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  Posted on: Thursday, December 16, 2010
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Market Is Overbought, Overextended and Overvalued

   
 
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After an 86 percent gain in 21 months the market looks overbought, overextended and overvalued.  Furthermore, despite  the implementaion of QE2 and the passage of the tax compromise, the economy is not likely to grow fast enough to to be self-sustaining.

Although the combination of QE2 and the White House/Congressional compromise on the tax extension issue is being touted as the great elixir that will spur economic growth we think that growth will be subdued and temporary.  Indeed QE2 is already looking like a failure in its early stages.  No matter what the "experts" say now, it was crystal clear from the get-go that the Fed's intention was to lower long rates, not raise them.  As it stands today the sharp rise in the 10-year Treasury bond is likely to further weaken an already dead housing market by enough to offset any additional growth that QE2 could have provided.   Furthermore, the combination of QE2 and the big projected increase in the budget deficit caused by the compromise tax bill has helped spur another jump in commodity prices that will reduce real consumer income and negate much, if not all of the intended boost to consumer spending.  

In addition economic growth will be tempered by the temporary nature of the stimulus, continuing high unemployment, a moribund housing sector, the dire condition of state and local finances, a lack of readily available credit and the ongoing fragility of a banking sector that is still loaded with toxic assets that are significantly overvalued on banks' balance sheets.

Another major headwind to growth is the ongoing need to reduce household debt to normal levels after the credit binge of recent years.  Consumer credit excluding student loans continued its year-long slide in October, falling by $32.5 billion, and the unwinding has barely started.  Although consumer spending has perked up recently, we note that a national survey indicated that the percentage of people saying that they used their credit cards over the Thanksgiving day weekend was the lowest (17%) in the 27-year history of the survey.   According to major credit card companies, the use of personal credit cards dropped 11% in the 3rd quarter from a year earlier.  Does all of this sound like a consumer ready to spend freely?  We think not.

As if all of the above weren't enough, the chances of financial and economic crises overseas, particularly in Europe, China and Japan are exceedingly high.  The turmoil in the European Union is not a temporary crisis that will be cured with the wave of a wand.  A number of the weaker EU nations are basically insolvent, and their debts, sooner or later will have to be restructured.  The New York Times and Wall Street Journal recently highlighted the exposure of German, French, British and Spanish banks to the debts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal.  The IMF has warned that if the EU doesn't come up with a permanent solution the EU economy could go off a cliff.  Meanwhile the austerity measures being imposed on the troubled countries will be a drag on the EU economy for some time to come.  As for China and Japan, we'll leave that for future comment.   

In light of these problems we believe that investors are overly optimistic.  An 86% market rise in 21 months has already discounted a lot of good news----some of which will not happen.  The market looks overbought and overextended, and is showing signs of an imminent top with lagging breadth, a lower number of new highs, overenthusiastic sentiment, higher-volume down days and a more frequent number of late-day selloffs.  At this juncture we think that potential upside progress is limited while downside risk is high.  

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