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2011

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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:32 PM | 显示全部楼层


回复 20# ppteam Top advisers who have the best records in both up and down markets are now very bullish
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:36 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 21# ppteam

CREDIT SUISSE: THE 5 BIGGEST RISKS OF 2011

In a recent strategy note Andrew Garthwaite of Credit Suisse covered what he believes are the biggest risks heading into 2011.  On the whole, Garthwaite believes all 5 risks are manageable, which contributes to their expectations for 13% gains in the S&P next year.  The 5 risks and the CS opinion of each is attached:

        * Chinese inflation (as above), which we think is manageable until we see a sharp rise in export prices;

        * Peripheral Europe. Critically, we think even under a severe private sector de-leveraging scenario, Spanish government debt to GDP would only rise to 100% by 2014E which would make its funding arithmetic sustainable, provided fiscal policy is tightened by another 2% of GDP (which should be politically possible). We think core Europe will continue to support peripheral Europe (the cost of it not doing so would be at least $500bn on our estimates); the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) is likely to be extended and the ECB is unlikely to withdraw from the policy of providing unlimited liquidity to the banks. Peripheral Europe needs Germany’s economy to grow well above trend (after all it is 50% larger than the periphery) – and that, we think, will continue to happen.

        * The inventory rebuild has been extreme: normally, a reversal of an inventory rebuild  of this magnitude is associated with a slowdown in growth. Yet, the level of inventories (to sales) is not extreme and there should also be a positive surprise to domestic demand, which again limits de-stocking;

        * Fiscal overkill. Yet, we estimate fiscal tightening now accounts for just 1% of GDP globally in 2011 and is being watered down; especially now that the Bush tax cuts have been renewed.

        * Contraction in lending. Yet, US bank leverage is already close to a 30-year low and US and European bank lending conditions are consistent with a pick-up in loan growth.
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:37 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 22# ppteam

What I Expect in 2011

The economy is growing once again, but the pace of growth has not been strong enough to generate enough job growth to make a serious dent in the unemployment rate. The unemployment rate actually increased to 9.8% in November, and the economy only added a total of 39,000 jobs.

There are, however, some significant signs that we are about to see better job growth in the future.

We have finally broken out to the downside of the “trading range” we were in for initial unemployment claims. Also, the JOLTS data for October showed a large increase in job openings. I suspect that the November jobs totals will be revised up when the December report is released, but even so it will still be a disappointing performance.

It is not just the total number of people out of work that matters, but also the number of long-term unemployed. The Great Recession was in a league of its own when it came to creating long-term unemployment. While off its June peak, then median duration of unemployment has been ticking back up in the last two months and now sits at 21.6 weeks. The highest the median had ever gotten prior to the Great Recession was 12.3 weeks.

Clearly, we still have a lot of work to do on the jobs front. While we will probably see a pick up in the pace of job creation in 2011 — perhaps getting up to an average of about 150,000 per month, up from 86,000 per month in the first 11 months of 2009. We will, however, probably see an increase in the participation rate. It is at 64.5%, the lowest level since November 1984, and down from 66.1% just before the financial meltdown. That would mean that progress on the unemployment rate will be much slower than progress on actual job creation.

“Low” vs. “High” Quality Growth

Too much of the economic growth that we saw in the second and third quarters was simply due to the rebuilding of inventories. That is very “low quality” growth. Looking forward to the fourth quarter and into 2011, it is likely that that portion of growth will fade, and possibly even start to reverse itself.

On the other hand, the two great drags on growth — housing and the trade deficit — are likely to go away, and might even turn into contributors to growth. To contribute to growth, we don’t need net exports to actually turn positive, as in running a trade surplus. We just need the size of the trade deficit to shrink. Even if it just stays at the horrible level it was at in the third quarter, it would stop subtracting from growth, and that alone would provide a major boost to the overall economy.

The October data suggests that it could do much more than that. A weak dollar would greatly help in that regard. It would make our exports cheaper to buyers abroad, and would make imports more expensive. Often it would not be just because the dollar was weak relative to the buyer’s country, but because a U.S. based company is competing with a company from a stronger currency based company. For example, at 90 yen to the dollar, a buyer in India might be indifferent between buying a bulldozer from either Caterpillar (CAT) or Komatsu, but at 80 yen to the dollar, the Caterpillar machine is “on sale” to the Indian buyer.

Just reversing the increase in the trade deficit we saw in the third quarter will help growth, but ultimately we need to go further than that and eventually start running a trade surplus. It is the trade deficit, not the budget deficit, which is directly responsible for the ever growing foreign indebtedness of the U.S. That, folks, is not a matter of opinion, it is an accounting identity.

I consider the trade deficit to be a far larger economic problem than the budget deficit, even though it gets a fraction of the ink the budget deficit does. While a decline in the dollar is desperately needed, it is not a slam dunk that it will happen in 2011. The reason is that the Euro, which is sort of the anti-dollar, faces problems which are just as severe as the dollar faces.

Still, I see the odds favoring a weaker dollar on a trade weighted basis over the course of 2011. In 2010 there was a very strong inverse correlation between the strength of the dollar and the strength of the stock market. I would expect that correlation to continue. The weaker the dollar, the better the stock market will do in 2011.

Trade Deficit & Our Addiction to Oil

A weak dollar will not solve the entire trade deficit problem. Too much of our trade deficit is simply due to our addiction to oil. Over the first 10 months of the year, $221 billion of the $421 billion (52.5%) total trade deficit was due to oil imports. As the dollar weakens, the price of oil tends to rise.

Unfortunately, the zeal to find ways to cut oil consumption has diminished relative to where it was just a few years ago when oil prices were pushing up against the $150 per barrel level. I was to aggressive in my oil price forecast last year, looking for oil prices to close out the year at around $100 a barrel. I’m going to risk making the same mistake again and call for oil prices to close out 2011 between $105 and $110. If they get much higher than that, then world wide growth would start to slow significantly, but the world economy can probably sustain those sorts of prices.

Over the medium-to-long term, moving towards more wind and solar seems to be the only viable solution. In the short term, we have more than ample supplies of natural gas, and the technology is well established to use it as a transportation fuel (where the vast bulk of oil consumption goes). We need to start making that transition as soon as possible. The reasons for doing so go far beyond just the trade deficit, but that reason alone should be more than enough. If left unchecked, the trade deficit will eventually lead to national bankruptcy.

The Housing Problem

Housing has been the other Achilles Heel of the economy. Traditionally it has been the locomotive that pulls the economy out of recessions, but this time around it has been derailed. Residential Investment was down to just 2.22% of the economy in the third quarter, from a high of 6.34% of the economy at the height of the bubble, and a long-term average of about 4.5% of the economy.

The six lowest months in history (back to 1963) for new home sales have been in the last six months. New home sales, normally about one sixth the level of existing home sales are running about one fifteenth the level of used home sales, and it is not as if existing home sales are particularly robust. Each new home built and sold generates a huge amount of economic activity. Unfortunately we still face a massive overhang of existing home inventory, and used homes are very good substitutes for new homes.

The high level of inventories relative to sales is putting renewed downward pressure on housing prices, although the decline in this second down-leg of housing prices is not likely to be as big as in the first down-leg in 2008. While the level of used home sales is not really that important, the prices of existing homes are extremely important.

Still there are some signs that the inventory is starting to be worked off. Housing is not yet ready to be a major contributor to economic growth, but if it can just stop being a drag. Eventually population growth and higher household formation will cause the inventory to be absorbed, and housing will get back on track.

When (not if) that happens, the economy will start to show much higher growth. Housing as a “non-negative” factor in the economy is probably a fourth quarter and first half of 2011 story. Housing as an actual positive contributor to growth is more likely a second half of 2011 and 2012 story.

The Fed’s Two Mandates

Economic policy has recently turned more stimulative. The Fed has two mandates: to promote full employment and to keep prices stable. Sometimes those goals are in conflict, but they are not now. Inflation is extremely tame, and there was a significant danger that we would topple into outright deflation — and deflation is a nasty disease.

Unemployment is clearly too high. Both sides are pointing to the need for an easier monetary policy. The Fed has spent all of its conventional ammo. The Fed Funds rate has been pegged near zero for two years now, and is likely to remain there for at least another year. It has thus had to resort to unconventional tools and launched a second round of quantitative easing, or the QE2. This has taken the risk of outright deflation off the table.

Core inflation is likely to stay under control in 2011, probably between 10% and 1.5%. Headline inflation will be higher than that, especially if the dollar weakens resulting in higher oil prices, but oil is a relatively small part of the overall CPI, so pencil in headline CPI inflation of about 2.0% for 2011.

The prospect of prices actually falling significantly was the only reason it would have made sense to own a 10-year Treasury note at less than 2.5%. The prospect of at least some positive inflation has pushed rates sharply higher since the QE2 was launched, overcoming the effect that the extra Fed buying pressure to push down rates. One of the key ways that QE2 will stimulate the economy is through putting downward pressure on the dollar and thus improving the trade deficit.

For awhile it looked like fiscal policy was on the verge of becoming deeply concretionary. The hymn that the GOP was singing on its way to victory was all about how nasty budget deficits are. Over the long term, they are right about that, but in the short term we actually need to be running a budget deficit.

Despite all the press, the fact is that the budget deficit has been trending down, not up (although it did tick up significantly in November). With the ARRA stimulus fading fast, all of the Bush tax cuts scheduled to expire, as well as the tax cuts that Obama pushed through as part of the ARRA, and unemployment benefits about to end, it looked like the budget deficit was on track to fall sharply in 2011 — but at the cost of a significant drag on the economy, one that could have been big enough to tip us back into a double-dip recession.

The Tax Deal

The deal the Obama cut with the GOP, and which just passed Congress, not only prevents fiscal contraction from occurring (which would have repeated FDR’s 1937 mistake) but actually adds new fiscal stimulus. This comes in the form of a one year 2% cut in the payroll tax.

While as a matter of accounting, I would have rather that the stimulus come out of the General Fund budget rather than Social Security, it will be a major shot in the arm for the economy. For someone earning $50,000 (roughly the median household income) that will mean an extra $1,000 in their pockets for 2011. That’s roughly equal to the increase the median family has seen in its pretax income over the last decade.

Where We Can Expect Growth

So on balance I think that growth will pick up in the U.S. in 2011. The world economy, most notably Asia and Latin America, should post higher growth than the U.S. The price of copper for example is now pushing $4.30 a pound, and that level points to very robust worldwide economic growth (ignore the forecasts made by “Dr. Copper” at your peril).

We are also moving into the third year of the presidential cycle, and the third year is almost always the best of the four for the stock market in the cycle. Corporate earnings are doing very well, and the third quarter earnings season was very strong. Earnings growth should continue at a solid pace through 2011 (about 12% for the S&P 500). Valuations, particularly relative to bonds, are still very reasonable, if not quite as compelling as they were a few months ago.

I think that we are unlikely to see either major P/E contraction of expansion in 2011, but if forced to pick, the risk is more of P/E expansion from current levels than contraction. My round number projection for the S&P at the end of 2011 is 1400, or up in line with earnings growth.

I would favor the more cyclical sectors and large dividend-paying firms. Technology, Industrials, Autos, Energy and Materials look attractive to me. I’m still a skeptic on the Financials and would underweight them, as well as Utilities and Staples, and would avoid the Construction sector, particularly in the first half of the year.
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:38 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 23# ppteam

Sy Harding’s Street Smart Outlook for 2011


December 30, 2010

It’s that time of year for my forecast for next year.

But first, how did my forecast for 2010 work out?

A year ago there was considerable excitement about the recession having ended the previous June, and the stock market surging up in a dramatic new bull market off its March, 2009 bottom.

But I predicted that 2010 would see a return of problems; for the real estate sector once the tax rebates for buyers expired in the spring, that loan defaults and home foreclosures would continue to rise, that unemployment would continue to rise, that consumers would remain hunkered down. So economic growth would be anemic and the economy might even slip back into recession for a quarter or two.

Most of that came to pass, except that while economic growth slowed enough in the summer to panic the Fed into promising, and then providing, another round of quantitative easing, the economy did not quite dip back into recession, economic growth slowing only to 1.7% annualized in the second quarter at its worst.

On the stock market, I predicted it would run into a serious correction during the market’s typically unfavorable season beginning at the end of April, but that the most important feature of the year would be “an important bottom, which will be a time to buy stocks with both hands. But it will be tricky to identify the key turning points, not made easier by the fact that each of the last two years experienced serious downturns right out of the gate, beginning just a few days into January.”

That was just about how it went. The market experienced a mild correction of 7% that began in January and ran into early February. It then recovered to new highs by the end of April, at which time it topped out into a 16% correction to its July low. And as it turned out, that low was a time to buy stocks with both hands. Although the S&P 500 is up only 12% for the year, for anyone who stood aside to await the low, it has gained 24% since the July low, while the Nasdaq has gained 27%.

Unfortunately, the forecast was also correct that it would be tricky to identify the turning point. I got the April top right, with my Seasonal Timing Strategy triggering its exit signal on April 20, just a few trading days before the market’s April 27 peak. But I certainly missed the low in July being the important low for the year, having come to believe during the summer that the low would not take place until September or October.

So now on to 2011:

The economy should continue its slow growth in 2011, inspired by ongoing government stimulus and support, but held back by continuing high unemployment, and a housing industry still mired in a depression, which will keep consumer spending (65% of the economy) muted.

On the stock market, investor sentiment is now at extremes of bullishness and confidence regarding 2011, and for good reason.

Next year will be the third year of this Four-Year Presidential Cycle, and there has not been a negative 3rd year since 1940. Every administration does whatever it can in the third year of its term to make sure the economy, and therefore the stock market are positive and strong when re-election time rolls around.

And this time around the economy and market will be further supported by the Fed’s additional round of quantitative easing, which began in November and runs through June.

That’s the good news. Next year should be a positive year for the market.

The bad news is that I expect 2011 will be similar to 2010, with considerable volatility and some scary moments on the way to that positive finish.

The problems are liable to begin early in the year. The significant rally from the July low has the market overbought above key moving averages, and has investor sentiment pumped up to extreme levels of bullishness and confidence usually seen at rally tops.

That combination is liable to roll the market over into a correction of some degree beginning in January. By the way, that’s becoming a habit. While historically January tends to be one of the most positive months of the year, in each of the last three years the market has experienced corrections that began in January.

In all three of those years the correction that began in January bottomed in February or March, and the market then rallied at least into May. And that is my first prediction for 2011.

The market is then liable to run into trouble in its unfavorable season again. The list of potential catalysts for that trouble is fairly long, and includes the ongoing debt crisis sweeping through Europe, which will continue to periodically flare up, China’s increasingly serious efforts to slow its overheated economy and the effect that might have globally, the projected increase in the number of home foreclosures and bank closings even though the economy continues to slowly recover, and so on.

So my forecast is for a year quite similar to this year, with an early correction of some degree, temporary recovery, then a more significant correction, followed by a substantial rally off the low to produce a positive year.
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:40 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 24# ppteam

Optimistic about pessimism


2010 12 Insight.pdf (397.49 KB, 下载次数: 1)
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:41 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 25# ppteam

Goldman, Intel Are on My Top 10 List for 2011: John Dorfman

As investors make their resolutions for 2011, many should resolve to take on more risk.

Seared by losses in 2008, millions of investors have slashed their stock allocations, preferring the relative safety of bonds or cash. This represents a triumph of fear over experience.

History shows that the stock market is the right place to keep a percentage of your money. For most people, I recommend 60 percent of liquid assets. In the 30 years from 1980 through 2009, the compound average annual return in U.S. stocks was 11 percent. So far this year the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is up 15 percent, including dividends.

Yes, 2008 was awful. And no, you shouldn’t have money in the market unless you can afford to risk its loss. Yet owning a piece of American businesses has been a wise strategy, long-run. In that spirit, here are my 10 favorite stocks for the coming year.

I expect the information-technology sector to have a good year in 2011 as the economy picks up, so I will start with two technology companies. One is Western Digital Corp., which I believe is undervalued at six times earnings. The Lake Forest, California, company is the world’s second-largest maker of computer disk drives in terms of revenue. In its last fiscal year, which ended in June, Western Digital increased its earnings to $1.4 billion from $470 million the year before.

Cues From Management

The other tech company I like is Intel Corp. This year nine Intel insiders have bought their company’s shares. In addition, Intel raised its dividend six times in the past five years. Both of these are indicators that management believes better times are ahead.

I also have two selections in the energy industry. Transocean Ltd., with headquarters in Vernier, Switzerland, appeals to me as a leader in deep-water drilling. The stock took a whack in 2010 because of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill; it owned the rig that blew up and sank. Its 16 percent decline this year sets it up for a rebound in 2011, I believe. The stock sells for only 10 times earnings.

GT Solar International Inc., based in Merrimack, New Hampshire, has had a good run this year, up about 62 percent. Yet it sells for only 10 times earnings, and I believe there is room for further gains. The company makes furnaces that melt and purify silicon for use in solar panels. More recently it has developed furnaces for making synthetic sapphires used in light- emitting diodes. The company is debt-free.

Scorned, Now Cheap

In the financial sphere, my choice is New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc. The investment bank has been vilified for betting against a mortgage security it created, for high- speed trading and for paying its executives handsomely. These criticisms have helped to whittle Goldman’s stock price down to about $168, which is less than nine times earnings. That’s a low valuation for a talent-rich company.

I like several of the big drug companies, notably Johnson & Johnson. The New Brunswick, New Jersey, company has increased its dividend five times in the past five years. Its stock, which has sold for a median of 18 times earnings the past decade, currently fetches only 13 times earnings.

I think owning some Chinese stocks is desirable for U.S. investors. China’s economy is currently one of the fastest- growing in the world. Its budget is in better shape than ours in the U.S., and its population is younger.

Concrete Advice

One Chinese company I like is China Advanced Construction Materials Group Inc., which produces concrete and provides technical advice for large development and infrastructure projects such as high-speed railroad beds. The company has headquarters in Beijing, but its stock trades on the Nasdaq market in the U.S. It sells for only four times earnings.

Mantech International Corp., located in Fairfax, Virginia, provides information-technology services for the government, especially the military and intelligence agencies. In a world of terrorist threats, this seems a promising niche. The stock has lagged behind the market this year, falling about 14 percent. At about $42, down from a high of more than $61 in 2008, I think it is a good rebound candidate.

Sparton Corp. is a micro-cap (market value $84 million) company based in Schaumburg, Illinois. I like it as a restructuring play. The company has three divisions manufacturing sonic buoys for the Navy, medical equipment (mainly for in-vitro fertilization) and electronics. I think the latter division could be improved and then sold, providing cash to fuel the growth of the first two, which are more profitable.

Riskiest Stock Pick

Rounding out my list is a risky pick, Amedisys Inc. The Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based home-nursing company is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department and two other agencies on suspicion that it overcharged Medicare. The likely outcome in my opinion is an out-of-court settlement. It’s worth remembering that without home nursing for elderly patients, many would be hospitalized, an unpleasant and costly alternative.

Some perspective: Before investing in stocks, you should have the equivalent of six months’ salary in a savings account, adequate health insurance and life insurance if you have dependents.

Disclosure note: Personally and for clients, I own all 10 stocks discussed in this week’s column.

(John Dorfman, chairman of Thunderstorm Capital in Boston, is a columnist for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column.)
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:42 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 26# ppteam

Follow the smart money? Hedge funds offered weak returns on 2010

Hedge funds often claim to offer strong returns that are not correlated with broader markets, but in 2010 many failed on both of those counts.

That failure came in large part because hedge funds cannot make as many bets with borrowed money, analysts said.

Hedge funds on average returned just 4.52 percent this year to December 28, according to Hedge Fund Research's HFRX index.

That is short of the FTSE 100's .FTSE 10.5 percent jump or the Standard & Poor's 500 Index .SPX 12.7 percent rise.

Those lower returns failed to offer the diversification that hedge fund investors crave, experts said.

Nearly every hedge fund strategy tended to move in synchrony with the markets and with other hedge fund strategies this year, according to hedge fund data tracked by Lipper.

The hedge fund industry's lackluster performance in 2010 could spur more investors to question whether it is worth paying higher management fees for the funds, experts said.

When an investor gives money to a hedge fund manager, they are looking for returns that do not depend on the broader market, and can therefore improve the performance of the investor's overall portfolio, said Gabriel Burstein, Global Head of Investment Research for Lipper and Digital Ventures at Thomson Reuters.

"It's one of the Number One reasons that people invest in alternative investments," Burstein said.

Even so, investors were forgiving this year. Hedge funds saw net inflows from investors in 2010 for the first time since the credit crisis began, as investors have grown more confident that hedge funds can withstand the markets, according to data from Credit Suisse.

It was a tough year for hedge fund managers for many reasons, including limitations on how much funds can borrow, and difficult-to-analyze changes in the political landscape that spurred sovereign debt crises and new regulations.

Bailouts for Greece and Ireland in particular spooked many funds into reining in their bets.

"Hedge fund managers are significantly more conservative than they were at the beginning of 2008, and I don't think there are really the mega opportunities, like there were in subprime in '07 and '08," said Virginia Parker, chief investment officer at Parker Global Strategies, a firm that advises institutional investors on hedge funds.

Banks are less willing to lend money to hedge fund managers to make big bets, and funds' investors are also reluctant to magnify their potential losses by allowing managers to take on debt.

"The only way hedge fund managers are going to beat a bull market in equities is if you have leverage ... but investors haven't wanted leverage," Parker said.

It is surprising that hedge funds' performance has so closely tracked the broader markets, Lipper's Burstein said. In rising markets like 2010's, the performance of different investment strategies usually diverges.

Returns from different strategies usually converge when markets collapse, like in 2008.

SOME OUTPERFORM

Not every fund has performed poorly.

For example, funds with exposure to credit markets had a strong year.

Louis Gargour's LNG Europa Credit fund, which bets on corporate credit, rose 76.8 percent in the first 11 months of the year, after making more than 80 percent last year.

Cheyne Capital's European Event Driven fund rose 19 percent, according to investors in the fund. And at the event driven $3.6 billion fund Third Point, Dan Loeb's Third Point Offshore fund is up more than 25 percent through November 30. according to numbers compiled by HSBC.

Activist investor Bill Ackman's biggest Pershing Square International fund, which manages about $3 billion was up about 19.7 percent through the end of November, according to investors. Polygon Investment Partners made around 27 percent in its European Equity Opportunity fund.

Hedge fund managers have become fond of the phrase "Risk on, Risk off"' this year to describe the rapid shifts in market behavior as investors fluctuate between riskier commodities and credit bets and a flight to safety in assets like gold and U.S. treasuries.

Investors who proved their strategies were nimble did well, and hedge fund investors went heavily into global macro strategy funds, which are able to invest across many asset classes and adapt quickly to changes in policy.

At $14 billion New Jersey hedge fund Appaloosa Management, David Tepper's flagship Appaloosa Investment fund was up almost 21 percent after fees in the 10 months through October, after some big bets that the government would continue to support financial firms.

Big U.S. funds had slightly more subdued returns. Israel Englander's Millennium International was up about 11 percent through December 2, according to figures compiled by HSBC, and Kenneth Griffin's $11 billion fund Citadel so far this year has seen returns of about 10 percent.

Man Group's (EMG.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) $22.6 billion AHL fund rose 11.6 percent in the 12 months to December 27 as gains this month helped offset losses in November, while Bluecrest's BlueTrend fund returned 8.7 percent in the 11 months to end-November, according to figures seen by investors.
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-1-2 05:49 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复 27# ppteam

6 THEMES FOR 2011

As the new year rolls in it’s important to organize and plan for the important themes and events that could impact 2011.  Credit Suisse recently detailed their 6 dominant themes for 2011 and how they’re likely to influence markets:

    (1) The rise and rise of the emerging market consumer remains the most dominant macro theme – for the third year in a row.

    (2) Investors should focus on corporate spend areas in the stock market, one of our key themes since mid-2009. Corporate free cash flow, profitability and investment intentions are all abnormally high, while corporates have seldom been as under-leveraged. We believe corporates will want to focus on non-discretionary or short-cycle areas, i.e. areas where there is a relatively quick pay-back.

    (3) Plays on abnormally low real interest rates: we believe that the monetary authorities in the developed world will keep real rates artificially low to facilitate the deleveraging of $6.3tn of G4 excess leverage. If real yields rise too far and threaten the economic recovery (which they would if QE2 ended, in our judgement) or if the fiscal authorities over-tightened, we believe QE would be renewed in the US – and via a weaker dollar would force other developed market central banks to respond.

    (4) M&A is set to increase sharply

    (5) Investors will pay more of a premium for both growth and pricing power. Growth will be at premium because the discount rate is likely to remain abnormally low (increasing the value of long duration earnings), while it is hard to see how this will be a normal recovery, with $6.3trn of excess leverage in the developed world, making growth more valuable. Companies with pricing power deserve a premium, given excess capacity of around 4% of GDP in the developed world on our estimates, increasing Chinese competition and rising input costs.

    (6) Investors should avoid companies exposed to increased competition from Chinese companies.
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发表于 2011-1-2 10:06 PM | 显示全部楼层
回复  ppteam


Top advisers who have the best records in both up and down markets are now very b ...
ppteam 发表于 2011-1-2 05:32 PM



    Scared
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发表于 2011-1-5 11:43 PM | 显示全部楼层
Appreciated!
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