Worst of the worst of the worst
July 18 2006 (CNNMoney.com)
Think things are choppy now? Get ready for August and September, the worst months of the year for stocks.
As if it hasn't been tough enough already, markets are about to move into what is typically the worst time of the year for stock investing: late summer and early fall.
Wall Street is also in the midst of what is typically the worst quarter of the year: the third. And those who follow the four-year cycle of the presidency will tell you that the second year of a presidential term of office, like 2006, is the worst of the four.
OK, so the market's seasonal patterns don't hold true every year.
But consider the reasons this year is likely to follow suit. Investors are nervously eyeing the worst violence in years in the Mideast; oil prices are near record highs; worries about a slowing economy and rising interest rates abound; a possible slowdown in corporate profit growth is looming, and a 3-1/2 year old bull market may have very well peaked last spring.
Add to that a cooling housing market, an expected slowdown in consumer spending, and less money going into stocks than there has been in some time, and you've got quite a challenging environment for investors, said Jim Melcher, president of Balestra Capital, a New York-based hedge fund.
"You've almost never had a confluence of factors like this where it didn't lead to a recession or a bear market," said Melcher. "It's just not a great time to be in stocks."
AntiSpin: The contrarian in us says, hey, maybe things aren't so bad. Everyone is feeling so bearish, and when everyone is feeling bearish, then that's bullish, right? As the Chinese say, "The crowd is blind." Well, not always. Collective bearishness drives collective investment behavior, and when that bearishness is irrational, that is, not based on real economic potential, then there are long term upside opportunities. But, unfortunately, the crowd can stay bearish long enough that their irrational expectations become self-fulfilling. Oh, and the crowd can also be right. Knowing when the crowd is trekking into a land of great discovery and wealth or following each other off a cliff into the sea takes more than contrarianism, it takes informed skepticism.
In our opinion, the market is reacting mostly to what appears to be a power play by Iran. No matter what they're after, they appear to think that when all is said in done they're going to wind up with more chips than they started off with. Our chips. How far things go, no one knows. What Iran really has in their hand, no one knows. But it can't be good, because if they succeed in goading Israel into sending troops into Lebanon to search for the estimated 8,000 missiles that are hidden all over the country, that will give them an excuse to show a card or two they appear to be itching to show us, and they may be more than the markets expect them to be.
Also, on May 20th, before things got really ugly, 61% of 488 iTulip.com Community members voted that the markets were due to crash and burn this summer. While the crowd may be blind, the iTulip.com Community is not.
July 18 2006 (CNNMoney.com)
Think things are choppy now? Get ready for August and September, the worst months of the year for stocks.
As if it hasn't been tough enough already, markets are about to move into what is typically the worst time of the year for stock investing: late summer and early fall.
Wall Street is also in the midst of what is typically the worst quarter of the year: the third. And those who follow the four-year cycle of the presidency will tell you that the second year of a presidential term of office, like 2006, is the worst of the four.
OK, so the market's seasonal patterns don't hold true every year.
But consider the reasons this year is likely to follow suit. Investors are nervously eyeing the worst violence in years in the Mideast; oil prices are near record highs; worries about a slowing economy and rising interest rates abound; a possible slowdown in corporate profit growth is looming, and a 3-1/2 year old bull market may have very well peaked last spring.
Add to that a cooling housing market, an expected slowdown in consumer spending, and less money going into stocks than there has been in some time, and you've got quite a challenging environment for investors, said Jim Melcher, president of Balestra Capital, a New York-based hedge fund.
"You've almost never had a confluence of factors like this where it didn't lead to a recession or a bear market," said Melcher. "It's just not a great time to be in stocks."
AntiSpin: The contrarian in us says, hey, maybe things aren't so bad. Everyone is feeling so bearish, and when everyone is feeling bearish, then that's bullish, right? As the Chinese say, "The crowd is blind." Well, not always. Collective bearishness drives collective investment behavior, and when that bearishness is irrational, that is, not based on real economic potential, then there are long term upside opportunities. But, unfortunately, the crowd can stay bearish long enough that their irrational expectations become self-fulfilling. Oh, and the crowd can also be right. Knowing when the crowd is trekking into a land of great discovery and wealth or following each other off a cliff into the sea takes more than contrarianism, it takes informed skepticism.
In our opinion, the market is reacting mostly to what appears to be a power play by Iran. No matter what they're after, they appear to think that when all is said in done they're going to wind up with more chips than they started off with. Our chips. How far things go, no one knows. What Iran really has in their hand, no one knows. But it can't be good, because if they succeed in goading Israel into sending troops into Lebanon to search for the estimated 8,000 missiles that are hidden all over the country, that will give them an excuse to show a card or two they appear to be itching to show us, and they may be more than the markets expect them to be.
Also, on May 20th, before things got really ugly, 61% of 488 iTulip.com Community members voted that the markets were due to crash and burn this summer. While the crowd may be blind, the iTulip.com Community is not.
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