Monday, February 20, 2012

Two Sides of a Story

We are just through with a week which has seen an upsurge of hope in investment markets around the world. All around the world stocks are up and there's talk that a turnaround is now visible. Every major index is up from anything between five to fifteen per cent over just a few days. So is this it? Are the dark clouds lifting? Is there a turnaround on the way which the markets have foreseen? It's possible but there are plenty of solid arguments against this view. Let's see what the arguments on both sides of the investments picture are.
 The Turnaround is here: It's true that the world economy is taking a severe beating, but equity prices have more than kept pace. In every equity market around the world, prices have fallen so sharply that there are plenty of great stocks available at ridiculously low prices. Sure, the economic downturn will impact many companies' profits, but eventually the profits will rise again. Such stocks will never again be available at such bargain basement prices. In any case, this is not about stock prices alone. From anecdotal evidence like Citibank's two profitable months to the improvement in the India's IIP to improving consumer confidence around the world, there's evidence that the global economic decline is not as bottomless as the doomsayers would have had us believe.
 They may have been slow of the blocks, but governments around the world have done a great deal to stave off the worst effects of the crisis. It takes some time for these actions to have an impact at the ground level, but the massive interventions of governments will start showing up strongly from now on. All things considered, there appears to be strong evidence that the worse is behind us and the turnaround is in sight.
 OK, that was one side of the argument, now let's hear it from the side that thinks that the worse is still ahead: Equities don't turnaround when they ought to turn around, but when investors start buying them in serious numbers. The evidence for this is still thin.
 The sudden upsurge in world stock prices is entirely the work of short-sellers scrambling for cover and short-term traders. In India, none of the constituencies of stock buyers are about to start pouring money into stocks. This holds for everyone from the biggest institutions (both domestic and foreign) to the retail investors. Moreover, the collapse in sales and profits has barely started showing up in corporate results yet. To think that the impact on stock prices is over and done with is a mistake. What governments are doing is to try and re-inflate the same bubble, and what the cheerleaders are doing is to try and convince us that the clock is about to turn back eighteen months. If this downturn teaches one thing, it is that the situation is unpredictable. The markets are supposed to be foreseeing good times to come, but don't forget, the same 'markets' haven't been able to foresee anything correctly for almost two years now.
 Those are two sides to the debate and the logic for both is impeccable. Which one will appeal to you more depends on what sort of a mood you are in. That probably depends on how the downturn is affecting you personally. Which is where the key to understanding the situation lies. At this point of time, the real malaise is the tremendous loss of confidence in the future that has happened to individuals, businesses and institutions.
 Would you care to predict when that will get cured?

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