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Monday, May 10, 2010

Greek Debt Bailout – What Happens Now?

The Greek (actually Euro) debt crisis has been, at least temporarily, averted via a $1 trillion rescue package that could really be looked at as a “render predatory traders useless” package. Now what? Is the EU set to recover? Is everything just fine?

Despite these efforts, much of the world including the U.K., Canada, Israel, Dubai, Korea, China etc. (see: World Housing Bubble) are set to stagnate and/or enter recession within the next 18 months. In these countries, economic recovery has been more about new housing bubbles and consumer credit growth than real recovery.

Although the U.S. was the instigator of the worldwide collapse, it is now in the best position to move forward (no one said life is fair). The U.S. has inexpensive housing, low interest rates, a devalued dollar, moderately valued stocks, citizens with reduced debt, and increased productivity - all of which give the U.S. economy plenty of upside potential.

Under normal circumstances, a multinational recession would not bode well for U.S. stocks and I would say, “sell.” However, the current situation is more complicated than that. American stocks today are priced at levels that reflect modest post-recessionary income and a definite lack of euphoria. Even if world markets slow down, it is already priced into U.S. stocks at this level.

Secondly, you may have noticed that although world markets are global and affect each other, it is mostly the U.S. market that affects the rest of the world – and not the other way around. Even when a powerhouse like China experiences market drops, for example, the effect on the U.S. market is negligible. I suspect that when world markets decline it will bring down the American market only temporarily, until everyone realizes that U.S. growth is sustainable domestically at a level that supports and even exceeds today’s stock prices.

In short, most Commonwealth, EU, Arab and Asian countries have, at this point, little or no room on the upside, but plenty of room on the downside. Conversely, U.S. stocks that grandmothers around the world are still afraid to buy are the best investment opportunities around.

Many high-quality U.S. stocks, including members of the Dow 30, remain at single digit or low-double digit P/E levels, even on modest sales. If prices drop from here and you are a long-term investor, I recommend going against the grain and buying more, since any dip below today’s reasonable prices is a blessing. If you are afraid of volatility in your portfolio (there is sure to be plenty), ignore all this advice and stay away from the cheap-stocks party.

PS - The International cheap stocks party should begin sometime next year.

Statistics (at time of writing)
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 10,785
Hang Seng: 20,320
FTSE 100: 5,385

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"These high prices [in the Dow] were the cause of great jubilation on Wall Street, but I found them depressing. I was happier with a good 300-point drop that created some bargains."
Peter Lynch, Beating the Street
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Disclosure
Do not buy stocks, or take this or any other financial advice without doing your own analysis; including, but not limited to: reviewing business models, financial statements, management style and philosophy, recent developments, market macroeconomic analysis, and chart analysis. If you do not know how to do these things, you shouldn't be buying stocks in the first place. Seek the advice of professionals, as appropriate.