In
the past week or so, we've seen several strategists on Wall Street put out
really bullish calls on the stock market, especially in the wake of the Federal
Reserve's surprise decision last Wednesday to refrain from tapering back
quantitative easing.
Deutsche
Bank chief U.S. equity strategist David Bianco
says the S&P 500 now has a "straight shot to
1800" without a 5%
correction.
BMO
chief investment strategist Brian Belski ratcheted up his year-end S&P 500 price target to
1800 from 1650,
saying stocks could ride all the way to 1900 on continued easy money from the
Fed.
ConvergEx
Group chief market strategist Nick Colas argues that "the classic setup for a Q4 melt-up
rally" is in place.
And
Barry Knapp, one of the most bearish equity strategists on Wall Street in 2013,
finally cranked up his year-end S&P 500 price
target to 1800 from
1600, also on account of recent Fed developments.
Against
this backdrop comes an interesting anecdote from Morgan Stanley's top economist
Joachim Fels, who says that "if you happen to be a contrarian, you should
probably sell stocks till your hands
bleed, and then sell some
more."
In
his "Sunday Start" note to clients, Fels writes:
If
you happen to be a contrarian, you should probably sell stocks till your hands bleed, and then sell some more. Why? All the five
seasoned investors representing large pools of money on the panel I moderated at
our 4th annual Global Economics &
Strategy Day in Frankfurt on Friday were constructive on equities, and almost all of the around 200 investment
professionals in the audience seemed to agree.
The
consensus on the panel was that the global economy continues to recover,
interest rates will rise moderately, valuations are ok, earnings will
accelerate, and European equities look more attractive than other regions. The
only major divergence in view was over Japan , where the bulls argued “don’t fight the
BoJ”, while the bears lamented the lack of structural reforms. Still, despite
the broad overall agreement, it was a lively panel discussion that even touched
on diverse topics such as cows,
communists, and correlations – but
that’s a story for another day and I only mention it because one of my favourite
colleagues asked me to.
While
I have a strong contrarian streak, I confess I side with the consensus at the
moment, along with our own strategists who are constructive on developed-market
equities. The global macro backdrop remains supportive and is pretty much
following the DM ‘Acceleration’, EM ‘Stabilisation’, and central bank ‘Accommodation’ script we laid out in our Back-to-School
Global Macro Outlook three weeks ago. In fact, monetary policy now remains even
more accommodative than we expected as the Federal Reserve’s FOMC surprised us and almost everybody else on Wednesday by
not tapering its bond purchases.
That sounds like a
pretty good snapshot of the mood on Wall Street at the moment.
source: businessinsider
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