Wall Street eyes 2018 gains with a side of caution
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[December 29, 2017]
By Sinead Carew
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks are expected to
keep rising in 2018 because a massive drop in the corporate tax rate is
seen boosting the economy and corporate profits, but strategists say
sizable gains could either be short-lived or elusive.
The bull market is on track to mark its ninth birthday in March, with
the S&P 500 climbing 20 percent for 2017 - its biggest increase since
2013. The drop in the corporate tax rate in 2018, to 21 percent from 35
percent, is seen by many as the biggest factor for the stock market next
year.
Yet 2018 share gains are expected to be smaller than 2017 with the S&P
500's price/earnings ratio - a measure of stock prices against expected
profits - is around its highest level since June 2002. Many on Wall
Street cite potential pitfalls even though they see no signs of a
recession.
“We've had six years in a row where stocks have (outperformed) earnings,
and I think we break that streak with stocks going up but not as much as
earnings," said Robert Doll, chief equity strategist at Nuveen Asset
Management in Princeton, New Jersey.
Some say the tax bill's benefit will be short lived. David Kelly, chief
global strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management described the bill as
"more carbs and less protein," because the tax overhaul will improve
spending but does nothing to boost productivity.
"It'll be a one-year wonder," said Kelly. "People should enjoy the party
while it lasts but just make sure you know where your coat is."
Several strategists cite the risk that faster economic growth could
cause inflation to increase at a pace that would lead the U.S. Federal
Reserve to raise interest rates faster than expected.
Wall Street's rosy forecasts seem "well supported by the tremendous
string of good news which the economy has delivered," according to Jim
Paulsen, chief investment strategist with Leuthold Group in Minneapolis.
But he said, the news is too good: "The problem with getting good news
is that at some point you can't be positively surprised any more."
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Traders react at the closing bell on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange, (NYSE) in New York, U.S., November 30, 2017.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Paulsen does not expect a recession. But when the economic surprise
index - which compares economic data to consensus expectations - is at
high levels, equity performance tends to be weaker, according to
Paulsen.
The Citi Economic Surprise index <.CESIUSD> was at 77 on Thursday, not
far from its almost six-year high of 84.5 reached on Dec. 22.
"We're going to have a 10-15 percent correction at some time in 2018. I
wouldn't be surprised if we're down for the year," Paulsen said. "If we
get a correction and people get scared I'll probably be buying again."
Investors will keep a close watch on the on U.S. mid-term elections in
2018 because a Republican loss of control of the Senate or the House of
Representatives could stall the party's agenda. In 10 of the last 17 U.S.
mid-term election years, equity price moves for the full year followed January's
direction, according to Jeff Hirsch, editor of the Stock Trader's Almanac.
Investor moods in January may depend on whether the U.S. Congress reaches an
agreement to raise the country's debt ceiling. Investors will also be hoping
Congress can reach a 2018 budget pact by Jan. 19. These are just some of the
worries traders are contending with.
But the market has history against it. The S&P 500 rises on average 1.3 percent
in the so-called Santa Clause rally - the period between Dec. 22 and Jan. 3 -
according to Hirsch. This year, five days in, the S&P has risen just 0.1
percent.
"The failure of stocks to rally during this time tends to precede bear markets
or times when stocks could be purchased at lower prices later in the year,"
Hirsch wrote in a blog post.
(Reporting by Sinead Carew; Additional reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch and
Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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