5 Reasons To Like Or Dislike Stocks By Jim Farrish
I wanted to look at 5 reasons to like or dislike stocks looking forward:
One – Earnings have been upbeat with 50% of those reporting beating expectations. The outcome overall has been above expectations and forecasts for the majority are positive for the balance of the year.
Good earnings eventually win investors over. Thus, one vote in the positive category to like stocks and the market looking forward is positive earnings growth.
Two – Sales or revenue growth has been positive from those reporting earnings. In order to grow earnings you generally need revenue growth. The last twelve months companies have grown earnings by cutting costs and jobs, but you can only cut so much in order to grow earnings.
The railroad sector has reported stronger than expected earnings (see number one) and the reason was higher revenue due to
increased traffic or shipping. The automobile and commodities (coal) were the largest increase. Rising demand trickles through the economy. The transition to revenue growth points to a growing economy which points in the direction of liking stocks.
Three – Improving economic data remains gradual, but steady. The estimates of 3-4% GDP growth is in favor of stocks, however you have to buy into the premise of this growth rate. I am not quite as optimistic relative to real growth in the US economy. Why?
The rising costs on the wholesale level is a vote in the camp to dislike stocks, or at least some sectors.
Four – Political static or interference will inject volatility in the markets. The most recent was the vote last week by Congress to repeal the healthcare bill. It pushed the healthcare sector down 3% and the healthcare providers were down more than 5%. This type of “help†from Washington isn’t going away anytime soon.
The current atmosphere in Washington is cooperation for job creation… I am not holding my breath, but this points to the need to watch stocks directly in the crossfire of Washington.
Five – Value over growth? While this is another debate within the debate relative to stock growth, value is taking the lead. The large cap stocks, as we discussed earlier this week, have out shined the small cap and growth stocks the last four weeks.
The bias is leaning in that direction and one worth watching as this year unfolds. Either way, this argument falls in the category of liking stocks.
I am on the side of liking stocks and the outlook is positive for the next 12-18 months. There will be volatility along with disappointments, but the overall outlook falls on the positive side. A short term pullback or correction would be a opportunity to add to, or establish new positions in equities.
http://www.dailymarkets.com/stock/2011/ ... ke-stocks/
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