Another Market Crash in 2011?Dan Dorfman - HuffingtonPost
Financial Columnist, Market Commentator
Posted: January 6, 2011 10:30 AM
<snip>
...
If you're one of those investors ready to take the plunge, a word of caution from one incisive market watcher, Olivier Garret, the CEO of Casey Research, an international advisory firm in Stowe, Vt., that provides financial and investment analysis to some 40,000 moderate and high net worth clients in more than 150 countries around the globe. His basic message: Watch out! These are dangerous times and too many things could go wrong.
In other words, there are still plenty of lurking nightmares out there.
Garret, in sharp contrast to the bullish sentiment sweeping Wall Street, but by no means a doomsayer, lays out the ingredients for what he expects could spur an inevitable market crash this year. In effect, he's anticipating, he tells me, "bad events," among them the collapse of both Spain and California, a bashing of the bond market, with yields rising 100 basis points or maybe more, the very real chance we could see a wave of defaults among cities, states and municipalities, the likelihood of decreased spending at the consumer and corporate levels, considerably more downward pressure on real estate and the prospects of a substantial rise in inflation because of heavy money printing.
In addition, he says, you can't rule out a possible German split from the European union, which would cause the union to fall apart and lead Greece, Spain and Portugal to all default on their debt. Noting that the European debt crises haven't improved in six months and that the debt to GDP ratios in most European countries (as well as in the U.S) exceed 100%, he believes this situation is more alarming than investors generally realize and could easily blow up again.
Garret also envisions the possibility of a major failure in the financial arena, noting the world's 25 largest financial institutions all have risk profiles, exaggerated by overvalued assets, too much debt and insufficient reserves. He further notes that we're near to the point where various governments, including the U.S., which is spending $1.5 trillion more than it earns, will not bail out the financials because they themselves have too much debt.
...<snip>
More:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-dorfman/the-crash-of-2011_b_804957.html:wow:
:banghead:
:beer:
:smoke: