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Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
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July 27,
2007
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor
of International Business
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Interest Rate and
Stock Outlook
Fed Policy and Interest Rate Outlook:
Fed target unchanged through November.
Treasuries are currently overbought.
The long end of the Treasury yield curve
will rise as the subprime scare
subsides, freeing up additional cash for
solid mortgages and enterprises with
sound business plans. The ten-year
Treasury rate should rise through the
balance of the third quarter. Look for
something above 5.10. Treasury long
rates are artificially suppressed by the
subprime scare. This may be a good time
to move high quality corporate and
municipal debt, and for investors to
move from Treasuries to lower grade, but
investment quality corporate debt.
Mortgage financing will remain
readily available at reasonable rates,
especially for creditworthy borrowers
with stable, verifiable incomes. Less
creditworthy borrowers will continue to
find financing; however, risks will be
better assessed and more fairly priced
into mortgage rates, and investors will
be more appropriately rewarded for
accepting attendant risks.
Stocks: Overall the interest rate
environment will be positive for stocks.
With the economy poised to grow between
2.5 and 3 percent in the second half,
the focus will be on overseas growth and
its contribution to corporate profits.
Profits growth will be strong and
continue to outperform the U.S. economy.
Most large U.S. companies earn a good
deal of their profits abroad. The
combination of strong growth in Asia,
coupled with moderate growth in the
United States, is good for their bottom
line.
A weaker dollar makes U.S. equities a
particular bargain for foreign
investors, especially in Europe and
Japan. Large U.S. multinationals earning
significant shares of their profits in
Asia will prove a great play for
European and Japanese investors who sit
on strong euros, pounds and yen but have
few good investment options at home.
Moderate GDP growth, favorable
interest rates, profits advancing
strongly, and robust foreign demand for
U.S. equities should power up U.S. stock
prices. The market should regain its
footing, and stock prices should recover
nicely and move up further.
Forecasts for
upcoming economic data.
Forecast Previous Week of July
30 Period
July 31
Employment Cost Index - Q2
0.8% 0.8
Personal Income - June 0.5%
0.4
Per Con Expenditures 0.3% 0.5
PCE Deflator 0.2% 0.5
Core PCE Deflator 0.2% 0.1
Real Per Consumption 0.1% 0.1
Chicago PMI - July 58 60.2
Construction Spending - June
0.3% 0.9
Consumer Confidence - July 102.0
103.9
August 1
ISM Index - July 55 56.0
ISM Prices 64.5 68.0
Pending Home Sales - June 98.0
97.7
Auto Sales (SAAR) - July
16.20m 15.6
Car Sales 7.65m 7.63 Domestic:
5.26 5.25
Truck Sales 8.55m 7.97 Domestic:
7.03 6.55
ADP Employment July 100 150
August 2
Factory Orders - June 1.0%
-0.5
Durable Goods Orders 1.4% -2.4
weight .514
Nondurable Goods Orders 0.7% 1.6
weight .486
Initial Jobless Claims 305k
301
August 3
Non-farm Payrolls - July
130k 132
Unemployment Rate - July 4.5%
4.5
Ave. Hourly Earnings - July 0.3%
0.3
Ave. Work Week - July 33.8 33.9
ISM Services - July 59.0 60.7
ISM Services - Prices 63.0 65.5
Week of August 6
August 7
Productivity (p) - Q2 1.5%
1.0
Unit Labor Cost 3.5 1.8
Consumer Credit - Jun $8.0b
12.9
Federal Funds Target 5.25 5.25
August 8
Wholesale Inventories - Jun
0.3% 0.5
Wholesale Sales 0.8 1.5
August 10
Export Prices - July 0.3%
0.3
Import Prices - July 1.4% 1.0
Import Prices, ex petroleum 0.2%
0.2
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission.
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