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"We had all this anticipation leading up to the meeting," he says. "But nothing much happened." Sica, who manages $1 billion for clients, sold all of his stocks in August, and put proceeds in U.S. Treasury bills and into so-called "short" bets that stocks will fall. His view is a nightmare, but even if you don't buy it, there is plenty to worry about. U.S. companies have generated record profits in part by cutting costs, including eliminating jobs. But there's a limit to how much they can squeeze suppliers and pile work on remaining employees. The other path to riches has been to sell more abroad, but there are signs that may prove difficult soon, too. This past week, Europe's biggest economy, Germany, reported its exports plunged in October. That followed bad news from a widely followed survey suggesting that the eurozone economy had likely contracted last month, which would make it the third monthly drop in a row. Many experts now think Europe is already in recession or will soon enter one. This matters because S&P 500 companies get 14 percent of their revenue from Europe. Asia is in better shape, but investors there are jittery, too. The Chinese economy is slowing. Stocks in Shanghai have fallen in six of the last eight trading days. Not surprisingly, some CEOs have been sounding more dour lately. Many have slashed their guidance on earnings for next year. On Friday, chemical giant DuPont and semiconductor maker Lattice Semiconductor Corp. cut their financial outlooks for the current quarter. That followed a warning from Texas Instruments Inc. a day earlier that its revenue might fall short of expectations. "We've seen the market highs for the year," says Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. "Europe will be in recession and corporate earnings here could be challenging." Russell, the US Bank strategist, agrees that Europe is in trouble but he's still cheery about U.S. stocks. He thinks earnings at S&P companies might grow only 7 percent in 2012, half the rate this year. Still, he's urging investors to buy. Even at that lower rate, stocks are trading at roughly 12 times their projected earnings per share versus a long-term average of nearly 17 times, he says. Translation: They're cheap. "We think investors will like what they see," says Russell, assuming they "refocus on fundamentals." Given Europe's troubles, it's a big assumption.
[Associated
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