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Weekend reading: Everyone is at it

Good reading from around the Web.

I suspect that if everyone writing articles about the correction in the stock market this week actually went out and bought some stocks [1], the crash would have been severely dampened.

In fact, one of the only things that makes me nervous about buying in these markets is that so many people are saying you should do so. Normally you get a fair few johnny-come-lately pundits arguing we should run to the hills, but they’ve been very thin on the ground.

According to the FT, even private investors in the UK have been buying [2] quite aggressively. Hurrah, I say, and it mirrors the actions of the Monevator readers who’ve left comments on my articles. But it’s a bit of a negative indicator, unfortunately.

Perhaps the short duration of the bull market since 2009 means we haven’t sucked in enough fair weather investors yet – maybe only the battle-hardened are still standing?

Anyway, of the many pieces I read, my favourite was a fairly dry summary of the current situation from the blog macrofugue, entitled The Fat Pitch [3].

After pointing out how (US) cheap stocks look relative to bonds, the author also makes an economic case for looking through the panic:

So far in this earnings season, the S&P 500 has a 91% beat rate, and has smashed top-line, bottom-line & operating margin estimates.

There are more than 1.2 million jobs from 12 months ago, 40,000 less per month applying for initial unemployment insurance, and consumer credit rose a mammoth 15.5% (annualised) last month.  The big knock since November on consumer credit was the lack of participation in non-government, revolving credit — we’ve now posted two straight monthly gains in those categories.

The pace of Commercial & Industrial loans is up $55B in 9 months.  The financial stress indices from three Federal Reserve branches, which indicated in the past with months of notice on lending contraction, have been in solidly negative (improving) territory for months.

The end of the dreaded de-leveraging seems in sight.

Saying the economic situation is improving is genuinely contrarian, and it follows my own hunch.

I don’t deny some other indicators look a bit ropey (for example, GDP has been wobbly in the US, France, and the UK, and the latest inventory purchasing data was a bit iffy). But there is good data around if you care to look for it.

Moreover, I’ve been saying all week that if companies can do so well when the US economy is still in the dumpster (particularly unemployment and housing) then there’s plenty more fuel in the tank.

There will come a time when this blog argues that the stock market is expensive and it’s time to be more aggressively overweight in bonds and cash. But I don’t think it will be when the FTSE 100 is on a P/E of around 10 and interest rates are near-zero (cash is king [4]!) and unemployment still high in much of Europe and the US, and investors have rarely had it so rough for a decade.

As for the UK riots, I take no pleasure in having predicted them [5] back in 2009 when I wrote my article David Cameron’s Curse: To save the UK economy and be hated for it:

At the risk of sounding like an old Colonel Blimp (which I’m really not!) I think law enforcement could be among the more secure public sector areas over the next few years, especially if you’re in the front line.

I suspect we’ll see a couple of riots (in the miners’ strike / poll tax mould) before this has played out.

Seeing young people so marginalised and full of hate and nothing is just utterly depressing.

From the blogs

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