How Do You Answer These 5 Questions?
Correcting or Down
Market Outlook: Still a gamble and not a
speculation
David’s Pick: RRPIX
Peter’s Pick: Cash
Sector Watch:
Up:
Mostly upward bounces
throughout the sectors, but strength remains in the Real Estate sector.
Down:
The broad markets, led by
weakness in Drugs, Tobacco, and Energy.
Navarro’s Broad Market
Outlook: Baseball
Analogies
This week, I shall play
the role of baseball’s “middle relieverâ€
or “setup†pitcher for the column’s bullpen closer, David Aloyan. I will
simply ask whether you believe the answer is yes to any one or more of the
following questions. If you do, then scoot right down to David’s discourse on
RRPIX and shorting the bond market.
Do you think that:
-
The war in Iraq will
continue to require large-scale military expenditures; the Bush tax cuts
will not be repealed; Congress will not exercise fiscal restraint; and the
structural budget deficits will not go away? -
Commodity and oil price
pressures will continue to grow and create “cost-push†inflationary
pressures while the expansionary fiscal and monetary policies of the US will
drive GDP growth and rising “demand pull†inflationary
pressures? -
At some point, China
and/or Japan will cut back on their purchases of US bonds and, more broadly,
on their currency intervention policies, other foreign countries like Saudi
Arabia holding large dollar reserves will start dumping them? -
Productivity rates will
peak (or have peaked!) and will fall — perhaps dramatically? -
At some point, the
Federal Reserve must begin raising short-term interest rates in response to
all of these factors?
^next^
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This Week’s Macro Data Market Movers: A Big
Week
OK, it’s a pretty big week on the data front. Let’s see if consumer
confidence continues to spiral into the gas tank. It would be nice to get some
affirmation in factory orders and the ISM that the supply side of the economy
is still cranking — but any disappointment would be UGLY. The
only thing more interesting to watch than the housing sector for some kind of
short signal is the auto sector. Let’s see how low interest rates are helping
Detroit (and Tokyo).
Finally, look for a little wobbly trading going in to Friday’s Jobs
Report. The buzz is that we’re going to get 130,000 new jobs created this time
as the tea leaves are looking good — but didn’t they say that last time?