Monday, March 5, 2012

S&P bull markets



Next week marks the third anniversary of the current bull market cycle in U.S. stocks. Back on March 9, 2009, a day not easily forgotten in the annals of wealth destruction, the S&P 500 sank to a 12-year low of 676, the bottom of the worst bear market since the Great Depression. Since then, the S&P has more than doubled. In fact, this bullish run in stock prices is in the top 10 in terms of duration (1088 days) and so far has delivered a bigger pop in share price appreciation (102 percent) than the 96 percent gain during the long upswing in stocks that lasted from July 23, 2002 to October 9, 2007—just before the economy and the U.S. financial system became a heaving mess.
Investors for the most part prefer to put their money in bonds and money market accounts rather than stocks. Investors have pulled more money out of  U.S. domestic mutual funds than they’ve put in for five straight years. They withdrew $134 billion last year, according to the Washington-based Investment Company Institute. Trading volume in S&P component stocks, at near comatose levels this year, is down 20 percent through Feb. 21, year-on-year, according to Deutsche Bank.
Illustration Courtesy Bespoke Investment Group


You know things are bad when Wall Street firms such as Blackrock, the world’s biggest asset-management firm, start taking out multiple-page ads in the financial press urging investors to rethink the cost of cash. At a Feb. 29 speech in New York, Blackrock Chief Executive Officer Laurence Fink said: “I have said many times that I would personally be 100% in equities.” Really? Haven't you, Mr. Fink, already invested somewhere in private equity? Like Mitt Romney in Golden Gate Capital? (http://mittromney.abouttruth.net/2012/01/27/romney-tax-returns-detail-funds-not-included-in-ethics-forms/)


I have an advice for you: hire the best bond manager you can get and let him to run the total return fund which has been under-performing its benchmark (http://money.usnews.com/funds/mutual-funds/intermediate-term-bond/blackrock-total-return-fund/mjhqx)
The fund has returned 6.37 percent over the past year, 11.73 percent over the past three years, 4.53 percent over the past five years, and 4.10 percent over the past decade.

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