Main Menu
Tag Cloud
-
Bluetooth
Computer
Speaker
Book Publishing
Book Publishers
Publishing
Publishers
Publishing BooksPublishing Companies
Online Sites
Online Website
Nanotechnology
Science Fair Project
Environment Particulars
all psp games
all psp games out
best psp games
cheap psp game
cheap psp games
demo game for psp to download
download free psp games
download full game psp
download game psp sony
download game psp video
download games for psp
download games on psp
download games to psp
Web Design Los Angeles
custom website design services
website design Santa Barbara
website design Pasadena
website design portfolio
website design
website design San Diego
ghd hair straighteners
ghd straighteners
hair straightners
pink ghd
chi hair straightener
hair straightner
ghd hair straightners
chi straightener
ghd straightener
hair straighteners
ghd straightners
free shipping
chi straightner
ghd hair straightener
hair straightener
chi straighteners
best hair straighteners
best hair straightener
Kerala Tour packages
Kerala tours
Tours to Kerala
Shimla tours
Manali tour package
Manali tours
Web Services Los Angeles
Ecommerce Website Design Company Los Angeles
Website Design Santa Clara
Web Design Pasadena
Website Design Glendale
-
7 users online.
A Contrarian’s View On Wall Street's New Best Friend
Remember when Goldman Sachs racked up $10.0 billion in one year and paid out an average of $622,000 to its employees in bonuses? Well, it wasn't that long ago. It was only 2006.
Fast-forward two short years and times are very different. There won't be any big, fat bonuses on Wall Street this year. In the last nine months, large financial institutions have laid off over 34,000 people previously employed at stock brokerages, regular banks and merchant/investment banks. Rumor has it that 20,000 more layoffs are in the works. The mood cannot be good on Wall Street. Pessimism reigns.
In terms of the biggest layoffs, so far they have come from Citigroup (with 6,000 jobs gone), Lehman Brothers (cut 5,000 employees) and Bank of America (with 3,500 jobs gone). I doubt JP Morgan needs all 14,000 Bear Sterns employees either.
The last time Wall Street cut so many jobs was after the tech bubble bust in 1999, less than 10 years ago. Of course, Wall Street recovered from the tech bubble. They went from peddling tech stocks to mortgage backed securities. Next? (Once gold hits $2,000 to $3,000 per ounce, Wall Street will likely be selling gold-backed securities and that's when investors like me and you will know it is time to get out of gold!)
Regardless of what Wall Street peddles, they have a new ally: the Federal Reserve. In my study of history, I've never seen the Fed come to the rescue of Wall Street like it has now. Buying mortgage-backed paper from banks and swapping it out for government treasuries? Reducing interest rates on a dime? Even saving a stock brokerage? Too bad the Robber Barons of the later 1800s aren't here to see this. Wall Street has a new best friend: the Fed.
And that brings me to the stock market. In spite of all the bad news one hears, the stock market is not moving below its January 2008 lows. In fact, the stock market keeps moving further up and away from its January lows.
What does this action by the stock market tell me?
It tells me that the stock market has discounted the worse for 2008. I'm a big believer in the stock market being the best leading indicator of events to happen six months to one year away. Right now, the market is telling us that the worse is over. You can see it in the reverse of highs vs. lows on the NYSE. Look at the home-building stocks... they are staging a rebound, too.
So while pessimism about the economy rises daily... and while the economic figures released each week are more dismal... I'm taking the contrarian view again. (Hey, when I was bearish in 2006 and 2007, I was a lone wolf. Hence, I'm getting used to it. And I don't mind running against the crowd, because the general consensus is usually wrong anyway.) For now, the stock market tells me that the worse for the economy for 2008 is over.
About the Author
A Contrarian View on Wall Street's New Best Friend
—by Michael Lombardi, CFP, MBA
Stock Market Investing Advice - Profit Confidential
Free Stock Investment Advice
Investment Newsletter - Profit Confidential
Rating: Not yet rated
by: business Total views: 6 Word Count: 505 Date: Sun, 30 Mar 2008 Time: 7:02 PM 0 comments
