Markets Sense the Plague Is Coming (Back)

Sign in

Become a MarketWatch member today

Nick Godt's Market Medics

June 26, 2010, 12:01 a.m. EDT · Recommend (1) · Post:

View all Nick Godt's Market Medics "?

Weak euro will hit revenues, stocks

America's World Cup wins boost soccer's success

By Nick Godt, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- In the 1947 classic novel "The Plague" by Albert Camus, a deadly epidemic shuts the town of Oran in Algeria from the outside world and leads to panic, a near collapse of institutions, order, common sense and humanity.

Ultimately, two leading and opposing trends emerge on how to respond with the issue and to sway the course of action.

Some negative housing numbers fuel new concerns for investors, Barrons.com's Bob O'Brien reports.

On the one hand, religious and repressive judicial authorities say the plague was a long-coming, well-deserved punishment from God for the sins of the populace and the breakdown of values.

On the other side is the scientific and medical community, which tries to relieve human suffering while seeking and ultimately finding a cure. The human toll, however, has been devastating -- in large part due to human folly in opposing relief efforts.

In the same vein, as leaders of the Group of 20 nations meet in Toronto this weekend, we'll all be reminded why the outlook for jobs and global growth as well as for markets is getting darker by the minute.

Unlike two years ago, when global leaders were united in their will to stimulate economies and avoid the abyss of another Great Depression, this time around, members of the "order for a new age of austerity," it seems, will outnumber the proponents of stimulus, job creation and growth.

The order has found new high priests in the leaders of Germany and the United Kingdom, who say that we must accept the painful penance of cost-cutting measures now to appease the gods of market forces. Debt markets must be dealt with at all costs, as must the guilt of passing on debt to future generations.

The simple idea that the outlook for long-term deficits magically improves when employment and economies grow, which boosts government revenues via already existing taxes, is apparently lost on anyone whose desire for repentance overwhelms everything else.

The real-world result: The growth outlook for Europe has been severely hit, not because of the debt crisis itself, but because of the austerity measures.

It could be said that part of the 14% correction in U.S. stocks from late April through early June accounted for part of this. This week, the Federal Reserve did acknowledge that there will be a hit to U.S. growth.

At the same time, the impact of stimulus measures in America -- measures that were implemented at levels much less than advocated by many prominent, nonprivate-sector economists -- is quickly fading.

Huge drops in home sales this week and a downward revision in first-quarter growth might serve as reminders that in fact, not enough stimulus was put into the economy. China, which spent 10 times more relative to the size of its economy, is now busy slowing down its growth.

Yet U.S. members of the order point to the fading effect of measures that were too small to begin with as proof that the really reasonable thing to do is inflict pain by cutting spending.

Nowhere was this more evident than in the punitive move by Congress this week to not renew the spending bill to extend the period of unemployment benefits: About 2 million Americans will lose their benefits by the end of July, including 1.3 million by the end of this week.

Huge drops in home sales this week and a downward revision in first-quarter growth might serve as reminders that in fact, not enough stimulus was put into the economy.

As Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note: "This is another body blow to consumer spending, which is already flagging."

Legislators' punitive side, meanwhile, didn't seem to impress Wall Street on Friday following what has been called the biggest overhaul of the financial system since the Great Depression. Banks and financial stocks rallied, with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!gs/quotes/nls/gs (GS 139.66, +4.68, +3.47%) shares up 3.5%, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. /quotes/comstock/13*!jpm/quotes/nls/jpm (JPM 39.44, +1.41, +3.71%) up 3.7%, Bank of America Corp. /quotes/comstock/13*!bac/quotes/nls/bac (BAC 15.42, +0.40, +2.66%) up 2.7% and Morgan Stanley /quotes/comstock/13*!ms/quotes/nls/ms (MS 25.01, +0.75, +3.09%) up 3%.

But the order likely will say that private-sector firms are about to unleash a big wad of cash that will make up for the lack of consumer and government spending, hiring massively in the face of a darkening global economic outlook.

For some reason, however, firms flush with cash after the bursting of the tech bubble didn't really begin spending or hiring until after the housing bubble lifted the economy out of recession (as most reasonable businesses usually do).

The order's faith in market forces might be strong, but the market itself didn't seem to be holding its breath about growth this past week, which saw stocks slump for the first week in three due to worries about the economy.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average /quotes/comstock/10w!i:dji/delayed (DJIA 10,144, -8.99, -0.09%) fell 2.9% points, while both the S&P 500 Index /quotes/comstock/21z!i1:in\x (SPX 1,077, +3.07, +0.29%) and the Nasdaq Composite /quotes/comstock/10y!i:comp (COMP 2,223, +6.06, +0.27%) slumped 3.7%.

Nick Godt is MarketWatch's markets editor, based in New York.

Thanks to the American team's success in this World Cup, soccer is poised to join the pantheon of popular sports in the U.S.

2:57 p.m. June 25, 2010 | Comments: 20

Thanks for the compliment about American Spirit. It still exists. We're bearish - and have good reason as we're in a nastier fix than you. I'm glad things are better for you. I wish the Facts showed the same down here. This is actually one of the unusual times where MarketWatch Isn't "looking through rose tinted glasses." There is a wide variety of people on these boards from..."

- Castor-PolluxM35 | 12:08 a.m. Today12:08 a.m. June 26, 2010

"#Dollar reverses gains against #euro ahead of the #G8 and #G20 meetings $DXY http://bit.ly/9hE1jW" 4:48 p.m. EDT, June 25, 2010 from MarketWatch

"Don't hang on these technology-stock #HOLDRs RT @MktwJaffe http://on.mktw.net/a7KR8A" 4:12 p.m. EDT, June 25, 2010 from MarketWatch

"Hit to #BP's market cap gushes past $100 billion $BP http://bit.ly/dwAO7z" 3:43 p.m. EDT, June 25, 2010 from MarketWatch

"U.S. stocks suffer first weekly decline in three; Nasdaq is biggest loser http://on.mktw.net/bYtcRg" 3:10 p.m. EDT, June 25, 2010 from MarketWatch

"How bank #reform will change #mortgage shopping RT @MKTWPF http://on.mktw.net/9g713T" 2:52 p.m. EDT, June 25, 2010 from MarketWatch

Paul B. Farrell

Behavioral Economics

An Invisible Gorilla is killing America's soul

John Dvorak

Digital Dvorak

Microsoft and the curse of Netscape

Kristen Gerencher

Vital Signs

One hospital's big bet on technology

Read Full Article »


Comment
Show comments Hide Comments


Related Articles

Market Overview
Search Stock Quotes