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January 23, 2008
Favorite
Myths of Stockbrokers
by Gary North, Ph.D.
The
world's stock markets are in freefall. Why? Here is
the universal explanation: investors are worried
about a U.S. recession -- a recession that the
mainstream forecasters insisted in December was not
going to happen.
Here is a rule: "No economist ever got fired for
predicting 'no recession.'"
Virtually all institutional economists always
forecast "economic growth will continue." Growth
usually does, so it is safe to predict it. I cannot
think of a recession in my lifetime when even a
quarter of the institutional economists had
predicted a recession in the previous year.
The
following assurances were published in December,
2007.
- Washington, DC -- Despite a relatively
uncertain economic cycle, the leaders of
America's top companies showed a slight uptick
in their expectations for the economy over the
next six months, according to Business
Roundtable's fourth quarter 2007 CEO Economic
Outlook Survey, released today.
-
- The CEO Economic Outlook Index, which
indicates how CEOs believe the economy will
perform in the six months ahead, improved
moderately, rising more than two points from
last quarter's 77.4 to 79.5 today.
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- "This quarter's survey suggests that CEOs,
as a whole, still see the economy as steady and
that the vast majority expect their sales,
capital spending and employment levels to either
increase or remain steady in the first half of
2008," said Harold McGraw III, chairman of
Business Roundtable and chairman, president and
CEO of The McGraw-Hill Companies. "These latest
results demonstrate tempered CEO confidence with
a slight rebounding of expectations since last
quarter."
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- December 5
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- By Alex Veiga, AP Business Writer
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- Forecast
Sees No U.S. Recession in 2008 Despite Housing
Woes
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- LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The nation's housing
doldrums will drag on at least through 2009,
dampening U.S. economic growth and job creation,
but the slowdown won't push the economy into a
recession, according to a new economic
report.
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- Despite plunging housing values, rising oil
prices and credit problems that continue to
plague Wall Street, the nation's job market is
unlikely to suffer the kind of steep losses that
would tip the economy into recession, according
to the quarterly Anderson Forecast by the
University of California, Los Angeles.
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- "We still think an official recession is not
in the immediate future," concluded Edward
Leamer, director and co-author of the forecast
set for official release Thursday. . . .
-
- In addition, the U.S. unemployment rate
would have to soar from the current 4.6 percent
to nearly 6 percent by the end of next year, the
equivalent of a loss of at least 2 million jobs,
Leamer said.
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- The
Great Recession of 2008?
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- By Diana Furchtgott-Roth
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- December 21, 2007
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- It probably won't happen, says DIANA
FURCHTGOTT-ROTH, and even if it does, we may not
know until 2009. . . .
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- On balance, it is not likely that the United
States will experience a recession in 2008. Most
economic forecasters expect growth to continue
in the 2.5 percent range. Employment and
personal income have remained strong through
October and November of 2007, so consumption
spending should continue, buoying the economy.
The weak U.S. dollar makes American exports more
competitive, thereby fueling economic growth and
employment. Even if the economy dips in 2008,
its slowdown may not last the requisite "several
months" to be designated a recession by the
NBER.
Stock markets around the world are giving their
collective judgment on the accuracy of these
forecasts.
I told my Website's subscribers to get out of
the stock market on November 5, except for (maybe)
energy stocks, if they did not want to hold U.S.
T-bonds, and a defense industry fund. To cover for
the possible fall in these stock sectors, I told
them to short the S&P 500. The rest of their
portfolios were to be in foreign currencies (CDs),
an international bond fund, gold bullion, and an
FDIC-insured bank account.
I had been recommending gold since October,
2001, so this was no surprise.
I specifically recommended against foreign
stocks. In my December 14 issue of Reality Check,
titled "Bubbles and Levitation," I wrote:
- There are some investors who think that they
can find safety and even profit by purchasing
stocks in developing nations like China and
India. They think these nations are somehow
insulated from the Western economies and the
business cycle that has created the real estate
bubble. But there is no insulation.
So, I address the following to readers who still
are invested in stocks.
STOCKBROKERS
Did your stockbroker call you in December and
suggest that you short the U.S. stock market?
- No.
Did he tell you to sell all of your shares in
your tax-deferred 401(k) and IRA accounts and move
to cash?
- No.
Did he tell you last year that there is going to
be a recession in 2008, and that shares will fall
in anticipation of this recession?
- No.
In good times, stockbrokers tell you to buy and
hold.
In bad times they tell you to buy on the dips
and hold.
Stockbrokers are like barbers. For a barber, you
always need a haircut.
The stock market is now giving a "haircut" to
millions of investors.
If you have read my warnings that this would
happen, you are at least not surprised by what is
happening. Maybe you did not believe me late last
year. Maybe you still own stocks. But at least you
read the opinion of someone who doesn't make a
living from commissions, which in turn are earned
by selling shares and stock mutual funds.
I have repeatedly commented on the fact that the
mainstream media refuse to recommend the obvious
investment defense: short the stock market. I do
not recall even one time over the last four decades
when I read a mainstream economist or forecaster
say, "Get completely out of stocks. Then use this
money to short the market."
Instead, they tell you to buy more stocks:
sectors that will resist a falling stock
market.
I say, "Don't fight the ticker tape," to use the
terminology of Thomas Edison's ancient technology.
Get out.
If you are truly convinced it's going down, use
a short fund or a short ETF to short the S&P
500.
The reason I included energy shares (maybe,
though T-bonds were my first choice) and defense
industry stocks in my November 5 portfolio was that
it was for retirement accounts. Some people simply
will not sell all of their shares. They cannot
bring themselves to get 100% out of the stock
market. So, I had them short the market to cover
what I thought was risky: holding any stocks at
all.
FAVORITE MYTHS OF BROKERS
Stockbrokers have a list of myths -- also known
as lies -- to tell clients. Let us consider some of
them.
"A broad index of stocks goes up by 7% per
annum, long term."
To assess the accuracy of this statement, let us
look at the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial
Average from February 6, 1966 to August 12, 1982.
On February 6, the Dow made an intra-day high above
1,000 for the first time, but closed at 998. On
August 12, 1982, it closed at 777. Take
a look at the chart. You can use your Adobe
Acrobat reader to enlarge it, so that you can see
this 16-year period clearly.
That's the good news: a "mere" capital loss of
22%. But we must adjust for price inflation. Go to
the
inflation calculator of the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Choose the dates 1966 and 1982.
Insert "1000." Click. Presto! The investment lost
two-thirds in purchasing power, after deducting for
the 22% loss.
Anyone who bought and held the Dow in early 1966
until August 12, 1982, had his head handed to
him.
In September, 1982, I announced in my Remnant
Review newsletter that I thought 777 was the
bottom, and that stocks would move up. I had no
idea how high and how long they would move up.
In February and March, 2000, I announced that
the U.S. stock market was close to a mania-driven
peak, that it could not go on much longer. On March
24, the S&P 500 peaked at 1555 intra day and
closed at 1527. It
fell below 800 in 2002.
The NASDAQ had peaked at 5040 earlier in the
month. I warned against it, with its insane P/E
ratio of 198. It fell to just above 1000 in 2002.
Investors lost 75% of their value, plus losses due
to inflation.
The hottest stock sector was the dot-com sector.
This fell by 90%, but many firms fell to zero.
Yet nobody in the mainstream media was warning
in late 1999 against the stock market. The tech
stock mania was rampant. It was a new era.
No, it wasn't.
Since 2000, the dollar has fallen in purchasing
power by a little over 20%. Add this to any losses
you have sustained by adopting "buy and hold."
THE BOOMLET IN NOVEMBER
On
November 27 and 28, the Dow rose by 540 points.
Things looked rosy. The market's recovery was here.
The woes of August were behind us. So the experts
thought.
In my November 30 report, "Grasping at Stock
Market Straws," I ended with these words: "This is
not going to turn out well." It hasn't. Yet for two
weeks after the late November boomlet, the market
continued higher.
Happy days were here again! They weren't.
That reversal is what speculators call a bear
trap. The stock market looks like the worst is
over. The optimists come roaring back in. They then
get hammered when the bear market resumes its
fall.
This leads me to the next beloved myth.
"Buy on the dips."
People who do this are called "dips" -- at least
by stock market bears. Sometimes they are called
"dipsticks." Or worse.
Stockbrokers need commissions. Say that the
stock market is falling. The sensible strategy for
the investor is to sell. A risky strategy is to
sell short. But sell.
A commodities broker makes money both ways: long
and short. What makes him money is volatility. Wild
swings are his cup of tea. Long, slow moves don't
lure in the suckers, 95% of whom lose. He needs
volatility to excite people. He needs them to
replace the 95% who lost money and who will not
return for another shearing.
A stockbroker sells to people who are not
traders. They are investors. So, investors want to
get rich by buying and holding. No muss, no fuss.
That is why volatility is bad for stockbrokers. It
scares away the average investor.
The retirement fund managers don't sell short
except to hedge a position briefly. If they guess
wrong when short, they can get fired. Nobody ever
got fired for going long if every other fund
manager was also long.
So, the brokers' sales commissions are
structured for long-term investors who keep putting
in their tax-deferred investment funds. A broker
tells investors to buy on the dips because he needs
the commission money.
A discount brokerage firm that offers no advice
does not care. It sells to all comers: bonds, money
markets, foreign bonds and stocks. It offers no
advice. It provides services for on-line traders.
But brokers who call people are looking for
commissions.
Also, media advertisers need buyers of stuff.
Bear markets scare investors. Then investors stop
buying stuff. So, the media are always bullish.
Advertisers pay for bullish sentiment only.
CONCLUSION
If you are still in the stock market, you are
suffering a lot of pain.
You think, "But should I really sell?" You have
been taught the myths by your broker. You have seen
these myths reinforced on TV. You hesitate.
You must decide: Is the fact that all of the
American stock markets are lower than they were in
March of 2000 a relevant fact? Does this fact tell
you anything regarding "buy and hold" and "buy on
the dips"?
Because
The Radical Academy publishes essays and articles
on its website does not imply acceptance or
approval of the comments or opinions expressed by
the author of the material. Nor is the Academy
responsible for any misrepresentation of the facts
included. It is your job to be a critical
reader.
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