India | UK | US

GLOBAL MARKETS WEEKAHEAD-Is capitulation on the cards?

LONDON (Reuters) - Profit warnings, breaches of key index levels, record oil prices, stressed consumers and investors seeking safety provide the background for markets this week, and many people are wondering how long this will all last.
Posted : Sun, 06 Jul 2008 15:05:02 GMT
By : Reuters
Category : US (Business)
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
US Business News | Home
By Jeremy Gaunt, European Investment Correspondent

LONDON (Reuters) - Profit warnings, breaches of key index levels, record oil prices, stressed consumers and investors seeking safety provide the background for markets this week, and many people are wondering how long this will all last.

There has been no classic "capitulation" -- a market concept which states that heavy, sometimes panic, selling of stocks heralds the bottom and a beginning of an upturn. But there is enough gloom around to make a contrarian bullish.

"You are beginning to get into capitulation territory now," said David Bowers, joint managing director of Absolute Strategy Research and consultant to Merrill Lynch for its monthly global fund manager sentiment survey.

"Are we going to go from a narrow bear market to a broad bear market?" he said, meaning that investors may start selling not only poorly performing stocks such as financials but also those which have not done too badly this year.

This week may offer some sort of answer if only because of the depths that have been reached recently.

MSCI's main gauge of world stocks <.MIWD00000PUS>, for example, fell last week to a five-month trough. This was below the key March low it reached during the height of the Bear Stearns crisis when the U.S. Federal Reserve stepped in.

The U.S. S&P 500 index <.SPX> has joined its European <.FTEU3> and Japanese <.N225> counterparts in formal bear market territory -- that is, at least 20 percent below a cycle's peak.

Investor sentiment indicators have also been hitting significant levels. Reuters global asset allocation poll last week, for example, showed equity holdings among leading investors to be at the lowest level in the more than four years it has been compiled.

IN THE BALANCE

Some investors, albeit tentatively, are beginning to scent a possible end to the stock slide. Swiss wealth manager Sarasin, for example, has told its clients that it is time gradually to build up their stock holdings again.

"We are seeing that the cycle is showing signs of stabilizing and appears to be bottoming out," said Philipp Baertschi, a strategist in Zurich for the bank, which manages 80 billion Swiss francs ($79 billion) in assets. "We think the markets will take advantage and rally," he told Reuters.

Reflecting a dilemma for investors, however, clients of Barclays' wealth management arm have been told almost the opposite. The firm has cut back its recommended stock weighting.

"Oil prices and inflation are unlikely to fall back sharply, and there are potentially severe problems stemming from wage/price spirals in some of the major developing economies," wrote Michael Dicks, head of research and investment strategy.

Next year is also beginning to look increasingly gloomy, he added.

The dilemma is essentially whether stocks have now fallen so far that they are a bargain buy compared with bonds, cash and other assets, or whether rising inflationary pressures and slowing economies spell serious trouble ahead.

G8 AND GE AHEAD

Leaders of the Group of Eight leading economies, meeting in northern Japan at the beginning of this week, are unlikely to do anything to solve this dilemma.

They will almost certainly touch on some of the elements of it -- notably the weak dollar, the soaring price of oil and the accompanying rising threat of inflation.

"Oil is the driving variable," said Emanuel Ravano, managing director of PIMCO Europe.

But with finance ministers and central bankers absent from the meeting, market reaction could be limited. Some analysts have suggested there is mismatch between the themes of the G8 summit and who is participating at a time of major economic and financial distress.

A key parameter in any decision to buy stocks is valuation. Sarasin's Baertschi reckons they are cheap. "The market is oversold," he said, estimating that earnings growth forecasts this year have been revised down by 5 to 10 percent, meaning expectations have dropped to a more realistic level.

But a lot of this depends on continued economic growth and last week's gloom was compounded by a series of profit warnings.

These included British retailer Marks & Spencer , French supermarket Carrefour and Swedish-Japanese mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson <6758.T>.

Banks, including most of the U.S. giants, have already been buffeted by losses, so the latest warnings reflect a spread into more consumer-exposed stocks.

With this in mind, investors will be focused this week on the beginning of the latest U.S. earnings season, with a particular eye on Friday on General Electric .

The company is something of a proxy for the global economy. It is a worldwide business involved in commercial and personal finance, healthcare, industrial production, infrastructure and entertainment.


(c) Reuters 2008. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Article : GLOBAL MARKETS WEEKAHEAD-Is capitulation on the cards?
Print this article
Email this article

Stay Updated
News gadget on your Google homepage
Subscribe to a news feed in Google Reader


Related News

Hershey, Nestle, sweeten war for Cadbury
Washington - Hershey and Nestle are expected to jump into the war over Cadbury sweets, media reports said Saturday, just weeks after the British-based stalwart rejected a hostile bid by US Kraft Inc. The growing market for chocolate in the developing...

US stock drop slightly on Dell profits, mixed for week
New York - Technology and energy shares pushed US stocks lower Friday, capping a mixed week for investors amid unease about the pace of the world's economic recovery. Tech stocks slid after a disappointing earnings report from computer giant Dell, wh...

GM: Opel restructuring plan by mid-December; cuts up to 25 per cent
Washington - US carmaker General Motors will present a new restructuring plan for its European operations by mid-December, Nick Reilly, the new head of GM Europe, wrote on his new blog Friday. While the details were still being hashed out, Reilly war...

US stock sell-off on fears of weak recovery
New York - US stocks followed global markets in a broad decline amid investor fears over the world's uneasy recovery from recession. Major US stock indices fell about 1 per cent on average, following hefty declines in the DJ Euro Stoxx 50 and Japan's...

US leading economic indicator gains 0.3 per cent
Washington - A key measure of US economic performance gained in October, according to a private research group Thursday, signalling that a broader recovery may be taking hold. The New York-based Conference Board's Leading Economic Index added 0.3 per...

US stocks fall slightly on technology earnings
New York - US stocks posted modest losses Wednesday on poor profit forecasts from technology firms and a surprising dip in home construction. Earnings from Salesforce.com and Autodesk were worse than expected. Other technology shares losing ground in...

Obama acknowledges danger of double-dip recession if deficit grows
Washington - President Barack Obama said Wednesday he was mindful of the dangers brought on by the country's skyrocketing budget deficit, warning that too much spending could lead the United States into another recession. Obama, who has taken heavy c...

Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  

 

 

More US (Business) News click here
Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark

 
 



 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 


The Earth Times
News Category

© 2009 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.