“2011 Themes: These Go To Eleven” Year End Review

“2011 Themes: These Go To Eleven” Year End Review

Since we’ve now closed the chapter on 2011, we’d like to review our “11 Economic Themes For 2011” from last January, to see how well our ideas performed.

1.   No.   Raise ’em sort of high: We expect the Fed to raise short-term interest rates towards the end of the year, in response to slow but steady growth and a more hawkish group of voting members. We were flat out wrong on this one. The Fed kept rates steady at the lowest possible level of 0-0.25% throughout the year. A blip in US economic data mid-year and continuing concerns about Europe held back even the most hawkish voting board-members from recommending a raise.

2.   Not exactly.  Risk Off: We believe stock prices are quite a bit higher than underlying fundamentals support, at a trailing P/E of around 18.25 , prices are at the upper end of historical range. We were right to think that 2011 would be a year where market participants would lower risk, but we focused on US Equities. In fact, US Equities became a relative safe-haven as investors fled the Emerging Markets and Europe.

3.    YesUnited States of Europe: We expect the deterioration of sovereign credits in peripheral Europe to continue as these governments struggle with difficult but necessary financial decisions. We expect continued friction between fast-growing Northern European economies and Southern Europe. We have been discussing this theme for years, but it did come into its own in 2011. If anything, the conversation about potential outcomes has moved much faster than we would have expected. A year ago, who would have thought the markets (and even some in European political circles) would be discussing Greek default, and the break-up of the European currency union. The conclusion of the extraordinary events in Europe is still unclear and this will be a theme for 2012 as well.

4.    Yes.  Moody & Poor: We expect the US municipal bond market and state finances to continue as a topic of discussion. We expect certain weaker revenue and real-estate projects linked bonds to default… large scale defaults by major issuers (state GOs, water/sewer) are very unlikely. Municipal and State finances have continued to be in the news all year. We saw a very high-profile bankruptcy in Jefferson County, Alabama. We expect the role that financial intermediaries played in that case, and others, to receive attention over the course of 2012. As we anticipated, defaults in the municipal space were limited and the muni-market did quite well in 2011. However, the longer-term challenges remain in place. State revenues improved in 2011, but the fate of state-guaranteed pension funds and health benefits is still uncertain and remains a huge future liability for most US state and local government.

5.   Yes.   Running on Empty: The Chinese stock market did not fare well in 2010, and we expect the Chinese economy will experience lower growth in 2011. It is now clear to most participants that China is at an inflection point. The Chinese equity market has been in an unbroken bear market since reaching an all-time high in 2007. We believe other asset bubbles in China are at the point of bursting as well, and that this could well lead to large-scale social and political change in China.

6.   Yes.   Consuming Confidence: We expect consumer de-leveraging to continue in the US as consumers pay down debt till it approaches historical averages. Deleveraging continued as US consumers reduced debt wherever possible. Debt service and financial obligation ratios fell over the course of the year as rates remained at all time lows. Total outstanding consumer credit rose by 2%. Consumer sentiment returned to where it was at the tail end of 2010, after spending much of the year at depressed levels.

7.   Yes.   Help Wanted?: We expect unemployment in the US to remain high, slowly falling below 9% towards the end of the year. We also expect broader measures of unemployment and underemployment (the BLS’s U6) to stay above 15%. Though headline unemployment took a large drop towards 8.5% in December, it had spent most of the year around or above 9%. And if the political discussion is an accurate measure, the country as a whole remains concerned about jobs. As we anticipated, U-6 stayed over 15%, suggesting almost one in every seven workers is under-employed in some way.

8.    Yes.   Arrested Development: Though it is notoriously capricious to forecast, we expect GDP growth in most emerging markets will continue at high single-digit rates, while slowing in the US and Europe to a sub-trend 2% rate till household and government deleveraging has run its course. Though the full-year numbers are not available as yet, growth in the first three quarters in the US was estimated at an annualized rate of 0.4%, 1.3% and 1.8%. Unless the fourth quarter growth rates were truly remarkable, we will be well under 2% for the year. The story in Europe was, if anything, worse, with full year growth rates for the 27 member EU estimated at 1.6% and growth-forecasts for 2012 at 0.6%.

9.   Yes.   Double Helix: We expect health-care technology related to genetic sequencing to increasingly take center stage in preventive and curative care as sequencers become cheaper and consumer testing becomes more prevalent. We started 2012 with the news that a number of companies expect to offer solutions to sequence a person’s entire genome for about $1,000. We believe the rapid commercialization of this technology will change health-care and many other realms of human activity.

10.  Not exactly.  Feast and Famine: We expect 2011 to be a very volatile year for commodity prices. We believe the environment is ripe for a sharp price correction in some commodities, gold and oil for example, and perhaps certain base metals as well. We were partially right here. Commodities remained volatile in 2011, with the DJ-UBS commodities indices down over 13%. However, the two commodities we highlighted, gold and oil, remained relatively strong though gold did see a selloff during the second half of the year.

11.  Yes.  Death and Taxes, It’s all Politics: In the run-up to the US presidential election in 2012, we expect the political discussion to focus on debt and tax reform. The Congressional debt ceiling crisis and the subsequent downgrade of US treasuries by S&P this past summer brought this topic to the fore. As with everyone else, we wait to see what reform proposals the tax discussion will bring to the 2012 political season.

 

The final score is 8 out of 11, which is not bad.

 

 

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