The
quarter in brief. The rally continued, the economy showed definite signs of
improvement, and the biggest health care reform in decades inched toward
reality. Stocks upwardly appreciated, with the S&P 500 rising 5.49% for the
quarter.(source)
Commodities experienced even higher gains. A wave of buyers rushing to take
advantage of federal credits helped the real estate market. World economies
were growing healthier.
Domestic economic health. Let’s look back at some key economic indicators
during the quarter. Consumer spending, for one. Personal spending rose 0.6% in
October and 0.5% in November; personal incomes rose 0.3% for October and 0.4%
for November.(source)
The jobless rate climbed to 10.2% for October, then declined to 10.0% with only
11,000 jobs lost in November, the tiniest payroll decline since the start of
the recession.(source) Remember, the consumer is 70% of the economy, and
it will be interesting to see if there really was a Christmas spending spree
this year. This is doubtful, as consumers remain nervous about government
spending and taxation legislation Congress may soon enact.
The key U.S. manufacturing index (the ISM) went 55.7, 53.6 and 55.9 across
October, November and December – victories three, four and five, if you will,
in a five-month winning streak.(source) Its sibling, the ISM service sector index, went
from 50.6 in October to 48.7 for November (the new orders gauge came in at 55.6
and 55.1 those successive months).(source)
Durable goods orders rebounded from a 0.6% decline in October to a 0.2% gain
the ensuing month.(source)
The Consumer Price Index rose 0.3% in October and advanced 0.4% for November.
For November, there was actually a year-over-year rise in CPI (+1.8%). PPI rose
shockingly in November (+1.8%) after a 0.3% gain the previous month; the shock
was mostly due to a 6.9% month-over-month jump in the price of energy goods.
The Federal Reserve kept interest rates at record lows while dropping
occasional hints that rates might necessarily rise in coming quarters. After
much contention, the House and Senate passed differing versions of health care
reform legislation, with the bills yet to be reconciled as 2009 drew to a
close.
Major indexes. The fourth quarter of 2009 was not as amazing for the
market as the preceding quarter, but we’ll take it just the same. The fourth
quarter brought a big descent in the CBOE VIX (the “fear index” fell 14.92%).
With a strong concluding quarter, the Dow gained 59.28% from the March 9 close
to the end of the year. The S&P 500 and NASDAQ respectively gained 64.83%
and 78.87% in the same time frame.(source) Does it feel like a great year? These returns are
amazing considering the collective mood of the country currently.
|
%Change
|
4QTR2009
|
3QTR2009
|
YTD
2009
|
|
Dow
Jones
|
+7.37%
|
+14.98%
|
+18.82%
|
|
NASDAQ
|
+6.91%
|
+15.66%
|
+43.89%
|
|
S&P
500
|
+5.49%
|
+14.98%
|
+23.45%
|
|
10
YR TIPS
|
-5.13%
|
-12.36%
|
-30.84%
|
(Source: CNBC.com, ustreas.gov, 12/31/09)(source)(source)(source)
Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or
expenses, and cannot be invested into directly. These returns do not include
dividends.
Global economic health. The data suggests a global recovery is in full
swing, with Asia’s economies leading the way.
By December, manufacturing indices in China,
South Korea, India and Taiwan
all showed growth (though Australia’s
actually showed contraction).(
source) The PMIs in Europe
followed suit. The Eurozone PMI was 51.2 in November and 51.6 in December. PMIs
in Germany, Italy, England
and France were all above 50
for December, with France’s
index the highest at 54.7. At the quarter’s end, manufacturing in the U.K. was
growing at the fastest rate in two years.(
source)
The IMF and the OECD respectively predict 3.1% and 3.4% growth for the global
economy in 2010, with the bulk of emerging and developing economies heating up
to 5% growth or better. In this quarter, we learned that China’s economy grew 9.0% in 3Q 2009 as India’s economy
grew 7.9%.(
source)
World financial markets. Investors cheered worldwide as stock indices
made further impressive gains. Would you have guessed the Nikkei 225 would have
climbed 4.08% in the fourth quarter? It did, and that index climbed 19.04% in
2009 – its first positive year since 2006. Hong Kong’s
Hang Seng gained 4.38% in 4Q 2009, and the Shanghai Composite advanced 17.91%.
The U.K. FTSE 100 rose 5.43%.(
source) The MSCI World Index rose 4.11% in the quarter. The
MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 6.88%.(
source)
Commodities markets. The hottest commodity of this quarter was orange
juice: prices rose 41.04% in three months. Palladium prices rose 36.65%. Corn
prices were up 20.49%. Many other commodities gained between 10-20% last quarter:
sugar (+11.73%), copper (+18.71%), platinum (+13.54%), crude oil (+12.39%),
heating oil (+17.97%), oats (+18.88%), natural gas (+15.10%), milk (+19.08%),
wheat (+18.36%), gasoline (+15.15%) and diesel fuel (+13.63%). In fact, only
two widely traded commodities went negative during the fourth quarter: coal
(-4.64%) and cattle (-0.39%). Gold? Silver? Well, gold was +8.61% for the
quarter and silver was +1.12%. Gold finished the quarter at $1096.20 per ounce.
The U.S. Dollar Index gained 1.70% last quarter.(
source)
Housing & interest rates. New home sales were down 11.3% for November
after rising (a greatly revised) 1.8% for October; the numbers are up and down
because first-time buyers thought federal housing credits geared to help them
would expire this fall. Existing home sales rose (a revised) 9.9% for October
and 7.4% for November.(
source)(
source)
Pending home sales, which had risen for nine straight months, raised eyebrows
by slipping 16.0% in December.(
source) Housing starts reversed, diving 10.1% for October
but rising 8.9% a month later.(
source)
Mortgage rates of 30-year FRMs touched record lows but eventually climbed above
5% again. From the last 3Q Freddie Mac survey to the last 4Q Freddie Mac
survey, the average interest rate on a 30-year FRM went from 5.04% to 5.14%.
Across the quarter, averages on 15-year FRMs inched north from 4.46% to 4.54%.
However, averages on 5-year ARMs moved south from 4.51% to 4.44%, and rates on
1-year ARMs went from 4.52% on September 24 to 4.33% on December 31.(
source)
1st quarter outlook. For the first time in a long time, good news is
nice to hear. Many analysts think we are just two or three quarters into a
U-shaped recovery that will play itself out across the next few years. Of
course, there are concerns to watch: how the Fed and the Obama administration
choose to wind down the stimulus effort, when and how the Fed finally makes a
move with interest rates, and the indicators in the housing market. But barring
a major geopolitical or economic event, much of the optimism (and federal
support for the economy) will likely be sustained through the coming quarter
and perhaps the next two. The Great Recession is slowly becoming a memory, and
a classic “January effect” may kick off further upward movement on the major
stock indexes.
About the Author: Curtis A. Smith, CFP®, founded Interactive Capital Management (ICMC), in 1991 in order to focus on fiduciary standards and value producing services. Mr. Smith has over 30 years of financial planning and investment management experience.
Article Published: 01/08/2010