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BRYON WIEN’S 10 SURPRISES FOR 2010

5 January 2010 by Cullen Roche 4 Comments

Byron Wien, investment analyst extraordinaire and current vice chairman of Blackstone Advisory Services, issued his 10 surprises for 2010 yesterday.  If you were lucky enough to listen to his 2009 predictions you were fortunate to be listening to one of the few analysts that nailed just about every aspect of the economic upswing, the move in gold, the move in the Yen, the equity market rally and even some aspects of the political world.  The full list follows:

1. The United States economy grows at a stronger than expected 5% real rate during the year and the unemployment level drops below 9%. Exports, inventory building and technology spending lead the way. Standard and Poor’s 500 operating earnings come in above $80

2. The Federal Reserve decides the economy is strong enough for them to move away from zero interest rate policy. In a series of successive hikes beginning in the second quarter the Federal funds rate reaches 2% by year-end

3. Heavy borrowing by the U.S. Treasury and some reluctance by foreign central banks to keep buying notes and bonds drives the yield on the 10-year Treasury above 5.5%. Banks loan more to corporations and individuals and pull away from the carry trade, thereby reducing demand for Treasuries. Obama says, “The suits are finally listening”

4. In a roller coaster year the Standard and Poor’s 500 rallies to 1300 in the first half and then runs out of steam and declines to 1000, ending where it started at 1115.10. Even though the economy is strong and earnings exceed expectations, rising interest rates and full valuations present a problem. Concern about longer term growth and obligations to reduce leverage at both the public and private level unsettle investors

5. Because it is significantly undervalued on a purchasing power parity basis, the dollar rallies against the yen and the euro. It exceeds 100 on the yen and the euro drops below $1.30 as the long slide of the greenback is interrupted. Longer term prospects remain uncertain

6. Japan stands out as the best performing major industrialized market in the world as its currency weakens and its exports improve. Investors focus on the attractive valuations of dozens of medium sized companies in a market selling at one quarter of its 1989 high. The Nikkei 225 rises above 12,000

7. Believing he must be a leader in climate control initiatives, President Obama endorses legislation favorable for nuclear power development. Arguing that going nuclear is essential for the environment, will create jobs and reduce costs, Congress passes bills providing loans and subsidies for new plants, the first since 1979. Coal accounts for about 50% of electrical power generation, and Obama wants to reduce that to 25% by 2020

8. The improvement in the U.S. economy energizes the Obama administration. The White House undergoes some reorganization and regains its momentum. In the November Congressional election the Democrats only lose 20 seats, much less than expected

9. When it finally passes, financial service legislation, like the health care bill, proves to be softer on the industry than originally feared. There is greater consumer protection, more transparency, tighter restriction of leverage and increased scrutiny of derivatives, but the regulatory changes for investment bankers and hedge funds are not onerous. Trading volume and merger activity increases; financial service stocks become exceptional performers in the U.S. market

10. Civil unrest in Iran reaches a crescendo. Ayatollah Khameini pushes out Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in favor of a more public relations adept leader. Economic improvement becomes the key issue and anti-Israel rhetoric subsides. Talks with the U.S. and Europe begin but the country remains a nuclear threat. Pakistan becomes the hotspot in the region because of the weak government there, anti-American sentiment, active terrorist groups and concerns about the security of the country’s nuclear arsenal

Source: Blackstone

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Comments
  • chris

    my vote is with kass.

  • Willy2

    Byron Wien is a complete fool ! He falls for the predominant lies that Iran is a nuclear threat ! The US has started a propaganda war to justify an attack on Iran. So, he believes the lies trotted out by the US main stream media.

  • teomax

    3. Heavy borrowing by the U.S. Treasury and some reluctance by foreign central banks to keep buying notes and bonds drives the yield on the 10-year Treasury above 5.5%.

    as i already wrote in your 2010 prediction thread: “T’s issuance will be $5.5T in 2010; $3T of rollover and $2.5 of new issuance”.

    there is probably not enough money to buy that debt, not to mention that most developed countries will run record deficits too.

    or there could be enough money to buy that debt, providing following scenario:

    i expect the bond vigilantes or market participants to go after the worst and weakest countries at first (like we have seen it with banks,
    first subprime, that some prime banks with bad loans, then every bank – so in this case it was Iceland, the next victim is going to be greek or similar country and so on…)
    so the US could actually enojy the fruits of “fligh to the safety” only to the moment, when investors will realize that US goverment debt isnt safe too.
    or does anyone expect from goverment to cut their 1 trillion deficits projected every year into the 2019?

    if there will be no “flight to the safety” in 2010, then another round of QE is on the way, after which i fully expect foreign central banks to stop the buying US debt at all.

    good post on this topic from someone else:

    http://tickerforum.org/cgi-ticker/akcs-www?singlepost=1679114

    Sovereign spreads have picked up rather sharply since the Dubai wakeup call in some of the weakest states (PIGS, Eastern Europe). I see the market going after the overlevered states in much the same way as it did the I-Banks and players in the mortgage finance bubble, attacking the weakest players by size and working it’s way up the food chain. Only this time there isn’t going to be anyone to step in to stop the implosion of the government finance bubble like there was during the tech stock and real estate/wall street finance blow ups we had during the first decade of the 2000s.

    This could still be a hiccup or warning shot of what’s to come, but the fact that CDS on those weaker players remain elevated (though not back to the lows seen during the worst of the panic earlier this year) 2 full weeks after Dubai says something and bears watching going forward.

    This entire bear market rally has been catalyzed by governments (around most of the world) going “all in” in support of the old financial structures and regimes. It makes sense that it wouldn’t end until the governments themeselves become exposed as the overlevered behmeoths they’ve largely become worldwide.

    • Cullen Roche TPC

      Anyone with an ounce of common sense knows that such a plan can’t work. You can’t just spend your way to prosperity every time an economic hiccup comes along. We’ll pay the piper sooner or later. I can’t tell you exactly when that will be, but it’s coming….