SACO INVEST
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
SACO INVEST

Fórum da Saco Invest
 
HomeHome  SearchSearch  Latest imagesLatest images  RegisterRegister  Log in  

 

 Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right

Go down 
AuthorMessage
gastaoss




Number of posts : 440
Registration date : 2007-07-01

Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right Empty
PostSubject: Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right   Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right Icon_minitimeSat Sep 22, 2007 11:14 am

Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right


You can't please everyone, and the Federal Reserve didn't bother to try
this week. With its bold interest-rate cut Tuesday, the Fed clearly put
economic growth -- and the stock market -- ahead of inflation concerns.


Too bad if you were planning a vacation to most anywhere outside
the U.S. In slashing short-term interest rates, the central bank
sacrificed the dollar's value against other major and minor currencies
by reducing the appeal of dollar-denominated debt.


Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right 32726906

Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right 32726346

Looks like a good time to revive the "See America First" ad campaign.


Though the Fed was roasted by its critics for, in their view,
caving to Wall Street, policymakers' half-point cut in their benchmark
rate also must be playing well on much of Main Street.



For many average investors, what's not to like? The Fed's move had the
effect of performing further repair work on 401(k) retirement accounts
that had been battered in the late-summer credit crunch and related
market turmoil.



The share price of the biggest stock mutual fund, the American Funds
group's Growth Fund of America, slumped 9% from July 19 to Aug. 16.
That loss has been almost entirely recouped. At $37.29 on Friday, with
a 3.1% gain for the week, the fund's price was just a penny below the
July 19 record high.



Strong interest in technology stocks has helped the market rebound. And
if you're betting on tech, you're betting on a continuing economic
expansion, which is what the Fed wants to see.



The Nasdaq 100 index, dominated by tech issues, closed Friday just 0.2%
away from its midsummer peak. Google Inc., one of the big names in the
index, rose $7.27 to a record $560.10. Software giant Oracle Corp.
ended at a 6 1/2 -year high after reporting strong sales and earnings
growth in the quarter ended Aug. 31.



Among other indexes, the Dow Jones industrial average added 53.49
points to 13,820.19 on Friday, up 2.8% for the week. It's a mere 1.3%
away from setting a new high.



The story has been much the same for foreign stock markets, many of
which were hit harder than the U.S. market in the summer pullback.



And there's a kicker for American investors, who, overall, have poured
far more money into foreign stock mutual funds than domestic funds for
the last two years. As the dollar weakens, investments denominated in
stronger currencies are worth more when translated into dollars.



So although the falling dollar is lowering Americans' purchasing power
and, arguably, our standard of living in the long run, it's a bonus if
you own foreign assets.



Case in point: The Canadian dollar is at 1-for-1 parity with the U.S.
dollar for the first time since 1976. That's bad news if you're
dreaming of a Manitoba adventure. But if you own a stock fund indexed
to the main Canadian market gauge, the 8% year-to-date rise in that
index becomes a stunning 25.7% gain when translated into U.S. dollars.



That's about as compelling an argument anyone can make for maintaining a well-diversified portfolio.



So is the performance of gold, and gold-mining stocks. The metal's
price hit a 27-year high of $732.40 an ounce this week. An index of 16
gold-mining stocks surged to an all-time high.



Whatever is driving gold -- inflation worries, doubts about the
economy, demand from wealthier emerging-market consumers, or all of the
above -- investors who own the metal or its proxies are thrilled that
they have a piece of the action.



Who's hurt by the drop in the Fed's key rate to 4.75% from 5.25%, the
first reduction since 2003? People with cash in the bank or in money
market mutual funds will earn less because yields on those accounts
will decline in the near term.



And, at least this week, owners of long-term Treasury bonds took a mild
hit. Instead of falling with short-term rates, long-term Treasury
yields rose for the week, with the 30-year T-bond ending Friday at
4.89%, up from 4.72% a week earlier.



The Fed's critics say that's the penalty for a rate cut that they
believe wasn't justified by the economic fundamentals. Their argument:
With oil, wheat and other commodity prices at or near record highs, and
with the weak dollar threatening to boost prices of imported goods, the
Fed risks stoking inflation pressures by encouraging cheaper credit.



Buyers of long-term bonds are highly sensitive to inflation concerns,
because fixed returns are eroded by rising inflation. With current
T-bond yields under 5%, even an increase in annualized inflation to 3%
from the current 2% range (as measured by the government's price
indexes) would be devastating for bond investors.



Still, it's going to take more than a one-week rise in long-term yields
to make a compelling case that the bond market senses a serious
inflation problem out there.



The Fed's supporters, the bulk of the Wall Street crowd (not
surprisingly), say the central bank got it right. They believe that the
disruption in credit markets stemming from worries about the housing
sector's woes raised the risk of recession and required intervention.



The Fed showed that it was "committed to doing whatever it can to avoid
more significant economic weakness," said Nick Raich, director of
equity research for the private client group at National City Corp. in
Cleveland. Bolstered by that assurance, stocks could soon climb to new
highs, he said.



But what if the Fed is too late, or simply won't be able to forestall
an economic slump with lower interest rates? That happened in 2001,
after all.



Brokerage Goldman Sachs this week cut its estimate of U.S. economic
growth in the next three quarters to a range of 1% to 1.5%. If the
forecast is right, any fresh shock to the economy may tip it into
recession.



Global stock markets, zooming again, clearly don't believe that a
recession (and with it, a plunge in corporate earnings) is imminent.
Obviously, that means share prices are vulnerable if the economy
doesn't follow the bulls' script.



The markets' fast comeback of recent weeks, however, shows that the
appetite for equities remains robust. If the Fed rode to the rescue in
time, that appetite may well get stronger.
Back to top Go down
 
Wall St. bulls bet the Fed got it right
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1
 Similar topics
-
» When Bulls and Bears Act Unruly on a Seesaw
» Bailing out Wall Street - Again
» Socialism for Wall Street
» Wall Street gets ready to face 'Monday blues'
» Bonus Season: An Edwardian Tale of Two Wall Streets

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
SACO INVEST :: SACO INVEST-
Jump to: