-- =SMARTMONEY.COM: When Will The Losing Streak End? --
By Stacey L. Bradford January 2, 2003 2002 WAS A LOUSY year for stocks. It was also a terrible year for the Wall Street superstars who are paid vast sums of money to tell the rest of us what the stock market will do in the future. For some, punishment took the form of public humiliation. For example, Goldman Sachs uber bull Abby Joseph Cohen once again promised us a better, more profitable year in 2002 - and once again, she got it dead wrong. Other so-called experts suffered far more than tarnished reputations. Lehman Brothers waved bye-bye to chief equity strategist Jeffrey Applegate, while Credit Suisse First Boston kicked chief strategist Tom Galvin to the curb. These promulgators of the best-case scenario no longer grace our Pundit Watch column. But 2002 wasn't uniformly grim in Pundit land. Pimco's Bill Gross repeatedly warned investors that stocks were greatly overvalued based on real earnings, and predicted that equities would continue to fall. Merrill Lynch's Richard Bernstein cautioned that technology and telecom stocks in particular remained overvalued. Salomon Smith Barney's Tobias Levkovich said the mighty American consumer would keep on spending. Right, right, right. So what do our savviest pundits see for the coming year? More of the same, unfortunately. Merrill's Bernstein, along with Levkovich and SG Cowen's Charles Pradilla, say investors should brace themselves for more volatility and trendless trading ranges. Bernstein expects the Dow Jones Industrial Average to hit a high of 9000 and a low of 7000, and predicts it will finish the year at 8250 - below where it began. The outlook is worse for the Nasdaq, which he says will close 2003 at 1000 after reaching a high of 1500 and a low of 900. These are ranges Bernstein provided for Louis Rukeyser's annual panelist competition.) One of our newer gurus, Morgan Stanley's Steve Galbraith, says it's time to reevaluate his portfolio. In a 180-degree shift from two years ago, he now favors growth-oriented and large-cap stocks over value-oriented and small-cap issues. He also believes Treasury bonds will sell off, and that the initial backup in yields could prove positive for stocks as it lends confidence that the double dip threat of recession is receding. Of course, if the U.S. attacks Iraq, all bets are off, warns UBS Warburg's Ed Kerschner. The attack itself may have only a mild direct impact on the economy, he says - but it could derail the already fragile recovery scenario that his firm has predicted. How? If the U.S. goes to war, corporations and consumers could rein in their spending. And tied purse strings would imperil Kerschner's forecast of 5% to 10% growth in S&P 500 earnings. Without earnings growth, the likelihood of the S&P 500 index rising substantially would diminish greatly. If this kind of thinking has you down, you might consider some of those best-case-scenario forecasts. In October, Cohen trimmed her 12-to-18-month price targets for the S&P 500 to 1150 from 1300 and the DJIA to 10,800 from 11,300. Why's that a good thing? Those reduced numbers would still represent a 30% rise from current levels. Prudential's Ed Yardeni comes in just a tad lower, calling for an S&P 500 of 1100. Gains like those sound wildly unrealistic to most of us. Unless, of course, you consider how far the S&P has fallen over the past three years. Against that bleak backdrop, a 30% gain can hardly be called a recovery. For more information and analysis of companies and mutual funds, visit SmartMoney.com at smartmoney.com. (END) Dow Jones Newswires 01-02-03 1830ET- - 06 30 PM EST 01-02-03
02-Jan-2003 23:30:00 GMT Source DJ - Dow Jones |