LPL Financial Weekly Market Commentary for February 16, 2010

by Rose Greene, CFP on February 19, 2010

By Jeffrey Kleintop, CFA
Chief market Strategist
LPL Financial


Events and data in recent weeks have prompted market participants to view the tailwinds that caused the markets to go sailing higher for much of 2009 as beginning to fade. They now view them as having become more balanced with the rising headwinds associated with increasing global frictions.

We continue to expect the powerful economic and profit growth to weaken in the second half of 2010. The weakening is likely to result from the fading of the extraordinary global policy efforts that created a tailwind for growth and the rise of new headwinds as some actions are reversed. The early stage of this transition is already underway leading to heightened market volatility. While there is still plenty of good news acting as tailwinds for the markets, there is increasingly more of a balance with the bad news, or headwinds. The winds of change blowing in the markets include the following:

Tailwinds

  1. -The Federal Reserve (the Fed) is our friend (for now)
  2. -U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth is above average
  3. -S&P 500 earnings growth is strong
  4. -Credit and housing markets continue to heal
  5. -China’s double-digit GDP growth (but slowing loan growth)
  6. -Steep yield curve
  7. -Massive global fiscal stimulus in the pipeline


Headwinds
-No job growth (yet)
-Federal, state and local budgets are awful
-Anti-business tone in Washington
-Commercial real estate woes remain
-China and India inflation risks
-European debt problems exacerbated by weak economies
-Bank lending is weak


These are not in any particular order since the importance placed on them by the market varies from day to day. Some of them will switch from being tailwinds to headwinds this year, like the actions of the Federal Reserve, while others may switch from being headwinds to tailwinds such as job


Want more details?  Click here to explore each of the winds that are currently driving the choppy market environment.

LPL Financial Research Weekly Market Commentary


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