Einschätzungen zur US-Wirtschaft
Im Folgenden werden Einschätzungen zur US-Konjunktur wiedergegeben; auf Rezessionskurs setzt Goldman Sachs; während Ed Yardeni noch eine Wachstumsrate des Bruttoinlandsproduktes von fast 2,5% prognostiziert.
Der graphische Überblick:

Dazu kurze Zusammenfassungen:
Goldman Sachs
- There will be a recession in 2008
- Optimistic about longer-term
- December retail sales reflect only modest slowdown so far
- - 2 to 3 quarters in duration
- - Shallow -0.375 GDP for the year
- - Profits growth will slow to 7.5% y/y
- - Productivity will rebound
- - Growth back to 3% without being inflationary
Kiplinger
- CPI up 4.1% through December y/y
- Month of December up only 0.3% with lower energy prices
- 2008 inflation 3% as energy prices will moderate
- Still difficult for Fed to keep rates low too long
- Tax stimulus plan by early February
- Fed will supply stimulus sooner with 50 bp on January 30
- Inflation a concern Fed will address later this year
- - $800 rebate for low and middle income taxpayers
- - Business: Faster depreciation write-off and investment incentives to create jobs
- - Total cost $150 billion
Merrill Lynch
- Four months after first Fed rate cut the stock market has declined – the Fed is easing in a recessionary backdrop
- GDP for 2008 1.125%
- GDP for 2009 2.000%
- Fed funds rate Dec 2008 2.00%
- 10 year treasury Dec 2008 3.70%
PIMCO
- GDP 1% in 2008
- Fed funds rate 3%
- 30 year mortgage 5.0% – 5.5%
- Dollar will continue to weaken against emerging economies but may have bottomed against Euro and Pound
- - Refinancing boom
- - Affordable housing will stabilize housing market
WSJ
- Weak dollar and high cost of oil
- Weak dollar reduces trade deficit with export boom, but makes imported oil much more expensive
- Lower interest rates will further weaken dollar limiting the intended stimulus
- Foreign capital funding banks, investment banks
- Investors owning 5% or more of a bank may be subject to Bank Holding Company Act
- Deals of 10% or more (investment banks) subject to Treasury Department scrutiny
- Political risk too – Committee on Foreign Investment in US
- Typically 10% or less passive investment will fly under the radar
- Foreign capital
- - Oil priced in Euro equivalent is $57
- - Concern that sovereign foreign funds will work together to exercise control
- - Existing shareholders do not like dilution
- - However, better than selling asset which spreads credit crunch from Wall Street to Main Street
- - Bolsters our financial institutions
- - Facilitates global free markets
Yardeni
- December retail sales not that bad – November, December together show modest y/y growth in sales
- Citigroup – mortgage crisis leaking into consumer lending and credit card operations
- Can US economy count on the consumer?
- Some portfolio managers don’t like my recommendation to underweight financial and consumer discretionary sectors
- Are we talking ourselves into a recession?
The good news: - Wall Street financial engineers deserve large portion of the blame for credit crisis:
- Stock markets remain very coupled
- Global decline scenario is so grim
- Why the Fed Big Easing should work
- Good news
- - We think so, but they will need to retrench for a few months
- - Productivity gains will continue to bolster consumer
- - Now offer good values
- - May be better than sectors that have not corrected
- - Treasury yields down 50 bp in anticipation of Fed cut
- - Mortgage refinancing is taking off and will bolster consumer
- - Lower rates may provide support for housing market
- - Tax relief coming for consumer and business
- - Weak dollar boosting US exports
- - Oil prices are backing off some
- - Foreign investors remain big buyers of US stocks
- - In other words – this too shall pass
- - Absent financial and consumer discretionary sectors, the other eight S&P 500 sectors show good earnings momentum at this time
- - Market looks cheap to me
- - Isn’t likely to improve much until all the worries about a US and global recession are over
- - Paying themselves up front fees for structured derivatives sure way to produce lots of defective product
- - Fixed income investors deserve some blame for buying the product
- - Equity investors deserve some blame for exaggerating and overreacting (or the media)
- - Fears of global recession could become selffulfilling prophecy as result of negative wealth effect
- - Bound to be coordinated easing response by central banks
- - I think stocks have capitulated
- - So now would be the time to buy
- - Lower interest rates have always revived economy – Fed intent on avoiding a recession
- - Drop in short-term rates cause flow of funds to banks (CDs) – reintermediation: provides funds to make qualified loans
- - Conventional mortgage rates are tumbling – boost refinancing, particularly remaining ARMs
- - Lower rates mean investors will take on equity risk–stocks cheapest asset class now
- - $4.6 trillion in international reserves held in central bank money market funds – pressure to move into sovereign wealth funds and equity markets
- - Drop in treasury rates will offset higher yield spreadcost being incurred in capital markets
- - Industrial analysts expect 2008 and 2009 earnings growth to be 17.4% and 13.0% respectively
- - Will happen only if (1) US avoids recession, (2) global growth remains robust, (3) Financials earning comparisons turn positive, (4) dollar remains weak,(5) companies continue to reduce shares outstanding



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Bush: Keine Rezession in Amerika
Wirtschaftsberater sagen 2,7 Prozent Wachstum voraus
Der amerikanische Präsident George Bush und seine Wirtschaftsberater sind zuversichtlich, dass die Volkswirtschaft nicht in eine Rezession gleiten und sich von ihrer aktuellen Schwäche in der zweiten Jahreshälfte erholen wird.
Sowohl das Konjunkturpaket, das der Kongress vergangene Woche geschnürt hat, als auch die Zinssenkungen der Notenbank (Fed) würden dem Wachstum neuen Schwung verleihen. Diese Einschätzung vertritt Bush in seinem Jahreswirtschaftsbericht, den er dem Kongress übermittelt hat.
Darin sagen die Ökonomen des Weißen Hauses ein inflationsbereinigtes Wachstum von 2,7 Prozent und eine durchschnittliche Arbeitslosenquote von 4,9 Prozent für 2008 voraus.
Die Wachstumsprognose der Regierung ist damit ungleich optimistischer als die vieler Bankvolkswirte an Wall Street. Sie sind vielfach davon überzeugt, dass die amerikanische Wirtschaft sich schon in einer Rezession befindet.
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