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Will the Stock Market Continue Going Up?
By Candace Bahr, CEA, CDFA and Ginita
Wall, CPA, CFP
We
have now reached a milestone the Dow Jones Industrial Average has reached 13,000, and prosperity continues. But economic indicators are mixed, and eventually the economy will slide into recession.
Here's how future economic developments may affect you.
Q: If we have a recession, does it mean the stock market boom is over
for good?
A: Recessions are a natural part of the economic
cycle, just as winter is part of the seasons. Recession happens
because interest rates and inflation rise, so consumers slow their
spending, and production slows. But cheer up economic growth
cycles are much longer than periods of recession, so even if recession
hits, recover is just around the corner.
Q: It is likely that a recession will happen in 2007 or 2008?
A: If you were running for president, would you want to do
so in a strong economy or a recessionary one? So election years
are rarely big years for recessions. But consider this: If there
were a recession during your term as president, would you want
it when you were running for re-election, or years earlier? For
that reason, if the new president in January 2009 sees recession
on the horizon, he or she might let things slide and
get it out of the way early in the administration. (But whether
the president has much power over recession is a subject of great
debate.)
Q: Will I get a better interest rate if I buy a ten year
bond than if I buy a three year bond?
A: That is usually true, but right now we have a very flat interest rate curve, and we might end up with inverted interest rates. That means you are better off buying bonds in the shorter end of the yield curve.
Q: Is the bull stock market is coming to an end?
A: Yes, but when is the question. All bull markets eventually end,
and here are some of the clues that
a bull market is ending:
- Interest rates rise for 3-month Treasury bills
- The Federal Reserve raises the discount rate
three times.
- The Department of Commerces index of
leading economic indicators is down three months in a row.
- The stock market indexes are moving up, but
the advance/decline line (the difference between the winners and losers each day) is
dropping
- One stock market index is moving up, but
others are declining.
- We have had some of these over the past year,
but not all of them together. Stay tuned.
Q: When the bull market ends will it be like
the stock market crash of 1987?
A: Stock market speculation and program trading
have been severely collared by federal regulations since the stock
market crash, and now complex trading brakes kick in to cushion
the fall when the stock market begins to slide. An economic crisis
likely will creep rather than crash.
Q: Do mortgage rates go up right after the Federal Reserve
raises interest rates?
A: Certainly rising federal funds rates (the interest rate
that banks charge each other) impacts interest rates, but the
impact is anticipatory. That is, interest rates go up in anticipation
of the rise, not in reaction to the increase. So its already
built into your mortgage rate. The real question is, whats
around the corner?
Q: If recession looms, is my best bet is to convert everything I own to cash
and wait out the storm.
A: Hunkering down is a good idea when a tornado is approaching,
but its bad advice for a long-term investor. If you sell,
you may miss the party later. The total gain from a bull market
tends to occur rapidly at the beginning of a market recovery.
So its more important to be in the bull market from the
beginning than it is to avoid the bear markets.
Q: So it sounds like in any market, even volatile ones, a savvy investor
can make money?
A: Very, very true. Volatility can actually help you if you are
a regular investor. For example, lets say you have $500
going into a stock fund in your 401(k) each month. If the market
is down on payday, shout "Hooray!" Thats because
youll get more shares for your money than if the market
were up. Its like going shopping and finding that everything
you need is on sale.
At WIFE we welcome your comments. Please feel free to contact us.
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