Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

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Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby 68Camaro » Thu Sep 15, 2011 4:28 pm

CNBC article:

Thursday September 15, 2011, 4:22 pm EDT

Despite a long-term picture in Europe that appears to be as unsettled as ever, investors will take any bit of good news and run with it.

That's been the message from a succession of trading days in which even the whisper of resolution to the European sovereign debt problem-a conference call among policy makers, another bailout installment for Greece-sees the market go higher.

Even downbeat economic numbers, like the batch the government released Thursday, weren't enough to derail hopes that Europe won't implode and take the global economy down for the ride.

"Somehow we're back to a risk-on trade again," says David Twibell, president of Custom Portfolio Group in Englewood, Col. "The problem in Europe is, 1) very serious, and 2) there is no easy solution. If there was we would have already solved the problem. The market is being a bit pollyannaish right now."

An announcement that the European Central Bank and its global cohorts are embarking on a program aimed at providing dollars for liquidity-challenged banks served as all the catalyst the market needed to surge.

Those who trade on hope that the plan will fix the debt crisis do so at their own peril, Twibell says.

"If the market is going to be remotely rational, the upside is going to be fairly limited," he says. "We still don't know how the US economy shakes out. The situation in Europe is going to be an overhang. I don' see a lot of upside, and the downside could be substantial if we see a disorderly default in Europe."

Though the problems with European debt and the effect it will have on banks run well beyond liquidity and into actual solvency, the narrative that took hold was that central bankers were taking a proactive step to prevent another catastrophe on the scale of the fall of Lehman Brothers.

The move came on the third anniversary of Lehman's implosion and conjured up memories of the financial crisis that nearly brought down the entire global economy.

"What is the good news? That the big powers in Europe are still adamantly opposed to any kind of debt resolution?" said Walter Zimmerman, senior vice president at United-ICAP in Jersey City, N.J. "Those who don't have a vested interest in European banks look at that and say it's just delusional to think that Greece is going to get out of this without any type of debt restructuring."

The answer to the market's movement, then, could be as much technical as it is based on hopes for European stability.

By most accounts the market is considerably oversold, with the Standard & Poor's 500 (INDEX: .SPX) trading at 13.5 times earnings, below its historical average near 16.

Moreover, stocks in an overall downtrend will stage aggressive rallies, as they have done at least four times over the past 30 or so years when in bear market cycles, which mark a 20 percent fall from the recent high, according to David Rosenberg, senior economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff in Toronto. The S&P 500 just missed the bear designation during its summer swoon off the early-May highs.

"In all cases, the first rally following the initial leg down reversed half of the initial selloff," Rosenberg writes in his daily note. "That is exactly what is happening right now. Tread cautiously if you are tempted to jump in. In other words, even with the bounce off the early August lows, this cyclical bear market is following a very similar path."

Hedge fund manager Dennis Gartman adds in his daily Gartman Letter, that the market is "hovering in a consolidation pattern that we think ominous in nature."

Such conditions can make for a good trader's market.

But for those with a longer horizon, trading on incrementally and likely temporary good news out of Europe is dangerous.

"Everything still has that whole contagion effect," says Nadav Baum, executive vice president at BPU Investment Management in Pittsburgh. "The traders love this stuff, they love the volatility."

The danger from Europe even has some traders using reverse psychology, thinking that if there are so many people believing something awful is going to happen that negates the possibility of it actually coming to pass. Leon Cooperman, head of Omega Advisors, espoused that philosophy at Wednesday's Delivering Alpha conference, run by CNBC and Institutional Investor, and others believe it as well.

"The market is incredibly oversold. There's so much pessimism out there," says Keith Springer, president of Springer Investment Advisory in Sacramento, Calif. "Things are bad. However, I think the fourth quarter is going to be better than expected, mostly because nobody expects it to be good."

Baum says he's advising his clients to stay put until the market gyrations subside.

"It's all cycles," he says. "Economies are cycles, markets are cycles, and we haven't had a good stock market since 1998. It's coming. It's only a matter of time before we get a sustainable type of market getting that 8, 9, 10 percent a year."
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby fb101 » Thu Sep 15, 2011 6:42 pm

It's only a matter of time........
All things back to normal?
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby SoFa » Sat Sep 17, 2011 10:03 am

It seems like when they put another band aid on the problems the market shrugs off worries about the larger situation and rallies like it did this week.
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby 68Camaro » Sat Sep 17, 2011 10:41 am

SoFa wrote:It seems like when they put another band aid on the problems the market shrugs off worries about the larger situation and rallies like it did this week.


Yeah - that's cause they want to believe in the band-aids. That's why it's really impossible to time this, even though we talk about it, and try to estimate it. The house of cards will fall when something relatively unexpected happens which sets something off that the powers that be can't control. Until then, it will stairstep down in reaction to really bad news, and move up on hope, and sometimes (given the psychology of those in charge of trading) hope overcomes normal bad news - at least for awhile.

All I can do for myself is work probabilities, which are only based on feel anyway, with some limited guidance from history. I think we are near the end of the first half of a roughly 30 year cycle (which is really a depression, no matter the biased data, and at any rate a significant lengthy downturn can FEEL like a depression even when it doesn't meet some of the rigorous definitions). This cycle began about with the dot-com collapse circa 2000. I don't think we've yet seen the bottom of that cycle. The earlier dips and rises over the past 10 years are just part of the ups and downs of a painful journey down. Unlike earlier cycles going back hundreds of years, we now have both a global economy and fiat money that factor into the response on this. I think (fear) those factors will make a difference in the depth and the length of this crisis, and how well we come out of this - but we will see. My estimates of chance versus timing, that we will see a further major market meltdown before we hit bottom and truly climb up:

99.99% chance within this decade - in my mind its essentially a certainty, just a matter of time
95% chance within next 3 years
90% chance within next 18 months
70% chance within next 6 months
50% chance by end of this year
In the game of Woke, the goal posts can be moved at any moment, the penalties will apply retroactively and claims of fairness will always lose out to the perpetual right to claim offense.... Bret Stephens
The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it. George Orwell.
We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality. Ayn Rand.
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby avidbrandy » Sat Sep 17, 2011 12:03 pm

Could it have anything to do with the fact that 70% of trades now are executed by automated computers. That they don't program mid and long-term world events very well?
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby 68Camaro » Sat Sep 17, 2011 12:59 pm

avidbrandy wrote:Could it have anything to do with the fact that 70% of trades now are executed by automated computers. That they don't program mid and long-term world events very well?


That could explain specific unusual trading events, but trends, even intra-day, are guided by traders with agendas and beliefs. So, I don't think it has anything to do with automated trading system.
In the game of Woke, the goal posts can be moved at any moment, the penalties will apply retroactively and claims of fairness will always lose out to the perpetual right to claim offense.... Bret Stephens
The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it. George Orwell.
We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality. Ayn Rand.
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby Delawhere Jack » Sun Sep 18, 2011 2:35 pm

Greek PM Papandreou cancelled a scheduled visit to the US that was to have been today through Tuesday. He was to have met with the IMF and the Fed. Greek has 768 million Euro in bond payments due Tuesday. The rest of Europe has thrown in the towel on throwing money down this bottomless pit.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/september-20-greek-default-day

If they do default, there are enormous amounts of CDS's written against the debt. Somewhere I read the JPM and some other bug US bank(s) are on the losing side of these bets. PLEASE-PLEASE-PLEASE-PLEASE let Goldman Sucks be one of those banks!
I've gone Galt. Obama and all the other commie's can kiss my a....
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby Mossy » Sun Sep 18, 2011 3:04 pm

Could be the gamblers have decided there's "one more hand" to play before time to cash in and go home.

I'd never have believed they could keep it going this long. Amazing.
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Re: Are Investors Taking Debt Crisis in Europe Too Lightly?

Postby fb101 » Sun Sep 18, 2011 4:20 pm

The problem is that we (and I guess most of the world) have gotten really confused about the difference between a bandaid and a fix.
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