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发表于 2008/10/27 11:41:07
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The Dow finished last week down 5.35 percent, the Standard & Poor's 500 index lost 6.78 percent and the Nasdaq composite index dropped 9.31 percent. That week wiped out nearly $800 billion from shareholder wealth, as measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index.
One bright spot was that the market did not hit the trading lows reached Oct. 10, when panic appeared to be at a peak. But that doesn't mean the market has hit bottom. Between 2000 and 2002, the S& 500 fell 50 percent from peak to trough, and so far that index is only off 44 percent from its Oct. 9, 2007 peak.
"I'm not sure that the market has gotten to the point where you think, 'It's been beaten up enough.' No one knows how bad it's going to be," said Tim Knepp, chief investment officer of Genworth Financial Asset Management.
Even if stocks have seen their lowest levels, an upturn is not necessarily around the corner.
"When will that occur and what will spur it? Good economic news should, but who knows when that will happen," Detrick said. The Dow's recent range of about 8,200 to 8,600 prices in "a major recession, the biggest recession since the '30s. Hopefully it's wrong and this is a tremendous buying opportunity, but no one knows."
Economists are not optimistic about data this week on new home sales, durable goods orders, third-quarter gross domestic product, personal spending and income, and consumer confidence. All these reports are anticipated to show continued weakness -- GDP in particular, which is expected to come in negative.
Investors are also worried that this week's earnings reports from companies such as Kellogg Co., Kraft Foods Inc., Procter & Gamble Co., Visa Inc. and Colgate Palmolive Co. will reveal signs of an even weaker-than-expected consumer.
The Federal Reserve is expected to lower interest rates by at least a half-point to 1 percent this week. But the rate reduction is already priced into the market and unlikely to calm its restlessness.
One reason: The credit markets remain incredibly constricted, even in anticipation of another rate cut. Bank-to-bank lending rates are down from their highs earlier this month, but are still lofty by historical standards, suggesting that banks continue to hoard cash instead of lend.
This is a troubling sign for companies that rely on banks and the credit markets for borrowing. Demand has all but dried up for bonds issued by companies with less-than-ideal credit ratings -- a huge problem that has yet to be fully felt by the real economy. |
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