2011 Asset Allocation Decisions

1294952422 33 2011 Asset Allocation DecisionsPage 1 of 4

It is the season of prognostications in the investments profession, but I will refrain from hazarding any guesses about how 2011 will turn out. As we enter the new year, the bull market that began in March 2009 is clearly intact. It is hard to find anyone who is not optimistic about stocks through at least the first half of 2011. Yet, it remains a crisis-prone environment, both at home and abroad, so I prefer to take it one month at a time and be prepared for a wide range of possible 2011 outcomes.

Investors face the dilemma of short-term stock market conditions that are positive but artificial due to unsustainable government policies, and must keep a watchful eye on the horizon for signs of the next, inevitable crisis. There are so many moving parts to the risk equation that investors cannot hope to have a sure method of knowing when to cut risk exposure.

That is why holding above-average cash, despite its negative after-inflation returns, is not an unwise asset allocation decision. the consensus outlook for another year of double-digit stock market returns in 2011 is understandable:

  • The economy appears to be gaining some momentum (though it is impossible to gauge the sustainability of an economic recovery that is dominated by government spending)
  • The Fed is openly targeting higher stock prices, and making cash and bond market alternatives unattractive.
  • Retail investors have begun to shift money back into equities, after favoring bonds for the past three years, which could become a self-reinforcing cycle that sustains the uptrend in stocks.
  • Technically, the stock market looks very healthy, given the recent breakouts to new highs, powerful momentum, and broad upside participation across all sectors and market cap segments. There is no sign yet of the technical divergences and non-confirmations that typically precede important market peaks.

Under normal circumstances, I would be inclined to join the bullish consensus and be optimistic about the 2011 stock market outlook. but these are far from normal circumstances. the U.S. financial system today is dominated by the alarming expansion of federal borrowings and hyper-aggressive monetary policy. Government liabilities have exploded by $4 trillion in just nine quarters, which equates to $35,000 per U.S. household. Currently outstanding federal debt of $14 trillion is now 95% of the size of our GDP.

The recent stimulus package, which included not just an extension of all of the tax cuts but $300 billion of additional deficit spending, ratcheted up 2011 growth expectations and contributed to the recent rally in the stock market, but made our longer- term fiscal problems even more intractable.

<a href="http://www.indexuniverse.com/sections/features/8647-2011-asset-allocation-decisions.html?utm_source=googles&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=google_newstag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.indexuniverse.com/sections/features/8647-2011-asset-allocation-decisions.html?utm_source=googles”>2011 Asset Allocation Decisions

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Leave a Reply

Security Code: