Many good points in The Wall Street Journal article.
BULLS SEE CORRECTION, BEARS SEE RECESSION ! By Peter D. Henig Red Herring Online August 28, 1998
When Asia first faltered to crack, nobody seemed to care. The Dow tore through 9,000 like a hot knife through butter. Questionable earnings? Investors just shrugged. Internet stocks were the rage and technology IPOs were going ballistic.
Suddenly, however, the world became a smaller place and investors are now all ears.
Mexico's and Venezuela's currencies headed south, and Russia announced it will no longer defend the ruble -- a full capitulation to devaluation.
And then the Dow cracked.
Stocks plummeted on Thursday with the Dow falling 357, or 4.2 percent, while the Nasdaq Composite Average dropped 82 points, or 4.6 percent. On Friday, it was more of the same: The Dow sank to 8,051.68, down 114.31 -- just above the critical psychological level of 8,000 -- while the Nasdaq dropped 46.73 to 1,639.68.
This leaves us with a Dow down almost 15 percent from its highs, while the Nasdaq ended Friday more than 18 percent below its all-time high, just short of the 20 percent drop that would suggest a bear market, according to analysts.
Cocktail conversation "Investors here have gotten wound up at something they know nothing about," says Charles Crane, market strategist for Key Asset Management. "It makes for great cocktail conversation."
Cocktail conversation about the Russian ruble? Yes, and more, say analysts.
Some are as skeptical about the emotions driving the current downturn as they were about speculation driving the bull market's momentum. Others are genuinely fearful that the end is nigh.
"International problems have compounded everything going on here, and technically, this just broke the back of the Dow," said Ron Rizato, director of research for Tasin & Co. "Look at the advance-decline ratio. It's a horror show."
Technology stocks, both small and large, were also a horror show. For quite some time, they have enjoyed lofty valuations, but now, they're flagging. The largest tech companies, like Lucent (LU), Cisco (CSCO), Dell (DELL), IBM (IBM), and AT&T (T) have held up well, say traders, but even those have shown signs of deterioration.
Among the Internet stocks, Yahoo (YHOO) lost 8 to 83.06, AOL (AOL) lost 8.25 to 96.25, and Amazon.com (AMZN) got flattened by 13.11 to settle at 105.89. Big-cap bellwethers hit the skids as well, with Microsoft (MSFT) dropping 4 to 105.25, Dell down 6.13 to 118.75, and Cisco off 4.44 to 94.69. As well, the Russell 2000 and the S&P 500, which represent the small- and mid-cap stocks of the market, are both nearing their lows for the year.
"This is the most bearish I've see it in five years," said one Wall Street trader. "It used to be called a correction; now I'm hearing 'bear market.'"
Check your emotions at the door
What's driving analysts mad right now are the emotions driving this move.
Traders have reported near-panic selling at times, even though many marketwatchers suggest the fundamentals aren't all that different from six weeks ago. "It's becoming chic to sell stocks," claims Mr. Crane. "The U.S. economy, while softer, is not falling apart at the seams."
But what appears to have the market truly concerned -- some might say overly concerned -- is the fact that right now one-third of the world's economies are in recession or depression while much of the the other two-thirds are in very fragile forms of expansion.
Commodity prices across the board have experienced steep declines, indicating that deflation, not inflation -- the Federal Reserve's constant worry -- may be upon us.
"What the market is telling us is there's a slowdown coming here," says Mr. Rizato. "Look at how fast and drastic the CRB [Commodity Research Bureau Index] has been falling here. You get those deflation worries, and suddenly it smells like fear."
But what is really onerous, suggests Mr. Crane, is the potential price decline in both goods and services worldwide. "If everything started going down in price, especially now, that's what could really be scary."
To Russia with love For now, however, Wall Street says don't panic.
"The Web will grow without Russia," trumpeted Keith Benjamin, Internet analyst with Robertson Stephens, in his recent Weekly Web Report.
Mr. Crane was equally blas‚: "Russia's stock market capitalization is probably less that of Yahoo's. Who cares?"
And for the ultimate denial, Abby Joseph Cohen, Goldman Sachs' market guru, reiterated her bullish comments, times two.
"Stocks are 7 to 10 percent undervalued," said Ms. Cohen, repeating her statement issued on Monday, when she considered the S&P 500 5 to 8 percent undervalued. Like most of the analysts we talked to, she added that the selloff was due mostly to a shift in sentiment, not a fundamental change in the business climate.
As for predictions, only Mr. Rizato, a technical analyst, sees the market as continuing to sell off.
"I see another measured move to 7600-7800," predicted Mr. Rizato. "A lot of people were too heavily weighted walking into the highs, and there could be a lot of mutual-fund redemptions from here."
Mr. Crane and Mr. Benjamin, on the other hand, see a bottom in the market's future. "I've been saying for a long time a trading range between 8300 and 9300," says Mr. Crane.
Mr. Benjamin offered no more precise numbers: "It is impossible to pinpoint the perfect day, but it is reasonable to believe these are attractive levels."
Attractive levels for a correction? Or a midway point in a recession?
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Correction or recession? You choose.
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