http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/printarticle.asp?id=mwo050809Profits in the first quarter, with nearly 90% of companies reporting, are down over 50% from last year and are 18% less than estimates. Yes, inventories are down, but so is final demand from consumers and businesses. There is a reason that GM and Chrysler are shutting down for two months this summer. That will percolate throughout the economy.
As the realization that the economy is not due for a robust recovery sinks in, I think the chances for another serious bear market test of the stock market lows will become increasingly high. As David Rosenberg said in his final memo from Merrill Lynch (and good luck to him in his new position, where I hope we all still get to read his very solid analysis!), if a few weeks ago someone had said you could sell all your stocks 40% higher, most of you would have hit that bid.
Now that price has in fact been bid. Do you want to gamble on a renewed bull run in the face of a continually shrinking economy? I suggest you give it some serious thought, or at least put in some very real stop-loss protection.
http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/all-eyes-are-on-us-stocks-and-the-greenback-33648There have been three other recessions in the past fifty years that share the two key features of this recession:
1. Global synchronization — In globally-synchronized recessions there is an absence of global trade, a typical crutch for ailing economies to lean on. This time around is a doozie … a whopping 65 percent of world economies are in a recession, and global trade has taken a header.
2. Financial crisis — In recessions associated with a financial crisis, the recoveries are slower because households are in saving mode, so demand is weak. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the personal savings rate in the U.S. is now more than 4 percent, the highest this decade — and it’s likely headed higher.
In this type of recession, the decline tends to be the steepest, the length of recession tends to be the longest, and the recovery tends to be the slowest compared to other historical recessions. You can see this in the following chart …
Highly Sychronized Recessions.
With the present crisis, we should expect a contraction in GDP of nearly 5 percent, 2 years of recession and 3½ years of sluggish recovery until levels of pre-recession output return. So based on the IMF’s study of 122 historical recessions, advanced economies should expect 5+ years of weak economic activity.