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RIA sentiment improves on bargain-basement stocks

Advisors slightly more optimistic on economic outlook and low
equity prices. Investment advisors' confidence in the U.S.
economy and stock market rose in November for the first time
since August, according to Advisorbenchmarking's Advisor
Confidence Index |image1|(ACI) -- mainly on the view that
securities have been beaten down enough to make a
bargain-hunter's rally almost inevitable.
Coming off an all-time low of 79.07 in October, the ACI rose 4%
to 82.46 in November -- still the RIA-sentiment's gauge's
second-lowest monthly reading since its launch in early 2004.
On the back of a 12% run-up since 20 November, the S&P 500 is
about 45% off its 52-week high of 1,524.
Down or out?
"The forthcoming rally in the stock and corporate bonds market
will be one that investors will talk about for decades to come,"
says Gary Clemmons of Baytown, Texas-based Texas Capital
Management.
Jim Elder of Montrose, Colo.-based ElderAdo Financial strikes a
similar chord: "With stocks and bonds at these current
valuations, we feel like kids in a candy store."
But Richard Coe of Coe Financial Services in Wichita, Kan., says
there might well be more stock-price erosion in store. "Averting
a worst-case scenario does not mean it can't get considerably
worse," he says. "I believe the stock market will need some
reasons to go up -- [and] today it is hard to find the reasons
other than that stock prices seem low."
And Kenny Landgraf, of Austin, Texas-based Kenjol Capital
Management takes a harder line, rising the possibility that the
near sacrosanct buy-and-hold approach to equities as a dead
letter. "Investors have nothing to show for that investment
discipline since the late 90s," he says. "The animal spirit of
businesses, consumers and investors has been smashed and [it]
will take a much longer time to repair than it took to
destroy."
The ACI, which is based on a monthly survey of independent RIAs,
goes from a "very negative" 33.33 to a "very positive" 166.67.
Its mid point, 100, represents a neutral outlook on the stock
market and the economy.
In keeping with the view that equities are cheap but not
necessarily in a process of |image2|bottoming, outlook on
the stock market was the weakest of the ACI's four components in
November. RIA sentiment puts a meaningful economic recovery about
a year away.
It will be interesting to see how this last guess plays out in
light of the National Bureau of Economic Research's recent
pronouncement that the U.S. economy has been in recession since
December 2007. By post-World War II standards a year is an
unusually long time for a fullblown recession to endure; a
two-year-long recession would be extraordinary.
Consumer sentiment was on a slight uptrend last month as well.
The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) rose to
44.9 from 38.8 in October.
Advisorbenchmarking is a subsidiary of Rydex Investments.-FWR
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