Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Stock, bond slumps echo 1974 bear run

Michael Patterson NEW YORK

IT'S
been 14 years since investors suffered as big a retreat in stocks and
bonds and some of the largest money managers say the losses may have
more in common with the 1974 bear market before the worst is over. The
Standard & Poor's 500 Index dropped 3.4% since March and investors
in Treasuries lost 2.88%, the steepest combined plunge in 14 years,
according to data compiled by Merrill Lynch and Bloomberg. Equity and
debt markets fell in tandem for only the sixth time since the savings
and loan crisis of the 1990s as oil closed at a record 19 times and
concern grew that inflation will cut the value of bond payments.

Dreman
Value Management, BlackRock and Cambiar Investors, which together
oversee $1.38 trillion, are buying banks, phone companies and oil
producers to weather more declines in benchmark indexes. David Dreman,
whose DWS Dreman Small Cap Value Fund beat 90% of its peers over five
years, bought Cleveland-based KeyCorp as financial firms fell to a
10-year low last week. BlackRock added AT&T for the best dividend
yield since 2006. Cambiar says Marathon Oil is inexpensive.
"Between
inflation and the liquidity crisis, this is one of the toughest markets
I've seen," said Dreman, who oversees about $15 billion in Jersey City,
New Jersey. "But it's not a market you sell into. Any loss
es you take by being too early will be more than offset by buying cheaply."
Dreman
founded his firm in 1977, three years after the S&P 500 fell 30%
for its worst annual loss in the last 60 years. Stocks plunged as the
Arab oil embargo pushed up US consumer prices as much as 12.3%, at the
time the biggest annual advance since 1947. Consumer prices climbed
4.2% in the 12 months to May. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index, a gauge
of 19 commodities, added 49% in the past year, exceeding the record 48%
annual gain in 1973.

Investors
were whipsawed this month by the Dow Jones Industrial Average's worst
June since 1930 and the biggest losses in Treasuries in four years.
Bets that the Federal Reserve will increase interest rates helped spur
a 1,292-point tumble in the Dow average this month on concern higher
borrowing costs will prolong the worst profit slump in six years.
The
Dow industrials added 37.86, or 0.3%, to 11,384.37 as of 9:45 am in New
York. The S&P 500 increased 5.23, or 0.4%, to 1283.61. Just two of
10 industries in the S&P 500 rose this year. Energy producers
gained 6.3% and a group of mining and chemical companies added 0.5%.
Massey Energy, the fourth-biggest US coal producer, advanced 155% for
the index's biggest rally after the Richmond, Virginia-based company's
first-quarter profit topped analysts' forecasts. — Bloomberg

0 comments:

DISCLAIMER



DISCLAIMER: INVESTING AND TRADING IS VERY RISKY AND FINANCIAL LOSSES ARE OFTEN THE RESULT.

Investment success is far from a sure thing. This site is solely intended for educational purposes. I am not a registered investment advisor and it is not my intention to provide anyone with investment advice. I am not recommending that any reader of this blog buy, sell, short, or engage in any other investment strategy based upon the content set forth herein. I strongly urge all readers to perform their own due diligence before investing and or trading their funds. I will not be responsible for any readers financial losses.