There are widely diverging views on the market outlook for 2012, with some being extremely pessimistic. On the other hand, there's Joe Rosenberg - who was chief investment officer of Loews until 1995, when he became chief investment strategist. Rosenberg has turned bullish.
Excerpts from an interview that Barron's, America's premier financial magazine, did recently with Joe Rosenberg:
Barron's: Europe has been a big overhang for the U.S. stock market. How bad is it?
Rosenberg: People are projecting a worst-case scenario about intertwined banking systems in Europe and the United States. That fear factor is what is impelling people to stay away from equities in the United States, and is precisely why equities here are so attractively priced. Now, I am not going to say all equities.
There is a big disparity in valuations between the best companies in the world, large-cap companies—both growth and value—and small-cap stocks, which have done well over the past few years, and are not as attractively priced. The price/book ratio of the S&P 500 relative to the Russell 2000 is near a multidecade low (see graph).
In terms of economic history, the equity market looks a lot like the Treasury-bond market in the early 1980s, when I had the most difficult time convincing people that they ought to buy bonds at 15% yields. Equities can easily generate a 10% annualized total return over the next five to 10 years. And they would still not be overvalued at that point. That's the beauty of it.
What should investors do?
If investors are afraid to put all their money into equities at one time, keep cash—and then every time you get another one of these scares, add to your position.
Investors are running scared.
These scares are nothing new in financial history. Sometimes, the scares are financial, and sometimes they are political. I can recall worse scares than the current one. Nobody wanted to go near equities during the Cuban missile crisis. That was a much worse scare than this one. It didn't last as long, but it was much worse, because we were actually on nuclear alert in this country. You can have cheap equity prices or good news, but you can't have both at the same time.
For the full story, go to Barron's website
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