Germany holds the key to whether the EU will remain in its current form. And, German elections over the weekend indicated many Germans are tired of bankrolling the efforts to keep the EU together. We now have to figure out who will get caught holding the bag and lose money if some or all of the countries in the EU withdraw from the EU.
We first alerted you two and one-half years ago (TWC of 2-23-09) to sell all of your mutual funds with high European concentration. In 2009, we feared the credit crisis would grow and engulf more countries. This fear became reality. The current status of Europe Union is highly fragile. We recommend you continue to avoid mutual funds with high European concentration.
Daily Archives: September 6, 2011
THE ECONOMY – REPEATED FROM 8/22/2011 FOR EMPHASIS
The FED and other Central Banks have not yet followed through with coordinated efforts to support their economies and restore confidence. Meanwhile, last week’s economic reports indicate the economy has slowed more than economists expected. These reports coupled with last week’s drop in the stock market, will diminish American’s confidence even further. And, as I reported in The Weekly Commentary weekly during each of the past three weeks, a continued crisis in confidence will probably result in further economic slowdown, and maybe a full-fledged recession. I believe the probability of a recession has grown dramatically.
The stock markets have already dropped in anticipation of the economic slowdown. There is a possibility the forecasted downturn is now fully factored into stock prices. If true, this would not be the time to sell. On the other hand, the economic downturn could be long-lasting and severe. It is very difficult to predict its severity. There is no exact, 100% sure-fire way to time recessions or markets. Due to the lack of clarity in my crystal ball, I recommend the following, depending upon which category fits your unique circumstance:
1. Aggressive investors, moderately aggressive investors, and investors who do not intend to touch their investments for 10 years or longer – continue to hold the current allocation of core investments, and wait to gather more information, and carefully watch central bank activities especially from FED Chairman Bernanke later this week.
2. Investors who need to withdraw from the investment portfolio – “park” any amounts you expect to withdraw within the next 5 years in a short/intermediate term bond fund.
3. Conservative, moderately conservative, preservation minded investors and investors who will start withdrawing from their portfolio in 5 to 10 years– reduce exposure of the more volatile stock and stock mutual fund holdings in your portfolio.
The Week Ahead
On Thursday evening, President Obama will outline his current thinking on job creation because we are clearly not coming out of the 2008 recession like we normally do. That is because what we just experienced was not a normal business-cycle recession, but a deleveraging/balance-sheet/debt-crisis recession. And the latter simply take at least 5-6 years to work through, after a country begins to deal with the problem, which we have not.
Even if somehow a Republican appeared in the White House tomorrow, there is no magic he (or she!) could bring with him/her to fix the unemployment problem. There are just some things the private sector will have to do for itself, and the sooner the government stops getting in the way, the sooner we will get things fixed. But it will take a long time, no matter what. That is just the way things are (Source, in part, Calculated Risk).
Celebrity Bartender Night at The Apollo – Now Featuring Incredible Chinese Auction Items!
My sincerest thanks to our donors and the Apollo Grill for their generosity!
Celebrity Bartender Night at The Apollo – Now Featuring Incredible Chinese Auction Items!
The outpouring of support and excitement for our fundraiser for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society has been outstanding! Please don’t forget to mark your calendars for Thursday, September 15 from 5-7 PM at the Apollo Grill! (Click above and see Personal Notes for details!)
Motivational Quote of the Week
This Week on “Your Financial Choices”
The show airs on WDIY Wednesday evenings, from 6-7 p.m. The show is hosted by Valley National’s Laurie Siebert CPA, CFP . This week Laurie will discuss:
Personal Finance for Dummies
With author Eric Tyson
Laurie and Eric will take your calls on this subject and other financial planning topics at 610-758-8810. WDIY is broadcast on FM 88.1 for reception in most of the Lehigh Valley; and, it is broadcast on FM 93.9 in the Easton/Phillipsburg area; and, it is broadcast on FM 93.7 in the Fogelsville/Macungie area – or listen to it online from anywhere on the internet. For more information, including how to listen to the show online, check the show’s website www.yourfinancialchoices.com and visit www.wdiy.org.
Personal Notes
Join Me for Celebrity Bartender Night at Apollo Grill! For more questions about the event or how you can get involved, please e-mail contact Betty Adam (badam@valleynationalgroup.com) or Andrea Schumann (aschumann@valleynationalgroup.com) at the Bethlehem office!
I would like to ask every one of you to come out and support Valley National Financial Advisors at the Apollo Grill on Thursday, September 15th for our Celebrity Bartender event! Laurie Siebert, host of “Your Financial Choices” will join me in taking over the bartending duties from 5-7 PM to support the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. VNFA has organized a team to participate in the 2011 “Light The Night” Walk in support of our colleague and friend, Donna Young, who has been fighting Non-Hodgkins Follicular Lymphoma since 2009. Donna has been with Valley National Financial Advisors in 1989 and we are incredibly proud to support her and LLS with this event!
The Markets This Week
The U.S. stock market almost stretched its rebound through a second straight week, but evidence of stalling job creation and quieter factories tested buyers’ resolve, and challenged the assumption that economic momentum will pick up anew in the fall.
Stocks began September under renewed selling pressure when a key manufacturing index shrank to 50.6 in August from 50.9 in July. A reading above 50 still points to expansion, and was far better than the contraction economists were expecting. But the wilting momentum was a cause for concern, and the expanding roster of contracting industrial sectors now includes those in Australia, Brazil, China, France, Italy, Korea, Russia, Spain, Taiwan and the U.K., while Germany and U.S. are approaching stall speed. Then on Friday, the U.S. Labor Department said job growth in August has slowed to nil for the first time in nearly a year, while the unemployment rate was stuck at 9.1%.
Lately, bulls have made much of the divergence between economic cues and sentiment readings: While the data show economic expansion slowing, consumer and business sentiment measures are far more dire and have plunged to depths typically seen in recessions. The implication is that Americans have overreacted to this summer’s U.S. debt-ceiling squabble and European debt crisis, and the panic surely will pass once we see the economy clawing its way back from the abyss. What this overlooks, however, is how crowd sentiment can shape behavior, persuading corporations to put off hiring and consumers to hold off big purchases.
So has the stock market sufficiently considered any economic deterioration still to come? At their lowest point this summer, when the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index closed at 1119 on Aug. 8, stocks were off 18% from their 2011 peaks—roughly two-thirds of the way toward the average peak-to-trough slide of 26% seen near recessions. All 500 of the components in the index fell that day, and declining traffic was a whopping 589 times heavier than the trickle of advancers. Ned Davis Research also counted five days in August when the horde of decliners was at least 10 times greater than advancers, and another five days when the exact opposite happened, a sure sign the market is groping for a bottom.
But while stocks have rebounded 5% from that low-water mark, momentum isn’t yet on the bulls’ side, and the S&P 500 is nearly 6% below its downward-sloping 50-day average. Bespoke Investment Group also analyzed stocks’ latest pop, between Aug. 22 to Aug. 31, and the results were hardly encouraging. While the average stock jumped 9.9% during that stretch, the 50 smallest stocks in the S&P 500 gained 12.7%, while the 50 biggest rose just 7.9%. In fact, that rebound was largely egged on by stocks with the richest price-to-earnings valuations, the lowest dividend yields, the most short interest. It’s a picture of a reflexive bounce following rabid selling, and not of longer-term investors stepping in to buy quality stocks.
It helps consumers that Treasury yields have plummeted this year, which keeps mortgage rates and borrowing costs down. Gas prices have pulled back despite the summer driving season, and crude oil is down 24% from its April high. Individual investors are soured toward stocks, and have whittled down their holdings, and dismal job growth has increased the cry for monetary support when the Federal Reserve meets later this month.
Meanwhile, money managers have suffered through a cranky summer. According to JPMorgan strategist Thomas Lee, the crop of funds lagging their benchmarks by at least 2.5 percentage points has ballooned from 24% a month ago to about 47%, the worst underperformance since 1998. Those trailing their benchmarks by at least five percentage points have also jumped, from 10% to 25%. Whether this is good news will depend on your perspective: Performance chasing by money managers who can’t afford to miss any rallies might help lift the indexes. But is it buying borne of true conviction, and will rebounding stocks really signal a mending economy?
The Dow Jones Industrial Average absorbed its fifth loss in six weeks, and gave up 44, or 0.4%, to 11,240. The Nasdaq Composite Index eked out a half-point gain to reach 2480, while the Russell 2000 fell 8 points, or 1.2%, to 683. Gold notched its eighth gain in nine weeks, while the 10-year Treasury yield fell below 2% (Source: Barrons Online).
The Numbers This Week
Last week, Foreign Stocks and Bonds increased. U.S. Stocks decreased. During the last 12 months, BONDS outperformed STOCKS. Returns through 9-2-2011 1-week Y-T-D 1-Year 3-Years 5-Years 10-Years Bonds- BarCap Aggregate Index .8 6.7 5.9 7.4 6.7 5.8 US Stocks-Standard & Poor’s 500 -.5 -10.0 2.2 -6.3 -5.4 0.0 Foreign Stocks- MS EAFE Developed Countries 2.2 -10.3 1.1 – 6.0 -4.7 2.1
Source: Morningstar Workstation. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly. Three, five and ten year returns are annualized excluding dividends.