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The problem is they can fall dramatically, too, and on just a whiff of an economic slowdown. They began dropping in June 2007, four months before most other stocks began to fall that year. Six months later, the Great Recession began. But nearly four years after the recession ended, the U.S. economy has a stronger foundation. Increased hiring, rising home prices and record-level stock prices could help consumers feel wealthier and spur them to spend. Some investors say, if anything, consumer stocks could zoom from here. "Americans' pastime is shopping," said Ivan Feinseth, director of research at money manager Tigress Financial Partners, and a big consumer bull. "And when you go shopping, you go eating." One of Feinseth's favorite stocks is Deckers Outdoor, the maker of pricey Uggs boots. He issued a report on November 5 recommending that clients buy the stock. The price was $30.29. It's now at $57.68. "I think it goes into the $80s," he said Thursday as Deckers slipped 2 percent along with the broader market. Should investors be more worried? Bulls says the March fall in sales was an anomaly, the result of an unseasonable cold weather that kept shoppers in much of the country from buying spring clothes and seasonal merchandise. Once the weather warms up, sales will pick up. And they think the hike in Social Security payroll taxes that took effect in January won't dampen spending for long, either. Perhaps the biggest argument in the bull's camp is that it would be an odd time for a sustained pullback in spending. Consumers, if anything, seem in the best shape in five years. Americans have almost fully recovered the $16 trillion in wealth that they lost in the Great Recession, according to the latest tally from the Federal Reserve. "The sheer pent-up demand ... is about to take hold," President Charles Evans of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago was quoted as saying in a speech Tuesday. Vitner, the Wells Fargo economist, is not convinced. He notes that the snapback in household wealth has come mostly from soaring stocks, and that means most gains have gone to a small number of people
-- the wealthy. Eighty percent of stocks are held by the richest 10 percent of households. "The cold reality is that for the vast majority of households, (a rising stock market) has not increased their wealth much," Vitner said. He added, "If anything, they've pulled back" from spending.
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