Subscribe

Three investing lessons learned from this summer

This week should be a good time to ponder what we all learned this summer and what this means for investing going forward.

This week should be a good time to ponder what we all learned this summer and what this means for investing going forward.

One lesson was the ability of the U.S. economy to grow despite a global economic slowdown, chronic political uncertainty and a generally very gloomy mood. A key contributor to this resilience has been a long-awaited rebound in housing and numbers due out this week should support this theme. In particular, while the FHFA House Price Index may not see any further gain following a 4.0% leap over the prior five months, the Case-Shiller Index should reinforce the theme of rising prices. New Home Sales could reach their highest level since an incentive-juiced April 2010, with New Home Inventories establishing yet another record low. Meanwhile, Pending Home Sales could also rise to their highest level in over two years.

The gain in home prices and equity markets in recent months does appear to be boosting confidence and both the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index, due out on Tuesday, and the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index, due out on Friday, should show some improvement over low levels in August.

Durable Goods Orders, on Thursday, will portray a sharp slowdown in manufacturing. However, this will largely reflect a huge monthly swing in Boeing aircraft orders – elsewhere a clearer picture of the health of manufacturing will be provided by a relatively flat Chicago Purchasing Managers’ Index. Meanwhile, Consumer Income and Spending numbers should confirm that they both improved August.

A second lesson was that central banks, while not good at stimulating economies, are very good at removing tail risks. This has been most notable in the case of the ECB which has succeeded first through the Long Term Refinancing Operations (LTRO) program and then through the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) Program in stabilizing both European banks and, to some extent, the peripheral sovereign bond market. One measure of this is the Spanish government bond market where 10-year yields ended last week at 5.76% down from 7.62% just two months earlier. This week, the Spanish will announce the results of an audit of Spanish banks to try to ascertain how much extra capital they need as well as set the stage for a perhaps more general Spanish aid package. However, given the ECB’s success in recent months in stabilizing European markets, the choreography in the Spanish aid request should be not be too alarming to markets.

The final lesson of the summer is that investors should resolve not to try to time when to get in or get out of markets but rather invest based on long-term fundamentals and valuations. Many said that the markets were going to move sideways or that you should “sell in May and go away”. Both the prescriptions and prognostications proved to be in error. The truth is that the market environment remains sluggish and uninspiring. However, relative valuations favor stocks while investor allocations in recent years have tended to favor bonds. With tail risks waning, this remains a time when many investors should consider moving away from overly-conservative portfolios to rectify this still-glaring imbalance.

David Kelly is the chief global strategistr for J.P. Morgan Funds

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

What the tax hit will mean for the economy

The tax package that averted the fiscal cliff will significantly lower the deficit, but at what cost to economic growth?

Three investing lessons learned from this summer

This week should be a good time to ponder what we all learned this summer and what this means for investing going forward.

JP Morgan: Dodging the Greek bullet

The week ahead should be a busy one for financial markets as policy makers react to the results…

JPMorgan’s David Kelly: Three key ‘unresolved’ questions about to be answered

Last week saw the sixth consecutive weekly loss for the stock market, with the S&P500 now down 6.8% from its late-April peak.

David Kelly: All eyes on oil

Once again this week, markets will focus on events far from both Wall Street and Washington.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print