------Original Message------
From: MeLinda MeLisa
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To: [email protected]
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Subject: [StockForex] Will good news convince Main Street to buy stocks?
Sent: Dec 13, 2010 7:09 AM

  Will good news convince Main Street to buy stocks? As good news mounts for 
stocks, Wall Street is betting scaredy-cat investors will finally buy. NEW YORK 
(Market Talk) -- The fear that kept small investors from participating in one 
of the greatest bull markets in history may be losing its grip. The White House 
reached a tentative deal with Republican leaders last week to cut taxes. 
Economists are raising their estimates for economic growth, and jobless claims 
have fallen 15 percent from a year ago. The monthly trade report released 
Friday showed surging demand for American products, and the University of 
Michigan's December consumer sentiment index reached its highest point since 
June. There's even good news about two symbols of Wall Street recklessness. The 
government sold its last stock in Citigroup Inc. on Tuesday and could do the 
same soon with its stake in American International Group Inc. The Standard & 
Poor's 500 index closed at 1,240 Friday, surpassing the level from before the 
financial meltdown in September 2008. And a survey by the American Association 
of Individual Investors showed the number of people bullish about stocks 
outnumbering those bearish by the widest margin in more than three years. 
"There was this widespread expectation six months ago that we were going to 
have a double dip recession," says Steven Bleiberg, manager of the Legg Mason 
Lifestyle funds. "That whole mindset has petered out." Arnold Espe, the bullish 
manager of USAA's Cornerstone Strategy Fund, predicts investors next year will 
put more money into U.S. stock mutual funds than they take out for the first 
time since 2006. Says Espe: "We're setting up for a pretty good market." Trying 
to guess what individual investors will do next is difficult, and the optimists 
could be dead wrong. There are plenty of reasons investors might balk at buying 
U.S. stocks, not least an unemployment rate of 9.8 percent. But if Espe is 
right, the market could rise smartly. Optimism about stocks can feed on itself. 
If small investors put back into the market even a fraction of the tens of 
billions that they took out in the past year, it could set off a virtuous cycle 
of buying. One sign that stocks may soon attract money: Though investors pulled 
$500 million more from U.S. stock mutual funds than they put in last month, the 
pace of withdrawals is slowing, according to fund tracker Strategic Insight. As 
recently as September, investors took out a net $15 billion. Small investors 
could turn to stocks soon because the alternative -- bonds -- don't look so 
safe anymore. For most of the year, small investors have used the billions 
they've withdrawn from stocks to buy bonds. The thinking was that bonds were 
safer because the principal is guaranteed. It's been a good move. Though the 
S&P has risen 11 percent since the beginning of the year, some bonds have done 
better. So-called junk bonds from highly indebted U.S. companies have gained 16 
percent and bonds from emerging markets, 14 percent, according to Barclays 
Capital. But now doubts about bonds are creeping in. Fear is rising that an 
improving economy will stoke inflation that could eat into bond returns. 
Inflation sends bond prices down sharply because the principal won't buy as 
much when returned if prices rise. Treasury bonds maturing in 10 years lost 4.2 
percent in the past month, and in a in a sharp reversal, investors pulled $1.3 
billion from bond mutual funds last month, according to Strategic Insight. 
"Treasury (bonds) aren't a very good value," says USAA's Espe. "So where are 
you going to go?" His answer, in part, is stocks. He says the S&P 500 could 
rise 10 percent next year. But, of course, there is another alternative to 
bonds: cash. David Wright, manager of the Sierra Core Retirement Fund, is no 
fear monger. Two and a half years ago, when most people sold stocks and the 
market hit 12-year lows, he bought heavily. He also loaded up on junk bonds and 
emerging market bonds. Now Wright has sold -- every last bit of it. He no 
longer owns stocks or junk or emerging market bonds. Cash is a third of his 
holdings, up from 12 percent in October. SOURCE: http://marketpin.blogspot.com/ 
 
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