending equate to a economic recovery? The fixes are so simple yet all the Harvard and Yale educations combined seem to produce nothing but word twisting self loathing idiots. Its pretty easy to fix this problem. We stopped producing and kept consuming completely destroying our savings. Until we tear up that NAFTA crap, Kick the private Federal reserve out of our monetary system, and eliminate ALL business taxes in the U.S. we will continue to wonder why our standard of living drops and dollar sinks in value. Yeah we will have a few rallies here and there propped up by unsustainable and artificial means but no long lasting wealth building opportunity until the changes are made.
Posted by: Bob at 07/04/2010 05:07:49 PM
I AGREE WITH Gman!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: frank at 10/02/2010 06:58:25 PM
Everyone agrees Port Saint Lucie Florida is the absolute best place to open a buisness or to have a home. This place is beautiful and the City of Port Saint Lucie is moving along like theres no tomorrow. And the building going on you would think it's 2005 during the boom.They just built a new civic center that would knock your socks off it won best design i can see why. Also new malls are going up everywhere,new roads,new drainage systems,new hotels,new LA fitness,investors are going crazy snatching up homes,new bridge is going in to connect the island even plans for an international airport. Im so glad i found out about this place through cnn, money mag,fortune mag,forbs . Thank you for your advice. I just purchased a million dollars worth of realestate and retired instantly cant thank you enough...