• RSS Feed
  • Subscriber Login
  • Weiss Ratings
Money and Markets
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Experts
    • Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
    • Jack Crooks
    • John Ross Crooks, III
    • Tom Essaye
    • Mike Larson
    • Nilus Mattive
    • Ron Rowland
    • Guest Contributors ►
      • Monty Agarwal
      • Sean Brodrick
      • Amber Dakar
      • Larry Edelson
      • Don Lucek
      • Rudy Martin
      • Tony Sagami
      • Peter Schiff
      • Claus Vogt
  • Blog
    • Martin D. Weiss’ Blog
    • Jack Crooks’ Blog
    • Mike Larson’s Blog
    • Nilus Mattive’s Blog
  • Resources
    • Personal Finance Corner ►
      • Hot Tips
      • Investments
      • Money & Banking
      • Consumer Loans
      • College Savings
      • Retirement
      • Credit & Debt
      • Taxes
      • Insurance
      • Life & Home
      • Investment Portfolios
    • Links
  • Services
    • Premium Membership Services  ►
      • Weiss Inner Circle
      • Money and Markets Inner Circle
      • The Weiss Elite
    • Trading Services ►
      • Global Forex Alert
      • International ETF Trader
      • LEAPS Options Alert
      • Million-Dollar Contrarian Portfolio
      • Safe Money’s Crisis Trader
      • Weiss Million-Dollar Ratings Portfolio
      • World Currency Trader
    • Investment Newsletters ►
      • Income Superstars
      • Safe Money
    • Books ►
      • The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide
      • Investing Without Fear
      • The Standard & Poor’s Guide for the New Investor
      • The Ultimate Safe Money Guide
    • Public Service
  • Media and Events
    • Press Releases
    • Money and Markets in the News
    • Media Archive ►
      • 2011 Media Archive
      • 2010 Media Archive
      • 2009 Media Archive
      • 2008 Media Archive
      • 2007 Media Archive
  • Issues
    • 2012 Issues
    • 2011 Archives
    • 2010 Archives
    • 2009 Archives
    • 2008 Archives
    • 2007 Archives
    • 2006 Archives
    • 2005 Archives
    • 2004 Archives
    • 2003 Archives
    • Special Reports
  • Videos
  • Store
  • Contact Us
    • Interview a Money and Markets Analyst
    • Reader’s Comments – Testimonials

Issues

Share Email Print

The Contrarian Viewpoint

Claus Vogt | Wednesday, January 5, 2011 at 7:30 am

Claus Vogt

The financial media has for the most part finished their presentations of expert forecasts for the coming year. And as you’ve probably gathered, most of the strategists from the major Wall Street houses expect a continuation of the bull market that started in March 2009.

Other sentiment indicators show the same picture of exuberance and outright bullishness.

These include:

  • Individual investors as measured by the American Association of Individual Investors,
  • Advisors as measured by Investors Intelligence,
  • Mutual fund managers as measured by the average mutual fund cash quote, and
  • Speculators as measured by put/call ratios.

Financial market history teaches that so much agreement is unusual and dangerous. Whenever there is unanimity in relation to market forecasts it usually pays to become a contrarian, which is what I recommend now. But not just because of all this unanimity.

There are …

Seven Additional Reasons to
Expect a Bear Market in 2011

First of all, the stock market is highly overvalued. It follows then that stock investments are nearly guaranteed to deliver poor, long-term returns.

Second, the rally since August 2010 isn’t based on sound and sustainable economic factors, but on unsound and fragile faith in the Fed’s ability to inflate asset prices.

Third, longer term interest rates have risen considerably since the Fed’s first announcement of QE2. In the past, bull markets were usually on borrowed time during a rising yield environment — even when fundamentals were much sounder than today.

History tells us we're in for a bear market this year.
History tells us we’re in for a bear market this year.

Fourth, stocks are extremely overbought when momentum indicators and the number of stocks reaching new 52-week highs stay below their cyclical highs, thereby not confirming the current run up.

Fifth, there is a debt crisis brewing, not just in Europe, but also in Japan and the U.S. The U.S. municipal bond market is already under pressure.

Sixth, the financial sector’s problems have not been solved, but only papered over with money printing and a suspension of mark-to-market (fair-value) disclosure.

Seventh, in China a huge bubble economy has developed. Since Beijing has already implemented a turn in monetary policy, this bubble is prone to pop in 2011, posing a major threat for a still very fragile global economy.

All of this makes for a very poor risk/reward relationship. Yes, the stock market could race higher — as it did in 1999 for example. But based on the excessive exuberance, plus the other seven reasons I’ve given you, I wouldn’t bet on that unlikely outcome.

And if you’d like to profit from market declines, you might consider an inverse exchange traded fund, such as ProShares Short S&P 500 (SH).

SH seeks daily investment results, before fees and expenses, that correspond to the inverse (opposite) of the daily performance of the S&P 500 Index. This means for every 1 percent decline in the S&P 500, the fund is designed to rise 1 percent.

Best wishes,

Claus

P.S. This week on Money and Markets TV, the Weiss Research editors kick off the New Year by giving you a peek at some of their favorite investments for 2011.

So tune in tomorrow night, January 6, at 7 P.M. Eastern time (4:00 P.M. Pacific). Simply go to www.weissmoneynetwork.com and follow the on-screen instructions. Access is free and no registration is required.

Claus Vogt is the editor of the German edition of Safe Money. He is the co-author of the German bestseller, Das Greenspan Dossier, where he predicted, well ahead of time, the sequence of events that have unfolded since, including the U.S. housing bust, the U.S. recession, the demise of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as the financial system crisis. Claus is currently the editor of Million-Dollar Contrarian Portfolio and has just completed his book The Global Debt Trap.

Share Email
Tweet

{ 2 comments }

Akhil Khanna Thursday, January 6, 2011 at 6:47 am

Last year we saw countries like Greece, Ireland facing bankruptcies due to increasing deteriorating financial position and increased borrowing costs. They had to be bailed out by the ECB and IMF. These problems are likely to spread to bigger countries and the tipping point, which is likely to happen this year, would be when one too big to bail out country defaults on its debts. This would start a chain of defaults which all the governments and central bankers in the world put together cannot reverse pushing the world economy on an extended path of slow or negative growth for years.

http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article24581.html

Trader Hermes Sunday, July 17, 2011 at 3:51 am

Hindsight – market has gone higher – if you were a great stock picker –
Index is flat to higher – Problems are great but the stock market is holding on so well considering all the problems.

Previous post: Four Financial Resolutions for 2011

Next post: BRIC Countries Invite South Africa to Join

  • Sign Up FREE

    To receive your Money and Markets FREE investment newsletter subscription, type in your e-mail address. We respect your privacy

  • Advertising

  • Take advantage of our strong track record for safety to guard your wealth in these trying times with our free daily updates delivered to your inbox every morning.
  • Advertising

  • Market Update

    Click an index for a graph of its recent activity:

    U.S.

    Thu 5/24/12, 5:16pm
    Index Last Change
    DOW
    NASDAQ 2,839 -10.7
    NASDAQ
    S&P 500 1,321 +1.8
    S&P 500

    Europe

    Thu 5/24/12, 11:51am
    Index Last Change
    FTSE 100 5,350 +83.6
    FTSE 100
    CAC 40 3,038 +35.0
    CAC 40
    DAX 6,316 +30.1
    DAX

    Asia

    Fri 5/25/12, 9:24pm
    Index Last Change
    HANG SENG 18,687 +20.8
    HANG SENG
    NIKKEI 225 8,572 +8.2
    NIKKEI 225
    CSI 300 2,595 -21.6
    CSI 300
  • Advertising

  • Weiss Group Press Releases

    Weiss Ratings: U.S. Credit Union Deposits Up $41 Billion in 2011 April 2, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: U.S. Banking Industry Continues Modest Turnaround March 26, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: Southwestern Banks Show Signs of Turnaround January 24, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: Sluggish Demand Triggers Downgrades of China, Canada, Saudi Arabia December 19, 2011
    Weiss Ratings: Eurozone Crisis Prompts Debt Downgrades December 9, 2011
    • Find us on Facebook

    • Follow us on Twitter

      • Money and Markets on Twitter
      • Money and Markets on Twitter
      • Dr Martin D. Weiss on Twitter
      • Nilus Mattive on Twitter
      • Ron Rowland on Twitter
      • Mike Larson on Twitter
      • Jack Crooks on Twitter
    • Weiss Ratings - Top-Rated Banks, Credit-Unions, Insurers

    • Weiss Research Affiliate

    • About Us
    • FAQ
    • Legal
    • Privacy
    • Whitelist
    • Advertising
    • ©2012 Money and Markets. All Rights Reserved.
    Weiss Research, Inc., founded in 1971, has a long history of providing research and analysis designed to empower investors with information and tools to make more informed, independent decisions along with an equally long history of public service. [More »]