Re: Bullish Information Re. 3rd-yr. Presidential Cycle
MARSHALL LOEB 12/18/06
A slowdown, but not a meltdown
Commentary: Bouncy third year of the presidential election cycle?
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...2A800DCA2F0%7D
"There are factors at work in the stock market beyond mere earnings. S&P's Stovall, for instance, keeps close watch on the third year of a presidential election cycle, such as the year we will encounter in 2007."
"Remarkably, since 1945, there have been 15 such years, and the market has never declined in even one of them (though it came close in 1947, when it was flat). The reason for the rise is that the sitting President wants to put the voters in a happy mood, and so he gets behind legislation that the people really like."
"And in the rare and ripe years when both the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates and there was a third year in the presidential election cycle, growth stocks tended to outperform value stocks, and the sectors that performed the best included technology, autos, homebuilding, retailing and industrials."
MARSHALL LOEB 12/18/06
A slowdown, but not a meltdown
Commentary: Bouncy third year of the presidential election cycle?
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...2A800DCA2F0%7D
"There are factors at work in the stock market beyond mere earnings. S&P's Stovall, for instance, keeps close watch on the third year of a presidential election cycle, such as the year we will encounter in 2007."
"Remarkably, since 1945, there have been 15 such years, and the market has never declined in even one of them (though it came close in 1947, when it was flat). The reason for the rise is that the sitting President wants to put the voters in a happy mood, and so he gets behind legislation that the people really like."
"And in the rare and ripe years when both the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates and there was a third year in the presidential election cycle, growth stocks tended to outperform value stocks, and the sectors that performed the best included technology, autos, homebuilding, retailing and industrials."
Comment