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Yardeni: Emerging Markets To Lead Global Recovery
May 07, 2009
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Ed Yardeni is president of Yardeni Research Inc., a provider of independent investment strategy research and data. He has worked as chief investment strategist at Deutsche Bank, Prudential Equity Group and Oak Associates. Yardeni has also served as chief economist for C.J. Lawrence, Prudential Securities and E.F. Hutton. His resume also includes working as an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He also held positions at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors and the U.S. Treasury Department. IndexUniverse.com's Murray Coleman caught up with the market-oriented economist and investment analyst Thursday afternoon to find out his take on macrotrends going forward.
IndexUniverse.com: Does this rally have legs? Ed Yardeni: I think it does. It has already traveled a fair distance. I think 1,000 on the S&P 500 is likely. We're probably going to take out the Jan. 6 high for the year fairly soon, which was 934.70. IU: Do you see more bumps in the road? Yardeni: Yes, but they're the same bumps we've seen in the bear market. The banking system still has its issues, as evidenced by the most recent stress test given by the government. And unemployment is still a concern. But there's a sense that these problems might not stop the economy from recovering after all. IU: Do you see a pullback coming, though? Yardeni: I don't try to be a technician. But sure, there could be a pullback. Remember, though, that we're coming back from a huge fall. What is encouraging is that stock prices in many industries are gaining back their losses from the September 2008 levels. That's when Lehman and AIG really hit the fan and panic took over. IU: What sectors seem the best-positioned at this point? Yardeni: Being defensive doesn't make much sense with a global recovery in sight. So I think materials and industrials should do well. The price of oil has done well recently. It should continue to rise. In the next six-to-12 months, prices could get up into the $75-$80-per-barrel range. The metals and mining as well as specialty chemicals also look attractive now. Diversified chemicals still appear rather sluggish and I don't see a lot of upside in that industry. IU: Do you think gold has more room to run? Yardeni: Not necessarily. Gold and the trade-weighted U.S. dollar have been flight-to-safety plays. We've seen more interest in risk-taking lately. If that continues to be the case, the trade-weighted dollar and gold may go nowhere fast. I'm not enthusiastic about either one at this point. IU: How about emerging markets? Yardeni: They've had a great run and I think they'll continue to outperform from here. We started to see at the beginning of this decade a great global boom. That was interrupted by the credit crisis, but it looks like global growth might be resuming again. China, India and Brazil look best at this point. Asia will be the region that really leads the global economy out of this recession, more so than the U.S., Japan or Europe.
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Summing Sector SPDRS = SPY?
You’d think owning the nine sector SPDRs in proportion to their weightings in the S&P 500 is a way to recreate SPY. But you’d be wrong.Round Two: Pimco Vs. BlackRock
It looks like Pimco and BlackRock are at odds again—this time it’s over QE3.-
VelocityShares Adds 8 Commodities ETNs
February 08, 2012 1:08 pm -
Global X Funds Launches Rainy-Day ETF
February 08, 2012 10:43 am -
UNG Sets 4-For-1 Reverse Share Split
February 06, 2012 8:48 pm -
iShares Plans Multi-Asset Fund-Of-Funds ETF
February 06, 2012 8:31 pm -
iShares Launches Asia ETF, Minus Japan
February 03, 2012 12:33 pm
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Socializing About The Social Media ETF
Paul Baiocchi joins Dave Nadig to talk about where theme funds go astray, and why SOCL might just be the exception.
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