by Brett Arends at WSJ: 
Could Wall Street be about to crash again?
This week's bone-rattlers may be making you wonder.
I don't make predictions. That's a sucker's game. And I'm certainly not doing so now.
But way too many people are way too complacent this summer. Here are 10 reasons to watch out.
1. The market is already expensive.  Stocks are about 20 times cyclically-adjusted earnings, according to  data compiled by Yale University economics professor Robert Shiller.  That's well above average, which, historically, has been about 16. This  ratio has been a powerful predictor of long-term returns. Valuation is  by far the most important issue for investors. If you're getting paid  well to take risks, they may make sense. But what if you're not?
2. The Fed is getting nervous. This week it  warned that the economy had weakened, and it unveiled its latest weapon  in the war against deflation: using the proceeds from the sale of  mortgages to buy Treasury bonds. That should drive down long-term  interest rates. Great news for mortgage borrowers. But hardly something  one wants to hear when the Dow Jones Industrial Average is already north  of 10000.
3. Too many people are too bullish.  Active money managers are expecting the market to go higher, according  to the latest survey by the National Association of Active Investment  Managers. So are financial advisers, reports the weekly survey by  Investors Intelligence. And that's reason to be cautious. The time to  buy is when everyone else is gloomy. The reverse may also be true.
4. Deflation is already here. Consumer prices  have fallen for three months in a row. And, most ominously, it's  affecting wages too. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that, last  quarter, workers earned 0.7% less in real terms per hour than they did a  year ago. No wonder the Fed is worried. In deflation, wages, company  revenues, and the value of your home and your investments may shrink in  dollar terms. But your debts stay the same size. That makes deflation a  vicious trap, especially if people owe way too much money.
5. People still owe way too much money. Households,  corporations, states, local governments and, of course, Uncle Sam. It's  the debt, stupid. According to the Federal Reserve, total U.S.  debt—even excluding the financial sector—is basically twice what it was  10 years ago: $35 trillion compared to $18 trillion. Households have  barely made a dent in their debt burden; it's fallen a mere 3% from last  year's all-time peak, leaving it twice the level of a decade ago.
6. The jobs picture is much worse than they're telling you.  Forget the "official" unemployment rate of 9.5%. Alternative measures?  Try this: Just 61% of the adult population, age 20 or over, has any kind  of job right now. That's the lowest since the early 1980s—when many  women stayed at home through choice, driving the numbers down. Among men  today, it's 66.9%. Back in the '50s, incidentally, that figure was  around 85%, though allowances should be made for the higher number of  elderly people alive today. And many of those still working right now  can only find part-time work, so just 59% of men age 20 or over  currently have a full-time job. This is bullish?
(Today's bonus question: If a laid-off contractor with two kids, a  mortgage and a car loan is working three night shifts a week at his  local gas station, how many iPads can he buy for Christmas?)
7. Housing remains a disaster.  Foreclosures rose again last month. Banks took over another 93,000  homes in July, says foreclosure specialist RealtyTrac. That's a rise of  9% from June and just shy of May's record. We're heading for 1 million  foreclosures this year, RealtyTrac says. And naturally the ripple  effects hurt all those homeowners not in foreclosure, by driving down  prices. See deflation (No. 4) above.
8. Labor Day is approaching. Ouch.  It always seems to be in September-October when the wheels come off  Wall Street. Think 2008. Think 1987. Think 1929. Statistically, there  actually is a "September effect." The market, on average, has done worse  in that month than any other. No one really knows why. Some have even  blamed the psychological effect of shortening days. But it becomes  self-reinforcing: People fear it, so they sell.
9. We're looking at gridlock in Washington.  Election season has already begun. And the Democrats are expected to  lose seats in both houses in November. (Betting at InTrade, a bookmaker  in Dublin, Ireland, gives the GOP a 62% chance of taking control of the  House.) As our political dialogue seems to have collapsed beyond all  possible hope of repair, let's not hope for any "bipartisan" agreements  on anything of substance. Do you think this is a good thing? As Davis  Rosenberg at investment firm Gluskin Sheff pointed out this week,  gridlock is only a good thing for investors "when nothing needs fixing."  Today, he notes, we need strong leadership. Not gonna happen.
10. All sorts of other indicators are flashing amber. The  Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing index, while still  positive, weakened again in July. So did ISM's new-orders indicator. The  trade deficit has widened, and second-quarter GDP growth was much lower  than first thought. ECRI's Weekly Leading Index has been flashing  warning lights for weeks (though the most recent signals have looked  somewhat better). Europe's industrial production in June turned out  considerably worse than expected. Even China's steamroller economy is  slowing down. Tech bellwether Cisco Systems  has signaled caution ahead. Individually, each of these might mean  little. Collectively, they make me wonder. In this environment, I might  be happy to buy shares if they were cheap. But not so much if they're  expensive. See No. 1 above.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
WSJ Asks "Is a Crash Coming?"
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