Showing posts with label Biggest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biggest. Show all posts

Friday, February 17, 2012

If The S&P 500 Finishes The Year With A Gain, It Will Be The Biggest Turnaround Since 1984

traders102408apNEW YORK (AP) — 2011 was shaping up to be a washout for the stock market just two weeks ago. Now, it's within shouting distance of its biggest comeback in nearly three decades.

The Standard and Poor's 500 index has jumped 11.4 percent since hitting its lowest level of the year on Oct. 3, largely because investors have become more confident that Europe will shelter its banks from huge losses on Greek bonds should that country's government stop making payments on its debt. For much of the summer, investors feared that a Greek default could lead to a freeze of lending between European banks and cascade into a credit crisis similar to the one in 2008.

The S&P 500 was down 12.6 percent for the year as of Oct. 3, when it closed at 1,099. As of Friday, it had trimmed the loss to 2.6 percent. It needs to gain just 33 points, or 2.8 percent, to get above 1,257, where it started the year.

If the S&P 500 finishes the year with a gain, it will be the biggest turnaround since 1984. That year, Apple Inc. introduced the Macintosh, and President Ronald Reagan's campaign ads proclaimed that it was "Morning Again in America." It was also the last time that the S&P 500 fell more than 10 percent during a calendar year and finished the year in the black. The index finished that year up 1.4 percent.

Edging out another gain of that size in 2011 wouldn't make anyone rich. But consider the hand that investors were dealt this year: A tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan plunged the world's third-largest economy into a recession and created a worldwide parts shortage. Uprisings throughout the Arab world sent the price of gas skyrocketing to an average of $3.98 a gallon in May. The U.S. lost its top-notch credit ranking for the first time. And Europe has teetered on the edge of a financial crisis that could hobble the region's banking system.

With all of that going on, investors might wonder how the S&P 500 index could possibly end the year higher than where it started. The biggest reason: some think stocks may be the best value out there.

With dividend payments alone, the S&P index offers a return on par with low-risk U.S. Treasurys. From Aug. 24 through Thursday, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note was below the dividend yield of the S&P 500 index. Since 1962, the only other time that's happened was during the 2008 credit crisis, according to J.P. Morgan.

"You have to have pretty dark thoughts to think that there's not a chance that the S&P 500 beats out Treasurys at this point," said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Bank.

Stone also thinks company earnings are going to be better in the third quarter than many analysts expect, driving stock prices higher. Since July, analysts have cut back their estimates for the S&P 500's third quarter earnings 3 percent because of concerns that the U.S. economy might be heading into a recession. Since then, retail sales, applications for unemployment benefits, and the number of jobs added in August have been better than Wall Street expected. "The market has been priced for the worst, but that's not bearing out in reality," Stone said.

Others point to the fact that the S&P 500 was stuck in a narrow trading range since Aug. 4th. That day, the index fell below 1,260 during a broad sell-off. The stock market has moved up and down a lot since then, but hasn't really gone that far. The S&P 500 has mainly traded between 1,099 and 1,218, a relatively small band. On Friday it broke out of that range, closing at 1,224.

Investors who buy and sell the S&P 500 index based on analyzing patterns in charts — known on Wall Street as technical traders — believe that indexes will tend to keep moving steadily in the same direction once they break out of a trading range. That's because investors tend to follow the herd. Increased confidence in Europe's ability to prevent a widespread financial crisis may help the S&P 500 move out of that range and stay there.

"If we have truly averted the worst of Europe then a large dark cloud is going to be lifted off of this market and momentum is going to take over," said Richard Ross, global technical analyst at Auerbach Grayson.

Seasonal investor behavior might also lift the S&P 500. The S&P index typically gains an average of 3.9 percent during the last three months of the year. "Positive market psychology hits a fever pitch as the holiday season approaches and does not begin to wane until the spring," according to the Stock Trader's Almanac. Professional investors also tend to readjust their portfolios at this time of year, buying stocks that have done well and selling those which have fared poorly for tax purposes.

That could have a greater than usual effect this year because the S&P 500 remains cheap, analysts say. At the start of the year, the S&P 500 traded at 15 times its earnings over the last 12 months. That was below the average price-to-earnings multiple of 18.6 over the last 10 years. Friday, the S&P 500 traded at 12.9 times earnings.

It's not quite time to count on gains, however. The S&P 500 has fallen more than 10 percent 43 times since 1900, according to Sam Stovall, chief equity analyst at Standard & Poor's. It finished the year with a gain only 11 times, a comeback rate of 26 percent. The average gain in those years was 1.8 percent.

"I'm skeptical of this rally," Stovall said, noting that Europe's debt problems still aren't solved. "But even if there is a gain, history says that you're not going to end up with anything to be too excited about."


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Monday, September 12, 2011

At $125 Million, Zagat Would Be Google's 10th Biggest Buy Ever (GOOG)

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Google paid $125 million to buy restaurant guide company Zagat, says the Wall Street Journal.

That's exactly how much the company said it was worth about 11 years ago -- and quite a lot less than the $200 million it was trying to shop itself around for in 2008.

But it's still a pretty big bite for Google. In fact, it would be the company's 10th largest acquisition ever, right after On2 for $133 million, and social-gaming company Slide, which cost $179 million a year ago and was just shut down.

And it's way more than the $50 million Google reportedly spent for Android -- probably its best buy ever.

Here's the full list: Google's 15 Biggest Acquisitions (Before Motorola)

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Thursday, September 8, 2011

Roubini Slams Trichet For Making The Biggest Mistake In ECB History

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Nouriel Roubini tweets: "I was just interviewed on CNBC:The ECB has to reverse this week its biggest mistake ever, the rate hike that sharply worsened the EZ crisis."

What's amazing about the ECB rate hikes earlier this year is that EVERYONE saw the possibility that it was going to turn into a disaster, in part because it so nicely echoed the blunder from 2008, when Jean-Claude Trichet -- looking at surging oil prices and a weakening banking system -- decided to hike rates in order to fight inflation.

Here's a chart we ran earlier this year, showing what the scene looked like in 2008, as Trichet hiked rates right at the top of the oil peak, only to see the whole thing collapse soon thereafter.

chart

What's actually amazing is that the ECB's rate hikes from this year haven't been reduced yet. With all the ECB has had to do to glue the whole thing together (buying Italian, Portuguese, and Greek bonds), the obvious move -- reversing the rate hiks -- still hasn't been done.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Here Are This Summer's Biggest Winners And Losers In Media

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Summer 2011 is officially finished -- taking with it one of the busiest hot-weather news cycles in recent memory.

And where there's constant news, there's a heap of winners and losers.

Sometimes -- ahem, Piers Morgan -- someone who looks destined to be a summer loser comes out way ahead.

Other times -- in Rupe and Wendi's case -- you find a big loser and a big winner under one roof.

Now that's what we call a crazy summer.

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Salt Prices In Korea Jump 42.8%, Biggest Increase In 30 Years

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saltSea salt harvesting in Thailand (image for representational purpose only)

Image: Wikimedia Commons

Salt prices in Korea have jumped 42.8% in August from a year ago and 13.6% from the previous month. Prices have increased eight consecutive months according to The Korea Herald. 

The steep rise in prices has been attributed to hoarding and bad weather. Fearing nuclear contamination after damage to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan this year, locals began to hoard salt driving up costs. Moreover heavy rainfall hurt salt production as well. 

The increase in prices is the highest since September 1981 when they jumped 46.7%. Chilly paste prices were up 18.7% in August from a year ago, soybean sauce was up 21.7%, and chilly powder and beans were up 18.2% each.

South Korea has been struggling with consumer inflation which rose 5.3% in August from a year ago, exceeding the government's 4% target. South Korea has been struggling with inflation which rose 5.3% in August from a year ago, exceeding the government's 4% target. While the government blamed the three-year high figure on weather, more worrisome signs have emerged for the country. Oil and gas products saw prices increase between 2% - 10%, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Increasing flow of dollars has caused inflation spikes in Korea, like it did in Malaysia and Singapore. The Bank of Korea has increased interest rates three times in 2011 to curb inflation, but is unlikely to raise them again and risk economic slowdown. Moreover household debt has been increasing, limiting the central bank's options to deal with rising prices.

Don't Miss: 10 Hyperinflation Horror Stories Of The 20th Century >

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