The 4 Stages of a Market Recovery

Is the economy finally catching up with the market? Haverford Investments' Jason Pride believes so

November 10, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Talk about mixed messages. Stocks are blasting off, yet unemployment remains stubbornly high. The economy grew in the third quarter—posting the first increase in a year—so why all the gloomy talk? And exactly where are we in the current economic cycle? Jason Pride, director of research at Haverford Investments, believes we've entered a period of "true growth," when the economy begins catching up with the market. According to Pride, this is stage three of four in a market recovery. Here's his rundown of each stage.

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1. Extreme Sell-Off. Call it the panic phase. Buyers disappear in the market, and spooked investors start selling. "This selling pushes the market down further, hitting more investors' pain thresholds and leading to even more selling," Pride says. "This self-reinforcing cycle causes a downward spiral in the market where the decline actually accelerates on the way down." Consumers begin to delay big purchases, and companies start to lose confidence, reflected by cautious commentary and a more conservative outlook for their businesses, he says. They also start putting off inventory purchases, and perhaps they don't hire workers that they would normally hire, Pride adds. "The economy and the market are doing things at the same time," Pride continues. "Normally, the market and economy even accelerate a bit into the downturn, and at some point, stage two occurs."

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2. From Burn to Turn. At this point, the market and economy look so bad that it doesn't take much to see improvement, says Pride. "Valuations drop to absurd levels for a number of stocks. Buyers start coming in, and people start to nibble." Pride believes this stage began in March, when stocks hit bottom and were trading around nine times normalized earnings (roughly half of the historical norm). "At this point, some investors' eyes open," he says. Companies start sounding more upbeat, as they've set the bar so low for earnings estimates that even a small dose of positive news allows them to beat expectations, according to Pride. "Those initial achievements come primarily from cost-cutting measures . . . and that starts getting investors' attention. The market starts to move off of that bottom, and you start seeing companies beating estimates. You start to see early signs of life," he says. "Remember, between March and July, people started commenting that things look 'less bad.' "

3. True Growth. This is the stage Pride believes we're in now: "We've seen slight improvements in housing, and initial jobless claims start turning. We've seen companies actually beating on the top line and not just the bottom line." Other signs: The economy begins to post growth, along with some international economies. "Everything is not completely back to normal, but the path back to a more normal economic environment is becoming more visible," he says. "Early indicators of employment—initial jobless claims—begin to improve, but unemployment is still rising and has not started to decline yet." Pride expects this stage to continue up to around the end of the year.

4. Sustained Economic Growth. "Here's where real, sustainable economic growth comes in," Pride says. "Top-line growth and overall GDP growth, having set in for a number of quarters, actually leads to job growth." Then comes inflation. "Everyone is worried about inflation now, worried that we're not going to see employment turning, but these indicators tend to be very lagging in nature. By the time inflation turns up, the economy will be in better shape, employment will be improving, and the Federal Reserve will have greater flexibility to contain inflation going forward without choking off a nascent economic recovery." But don't expect this growth period to mirror past recoveries. Pride believes it's likely to be subpar because of two factors: "First, the government did a lot to stimulate the economy, and there's a payback for this. The stimulus that was used to save us from a more dire economic scenario will have to be removed, and the deficits incurred will have to ultimately be reduced. The act of removing the stimulus and paying back these debts will restrain future economic growth," he says. "Second, the consumer remains overleveraged and needs to get their personal balance sheet back in order. This can only be done through higher savings, at the cost of their spending and the economic activity that results from it."

Even though growth will be somewhat muted, Pride says, "we don't think that means it's going to be a really bad economy, but it's not going to allow us to operate at 3.5 percent to 4 percent GDP growth . . . maybe more in the 2 percent range."

Tags:
economy,
stock market,
recession

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As long as major banks and companies make use of schemes for profit making in the market based on unregulated or deregulated market policies, the people, the country, the world will continue to suffer. Regulation existing for decades to insure that big business and banks stayed honest, but now with so much deregulated, banks and other industries (like Enron did) can put everything in the stock market with no care for their customers. Essentially grab the money and run scheme. This will never enhance the economy of our country, only the wallets of criminal enrepreneurs. Regulation is needed to keep industry honest. Unfortunately the very people who were responsible for Enron, and for the 2001-2008 bubble in the marketization of housing and other loans, etc. , and their cronies, are still on the Federal Reserve board of the USA. We are still not safe from unregulated messes in the stock market.

Joe of VA 2:41PM September 19, 2011

Our Government is hired and fully controled by Large Corporations, not US Citizents anymore. This is why it cares less about anyone who's small anymore and future of small businesses. They are bureaucrats selling themselves during lobbying process and waiting to give back to their patrons. Overseas investors from Asia control those Large Corporations with their shares in them. This is why the overall tendency is "let's do business by selling not just cheap, but selling very cheap". Let kill the small businesses think "large corporate uncontrolled animals". Since this days large corporations are no longer subject to anti-trust laws, they are fully allowed and equiped with "deap sale tools" to do the "holocaust" to the small businesses in the USA. Large corporation are no longer even under control by their own boards of directors, since everyone in any large company thinks how to save his ass and show good results in such a seek climate created by the same large corporations. It's like mass instinction where dinosaurs want to eat and ate more then they were allowed. In such case they even ate the roots of small trees, thus eliminating their own future food. Why nobody is stopping the "large animals", because they are still very strong and they do not listen to their brains(anti-trust activists and small business growth advocates). They only listen to themselves: "we need more food, let's eat the small animals(businesses), let's distroy their food. Let roll next big sale, let drop prices, maybe this will create new jobs in China:)"

Before we reinact antitrust laws and help the large corporations to realize that they need to stop helping our Bureaucratic Govenrment in destroying themselves, their helpers - small businesses and this great country, no economy is going to move up.

Economy can be moved up only by small

of 1:51AM December 08, 2009

I have lost all trust in our government! There is very little difference between the Republicans and Democrats. All they care about is their own special interests at the expense of everyone else. They shove regulations down our throat that our kids and grandkids will have to manage. As far as I'm concerned they are all a bunch bottom feeding crooks. If ever there was a time to kick everyone out of office and bring a completely new group, it is now. There has never been a better case for term limits that now.

C Evans of FL 5:57AM December 06, 2009

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