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Six Week Stock Market Rally Topping Out

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 Fueled by wishful thinking and faint glimmers of hope ~ the stock market has slowly rallied for six weeks but is now topping out because most of the good news is not convincing and that reality is becoming obvious: Allen L Roland

Early spring is when I usually catch a cold. I sense the weather is changing, pack up my sweaters, jackets and corduroy pants, unpack my khaki pants and sleeveless cotton shirts and get ready for spring ~ and then the cold snap hits, reminding me that Winter is just teasing me and along with this realization comes the sniffles. 

The same thing happens during the winter of bear markets ~ where wishful thinking and faint glimmers of hope outweigh common sense and the cold snap of reality quickly dampens false rallies.

Today, the stock market is off over 285 points and it appears a cold snap has settled in and a false rally has been busted.

Leading economist and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman calls it green shoots and glimmers and offers four reasons to be very cautious about the market outlook including " Things are still getting worse, Some of the good news is not convincing, There may be other shoes to drop and even when its over, it won't be over ." 

Green Shoots and Glimmers

So is it time to sound the all clear? Here are four reasons to be cautious about the economic outlook.

1. Things are still getting worse. Industrial production just hit a 10-year low. Housing starts remain incredibly weak. Foreclosures, which dipped as mortgage companies waited for details of the Obama administration's housing plans, are surging again.

The most you can say is that there are scattered signs that things are getting worse more slowly that the economy isn't plunging quite as fast as it was. And I do mean scattered: the latest edition of the Beige Book, the Fed's periodic survey of business conditions, reports that "five of the twelve Districts noted a moderation in the pace of decline." Whoopee.

2. Some of the good news isn't convincing. The biggest positive news in recent days has come from banks, which have been announcing surprisingly good earnings. But some of those earnings reports look a little ... funny.

Wells Fargo, for example, announced its best quarterly earnings ever. But a bank's reported earnings aren't a hard number, like sales; for example, they depend a lot on the amount the bank sets aside to cover expected future losses on its loans. And some analysts expressed considerable doubt about Wells Fargo's assumptions, as well as other accounting issues.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs announced a huge jump in profits from fourth-quarter 2008 to first-quarter 2009. But as analysts quickly noticed, Goldman changed its definition of "quarter" (in response to a change in its legal status), so that I kid you not the month of December, which happened to be a bad one for the bank, disappeared from this comparison.

I don't want to go overboard here. Maybe the banks really have swung from deep losses to hefty profits in record time. But skepticism comes naturally in this age of Madoff.

Oh, and for those expecting the Treasury Department's "stress tests" to make everything clear: the White House spokesman, Robert Gibbs, says that "you will see in a systematic and coordinated way the transparency of determining and showing to all involved some of the results of these stress tests." No, I don't know what that means, either.

3. There may be other shoes yet to drop. Even in the Great Depression, things didn't head straight down. There was, in particular, a pause in the plunge about a year and a half in  roughly where we are now. But then came a series of bank failures on both sides of the Atlantic, combined with some disastrous policy moves as countries tried to defend the dying gold standard, and the world economy fell off another cliff.

Can this happen again? Well, commercial real estate is coming apart at the seams, credit card losses are surging and nobody knows yet just how bad things will get in Japan or Eastern Europe. We probably won't repeat the disaster of 1931, but it's far from certain that the worst is over.

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http://www.allenroland.com

Allen L Roland is a practicing psychotherapist, author and lecturer who also shares a daily political and social commentary on his weblog and website more...)
 

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Timing by UncleSim on Wednesday, Apr 22, 2009 at 6:53:01 PM