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Last Wednesday, Byron Wien,
the thoughtful and well-regarded chief investment strategist of hedge
fund Pequot Capital Management, issued his list of Ten Surprises for
2007. According to the press
release, Mr. Wien has served up his economic, financial market and
political surprises annually since 1986.
Overall,
the list of possible outcomes is somewhat benign, with a seemingly
bullish bias. Reading between the lines, it would seem that Mr. Wien
sees most investors as being unduly negative about prospects for the
year ahead. That is despite the fact that risk premiums are at historic
lows, bullish sentiment is at multiyear extremes, and a great many
markets, including the stock market, are way past their sell-by dates.
Consistent
with this latter view, I thought I would go through the list and provide
possible alternative scenarios that I believe might be even more
surprising to investors than what he is suggesting. Here is what I came
up with (Mr. Wien's original list items are quoted in italics):
1.
The S&P 500 exceeds 1600 surprising even optimistic strategists and
investors. The combination of strong earnings, reasonable valuations and
excess liquidity throughout the world drives the U.S. market higher.
Market volatility increases substantially with the VIX index rising to
20.
Reversion
to the mean kicks in with a vengeance. Earnings fall in lockstep with
economic growth. P/E ratios continue their post-bubble downtrend amid
rising risk aversion and an increasingly pessimistic economic and
financial outlook. The noose of tight credit and rising illiquidity
begins to exorcise a decade-long exuberance. Instead of breaking out to
the upside, the S&P 500 begins a widely unexpected multi-year
descent.
2.
Secretary of the Treasury Paulson's trips together with the forthcoming
Olympics move China to a more accommodative attitude toward the United
States and the West. China
revalues the yuan by 10% and eases terms for Western partnerships with
Chinese companies.
The
beginnings of a hard landing in China as investment and real estate
booms abruptly come to an end, a dramatic U.S.-led global slowdown,
worsening trade tensions in the wake of rising protectionist sentiment
and the fallout from the failed Doha round of global trade negotiations,
and a growing realization that America's hegemonic dominance is falling
by the wayside cast a dark pall over relations between America and China
-- as well as other nations.
3.
Despite a world-wide economic slowdown, crude oil remains in short
supply because of Asian demand and the price per barrel returns to $80.
Development of alternative sources of energy and sales of hybrid cars
remain disappointing. There is a movement in Congress to encourage the
construction of nuclear powered electric utility plants and local
resistance seems to be softening as the "green wave" starts to
take hold.
On
the heels of a world-wide economic slowdown, higher borrowing spreads,
sharply diminished access to credit, and the unwinding of a massive
multi-year speculative bubble in oil, copper, and other commodities,
those markets continue significant medium-term corrections that will
eventually cut the price of oil and other commodities by a third or more
from peak 2006 levels.
4.
As the standard of living rises around the world, agricultural commodity
prices continue to soar. Corn goes to $5.00 a bushel, wheat to $7.00,
soybeans to $9.00 and cotton to $.80 a pound. The volatility of cattle
prices also attracts investor attention.
With
consumption falling hard on the heels of a collapsing credit bubble and
a dramatic economic slowdown in the U.S., China, and elsewhere,
agricultural commodities also begin double-digit medium-term
corrections.
5.
S&P 500 earnings grow by more than 10% for another year, exceeding
analysts' estimates. Profit margins hold their own as productivity
continues to improve.
S&P
500 earnings increase far less than expected. Faltering growth,
cutthroat competition in the U.S. and overseas, rising real interest
rates, costlier credit, a belated effort by American workers to garner a
greater share of economic spoils, and heightened antagonism towards
corporate managers on the heels of options and other scandals and
bonuses perceived as obscene all serve to pressure profit margins
downward.
6.
The Federal Reserve does not lower rates in the spring. The 10-year U.S.
Treasury yield goes to 5.5% as higher wages cause inflationary pressures
to increase and the yield curve turns positive. Real growth in the U.S.
approaches 3% once again as housing begins to recover. Credit spreads
widen as defaults increase in a service oriented, competitive economy
that is brutal to manufacturing companies.
The
Federal Reserve lowers rates in the spring -- though less than markets
demand -- as a collective realization suddenly takes hold that the U.S.
economy is in the midst of a dramatic slowdown. Although the 10-year
treasury yield increases, as Mr. Wien posits, the move in long-term
yields actually reflects selling of volatile fixed-income securities by
leveraged speculators, hedgers, and assorted foreign holders,
evaporating liquidity, tighter credit, and a dramatic shift in risk
preferences that favors short-term instruments over longer-term issues.
7.
The price of gold goes to $800 and silver approaches $18. The dollar is
stable against the euro because of renewed economic growth in the U.S. and
higher interest rates.
Gold
and silver follow other commodities downward on their way towards
unexpectedly sharp medium-term corrections. The dollar, meanwhile,
rallies strongly on overly negative sentiment, large-scale speculative
bets gone wrong, a scramble for dollar-based liquidity to meet margin
calls and other dollar-related credit obligations, knee-jerk buying by
investors and residents in emerging and other nations seeking a safe
haven amidst heightened instability, and the continuation of a technical
rally off of long-term support levels.
8.
Economic conditions in Japan continue to improve. After being one of the
worst equity markets in a developed country during 2006, the Nikkei 225
rises 15%. In this market large capitalization stocks do outperform
their smaller brethren.
The
Japanese economy gets hit hard as a result of its heavy dependence on
U.S., Chinese, and Asian export markets. The Nikkei 225 continues to
falter as part of an ongoing medium-term correction, with the shares of
large multinationals lagging their smaller brethren.
9.
The emerging markets of Asia take a rest. Attention shifts heavily to
Latin America and Brazil stands
out. It is a country with vast natural resources and reasonable labor
costs. The country moves closer to an investment grade rating and the
Bovespa rises to 55,000.
Asian
emerging markets get slammed by a global slowdown and an abrupt and
widespread dash for the exits by overseas investors seeking safer
pastures. Markets south of the border are dragged down even more by the
combination of a widespread shift in risk preferences and rising
political instability emanating from populist socialists movements in
Venezuela and elsewhere.
10.
Neither of the current frontrunners for the 2008 presidential election
in the U.S. proves to have staying power. Rudy Giuliani pulls ahead for
the Republicans as fears of terrorism heat up again and Barack Obama
gains momentum as he demonstrates that inexperience isn't a terminal
liability.
Perhaps
Mr. Wien is right on this one -- who knows? More than likely, candidates
who successfully feed on and amplify the growing fear and uncertainty of
the masses will be the ones who become the frontrunners.
Mr.
Wien believes these surprises, which the consensus would assign only a
one-in-three chance of happening, have at least a 50% probability of
occurring at some point during the year. In previous years, more than
half of the elements of the list have proven correct.
Forecasting,
of course, is always a difficult endeavor. Still, from where I sit, I
believe Mr. Wien's overly optimistic views for 2007 may be putting his
enviable long-term track record at risk.

© 2007 Michael J. Panzner
Editorial Archive
Michael
Panzner is author of The New Laws of the Stock Market Jungle: An
Insider’s Guide to Successful Investing in a Changing World
and a 25-year veteran of the stock, bond and currency markets. His
next book, Financial Armageddon: Protecting Your Future from Four
Impending Catastrophes is set to be published by Kaplan Business
in February.
Contact
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Michael
J. Panzner
P.O. Box 115
Manhasset, NY 11030
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