NEW YORK, July 1 (Xinhua) -- Although Wall Street rebounded strongly and
posted a three-month rally from March to May after raching 12-year lows March 9,
analysts expect the U.S. equity market to be boring in the second half of 2009.
According to media reports, investors have snapped up stocks recently on
speculation that the beginning of the economic recovery is not far away.
U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said in April that "green
shoots" were showing up on the economic landscape "as some confidence begins to
come back."
Are the economy's "green shoots" real or imagined? Compared with
expectations earlier this year, investors seem more optimistic as oil prices
retreated to about 35 U.S. dollars a barrel in February and the banking sector
and consumer confidence showed improvement.
U.S. stocks started to rebound on good news from the battered banking
sector. Bank of America's Ken Lewis, JPMorgan Chase's Jamie Dimon and
Citigroup's Vikram Pandit are among CEOs saying their banks were in the black
early this year.
The U.S. government in May reassured investors, saying that 10 of the top
19 banks will need to raise a total of 74.6 billion dollars in capital over the
next six months, less than what some analysts had estimated. Also, some banks
have been able to repay government money they took last fall after the Lehman
Brothers bankruptcy threw the financial system into disarray.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said "the financial system is
starting to heal."
Meanwhile, Alan Valdes, vice president of the Hilliard Lyons investment
firm, credited a drop in oil prices with spurring the economy.
"Remember last summer it was the housing market that got into that mess,
but it was oil that exasperated it. When oil was 140 dollars a barrel, that
squashed the American public," Valdes said.
The decline in energy prices will lower living costs and enable consumers
to start spending again.
Meanwhile, a batch of economic data suggests there is an increasing number
of favorable factors in the economy. Pending home sales have been rising since
February and house prices have declined at a lower pace, raising hopes that the
market has bottomed out.
In addition, while the U.S. unemployment rate climbed to a 25-year high of
9.4 percent in May, it was not as bad as some analysts had estimates.
However, investors have grown nervous that the rebound won't be as robust
as they had envisioned.
"We are still not out of the woods and there are lots of uncertainties. The
market doesn't like uncertainty," said Theodore Weisberg, president of Seaport
Securities.
This fear has put a dent in the three-month advance that saw stocks jump
more than 30 percent from 12-year lows in early March.
Now the question is where will the stock market go in the second half of
this year?
"It's quite possible that the market will not go down and make new lows as
somebody is saying, but also it is not going to go back and make new highs,"
Theodore said. "We can expect that the stock market will be boring."
Alan was more bearish, warning that "the year is going to end down." He
thought the market will likely to either trade sideways or test the lows because
"the picture is not that bright."
First of all, the unemployment rate in the United States was expected to
reach 10 percent in the days ahead. High unemployment can have a ripple effect
on the economy, making a bad economy even worse because it changes consumers'
spending habits and makes them keep expenses on a tight rein.
Although economists point out that while the pace at which Americans are
losing their jobs is decreasing, the large number of people looking for work or
not working enough hours remains a serious problem.
"Even though it has stabilized, there's still no one hiring. That's the
problem," Alan said.
Meanwhile, there is no spike in the housing recovery. On the one hand,
housing prices cannot go back up while unemployment remains high. On the other
hand, mortgage rates are more than five percent right now, much higher than the
desired four percent, and are stifling the market.
In addition, oil prices have doubled to nearly 70 dollars a barrel as the
second half of 2009 starts. That could dampen any improvement in consumer
spending.
"We're concerned that a rapid increase in oil prices may have a negative
effect on the economic recovery," said Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the
International Energy Agency.
Last but not least, although the market is trying to shake off concerns
about the financial sector, bad assets caused by subprime loans still weigh on
the balance sheets of some financial firms.
Investors' sentiments face strong headwinds from these troubles and caution
is in order. For the market to continue its upward march, investors need to see
something more concrete.
Given that the economic recovery unlikely will be dramatic, traders don't
think the equity market will be very exciting in the second half of the
year.
Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
