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Market Strategies For 2015 And 2016 | Seeking Alpha Seeking Alpha ‘ + ”; $(‘header’).insert( before: element ); _bindEvents(); Effect.BlindDown(‘ipad_beta_promo_container’, duration: 0.5 ); } } function _bindEvents() var closeBtn = document.querySelector(‘#ipad_beta_promo_container #close_promo_ipad’); if (closeBtn) closeBtn.addEventListener(‘click’, function () createCookie(‘hide_ipad_promo’, 1, 1); Effect.BlindUp(‘ipad_beta_promo_container’, duration: 0.5); Effect.BlindUp(‘keep_fixed’, duration: 0.5); Effect.BlindUp(‘close_promo_ipad’, duration: 0.5); }); } } add_ipad_promo_if_needed(); })(); 1. Market outlook for rest of the year; expectations for 2016; what were the main surprises in 2015? Expect a dive on 16th December, when the Fed announces its rate hike. The Bank of New York Mellon (NYSE: BK ) reckons that during Fed tightening cycles since 1946, every time the Fed has raised rates, the market has gained three per cent over the following 12 months after this “lift-off”. ( Financial Times , 10th December, 2015, p. 21). Then expect a year-end rally on account of portfolio managers wanting to improve their annual performance. Surprises: The market crash of September AND the way that the Chinese government tried to halt it with its interventionist policies. 2. Investment strategy; where to find opportunities; how to separate winners from losers How to separate winners from losers: use our Economic Clock®! Winners where there is an excess supply of money, or outlook of an excess supply of money. Losers: where there is an excess demand for money, or outlook of an excess demand for money. INVESTMENT STRATEGY The winners are Europe, Japan, the US and China: the first two have an excess supply of money; the US has a tiny excess supply of money and an improved earnings outlook (courtesy of an excess demand for goods). China will have an excess supply of money once the Central Bank loosens. This is not happening currently: indeed, when the Central Bank supports the RMB exchange rate, it buys RMB and sells dollars. But it then removes these RMB from circulation, so they are not part of money supply any more. SECTOR WINNERS are clearly soft commodities on account of a bad weather outlook. SECTOR LOSERS remain the industrial commodities: over-investment based on China euphoria are at the root of these losses. 3. Japan outlook; Abenomics and BOJ policy A winner – for all the wrong reasons. Her Economic Time® will continue being that of an excess supply of money and an excess supply of goods. Abenomics is dead in the water: that’s because the third arrow got bent by politicians unwilling to reform. Thus, like everywhere else, the Central Bank is left to pick up the pieces. 4. China markets; weak data signalling stimulus soon? Policy response is likely in the first quarter of next year . Indeed, the weaker RMB will help importers raise margins; but I remain doubtful whether the weak RMB can lift increasingly sophisticated exports. 5. Commodity rout; how long will it go? Oil prices See the Investment Strategy of question two above. Industrial commodities will continue suffering on account of a global excess supply of goods. Oil prices: Have nothing to do with our beloved demand/supply approach. Instead, they are all driven by politics of Saudi Arabia not wanting to accommodate Iran’s desire to produce 1 million barrels of oil/day. My guess is that everyone will scramble for market share, meaning that that excess supply of oil gets exacerbated. The good news is that this represents a massive tax cut for the consumer. 6. A Fed rate hike seems more likely this month. What’s your take? I guess “yes”; but this really depends on what the FOMC decides to focus on. If it is the US economy, then a rate hike is probable. But if it switches the floorboards again and decides to focus on China and on what the World Bank as well as the IMF are pronouncing, then all bets are off. I’ll believe that future rate hikes will take place gingerly, a bit like walking on egg shells. Scalper1 News
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