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May 30, 2012

WEEKLY MARKET COMMENTARY

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WEEKLY MARKET COMMENTARY
Update on Risks and Opportunities in the Financial Markets
May 2012



Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff
Legacy Retirement Advisors
LPL Registered Principal
565 8th St
Paso Robles, CA 93446
805-226-0445
Jennifer.Langstaff@LPL.c
om
www.LegacyCentralCoast.c
om

CA Insurance Lic# 0B63553


Weekly Market Commentary | Week of May 28, 2012

Highlights

  • Markets are focused on the June 17 Greek election with poll results holding market-moving significance given what is at stake.
  • A vote in favor of the pro-bailout parties may provide a relief rally, but bank deposits are already fleeing banks of southern European countries for the safety of Germany setting the stage for a potential crisis if the vote turns out as it did on May 6.
  • In the meantime, for the markets Greece's polls are like greased polls - hard to grab on to and harder to climb on.

Banking on the Greek Election

The stock market has been relatively unchanged in recent days, despite some sizable intraday swings. The movements suggest that the market is nervously awaiting a decision to be reached.

This is a big year for decisions. Another important vote takes place this week in Europe with Ireland, a country that received a bailout in 2010, holding a referendum on the European Union fiscal compact. This is a necessary step toward the end-game of Eurobonds and a collective monetary, fiscal, and debt policy for all of Europe. The recent polls in Ireland suggest it is expected to pass. A failure-or even a very close vote-may be viewed negatively by the markets. But this is not why the markets appear to be impatiently holding their breath. Instead, the vote that markets are most focused on at the moment is the June 17 Greek election. This is evidenced by the recent outsized reactions in the stock market to public polling results printed in Greek newspapers.

If the Greek election favors pro-bailout parties with enough votes to form a coalition and avoid the potential for an immediate Greek default, then investors may enjoy a potential relief rally as immediate risks subside. Progress towards a long-term solution for a combined Europe can continue while Greece, a very small part of the Eurozone economy, will remain in a depression.

However, if the outcome of the election is similar to the last one and fails to produce backing for the bailout agreement, the markets will likely continue to slide as a chain of events begins to unfold that holds the risk of a financial crisis.

Potential Post-Election Chain of Events

The series of events following the election if the anti-austerity parties garner enough votes to endanger Greece's membership in the Eurozone may begin with an acceleration of large withdrawals of euros from Greek banks for fear of a forced conversion to a "new" drachma at a substantially devalued level. Nearly one-third of deposits have already left Greek banks over the past three years as the risk has risen. Interestingly, the Greeks voted against German influence for their economy, but want German protection for their money as Greek bank deposits flee to German banks. Greek banks have seen outflows of 70 billion euros, while at the same time, German banks have seen deposits grow by 200 billion euros as depositors around the Eurozone seek safety. This flow is already accelerating but could become a flood.

Next in line may be banks in other southern European countries. With the precedent set that countries could leave the euro at the behest of Germany, deposits may leave Spanish and Italian banks, which so far have only seen a small move.

This could then be followed by panic with banks closing their doors for "bank holidays" to halt the runs. The European Central Bank would likely have to inject massive amounts of capital to keep the banks from collapsing.  

If the chain of events has not been broken by this point, the next link in the chain is for the troubled banks-most likely to be in Spain and Italy-to be forced to sell their holdings of government bonds in order to meet the outflow of deposits. This could result in losses on these bonds and push yields up even further than the 6% they are hovering around now. If these yields go high enough, other countries such as Spain may be in danger of default with devastating consequences.

This potential series of events leading to a crisis can be avoided, but it increasingly cannot be simply deferred. Europe has been circling around the potential for crisis for three years, sometimes drawing closer, sometimes moving further away, but unable to break free of its pull. The actions of policymakers have been varied and involved multiple bailout agreements and partial defaults that restructured debt obligations. But after exhausting a number of options, potential actions are now limited by the ability of Germany and Greece to come to terms and the willingness of depositors to tolerate any more uncertainty. With the most recent Greek polls supporting the idea that Greece will adopt a pro-bailout coalition government and given the amount at stake, the parties will likely come to an agreement. The outcome is anything but certain.

In the meantime, for the markets Greece's polls are like greased polls - hard to grab on to and harder to climb on.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

The economic forecasts set forth in the presentation may not develop as predicted and there can be no guarantee that strategies promoted will be successful.

Investing in specialty market and sectors carry additional risks such as economic, political or regulatory developments that may affect many or all issuers in that sector.

This research material has been prepared by LPL Financial.

To the extent you are receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to such entity.

LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC

Tracking # 1-071888| Exp. 5/13

If you no longer wish to receive this email communication, remove your name from this specific mailing list, or opt-out of all mailing lists.

We are committed to protecting your privacy. For more information on our privacy policy, please contact:

Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff
565 8th St
Paso Robles, CA 93446

805-226-0445
Jennifer.Langstaff@LPL.com

The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your financial advisor prior to investing. All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.

Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff is a Registered Representative with and Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC

 

This newsletter was created using Newsletter OnDemand, powered by S&P Capital IQ Financial Communications.

May 21, 2012

WEEKLY MARKET COMMENTARY

Having trouble viewing this email? Click here.
WEEKLY MARKET COMMENTARY
Update on Risks and Opportunities in the Financial Markets
May 2012



Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff
Legacy Retirement Advisors
LPL Registered Principal
565 8th St
Paso Robles, CA 93446
805-226-0445
Jennifer.Langstaff@LPL.c
om
www.LegacyCentralCoast.c
om

CA Insurance Lic# 0B63553


Weekly Market Commentary | Week of May 21, 2012

Highlights

  • Now that the Spring Slide is in full swing, we have to watch out for the big event with the potential to make it as severe as the past two years.
  • Looking ahead, the negatives we face in 2012 already include the end of the Federal Reserve's (Fed) Operation Twist stimulus program, China's slowdown, the European recession, geopolitical risks, the election uncertainty, and anticipation of the 2013 budget bombshell of tax hikes and spending cuts.
  • However, some positives this year may help offset some of the negatives, making for a potential decline that may be less steep than those of the past two years.

The Spring Slide

It has been 410 years since the first initial public offering (IPO). The Dutch East India Company helped people add spice to their daily lives, connect to those in faraway places, and became the richest company the world had ever seen. High hopes for similar success surrounded the Facebook IPO on Friday. However, the long-awaited IPO was unable to spur enthusiasm among stock market investors. Stocks posted the worst week in six months as the S&P 500 fell 4.3%, making three straight weeks of declines culminating in an 8.7% decline from this year's peak in April.

In each of the past two years, the stock market began a slide in the spring, a phenomenon often referred to by the old adage "sell in May and go away," which lasted well into the summer months. In both 2010 and 2011, an early run-up in the stock market, similar to this year, pushed stocks up about 10% for the year by mid-April. On April 23, 2010 and April 29, 2011, the S&P 500 made peaks that were followed by 16-19% losses that were not recouped for more than five months. On March 26, we published the 10 indicators that warned of another Spring Slide this year but noted that this year's decline may not be as steep as in the prior years. Now that the Spring Slide is in full swing, we have to watch out for the big event with the potential to make it as severe as the past two years.

A combination of factors contributed to the reversal in direction for the stock market, including an extended and exhausted rally, a slowdown in the economy, and weakening earnings outlooks. But what added fuel to the decline in 2010 was the negative environment that included the end of the Fed's QE1 stimulus program, the uncertainty around the impact of the Dodd-Frank legislation, the passage of the Affordable Care Act, the Eurozone debt problems and bailouts, central bank rate hikes, and the end of the homebuyer tax credit. In 2011, the negatives that helped drive the slide further included the end of the Fed's QE2 stimulus program, the Japan earthquake and nuclear disaster that disrupted global supply chains and pulled Japan into a recession, the Arab Spring erupted pushing up oil prices, rising inflation, central bank rate hikes, the Eurozone debt problems coming to a head, and, most importantly, the budget debacle and related downgrade of U.S. Treasuries.

Looking ahead, the negatives we face in 2012 already include the end of the Fed's Operation Twist stimulus program, China's slowdown, the European recession, geopolitical risks, the election uncertainty, and anticipation of the 2013 budget bombshell of tax hikes and spending cuts. However, some positives this year may help offset some of the negatives, making for a potential decline that may be less steep than those of the past two years.

  • First, central banks are now cutting rather than hiking rates, which should help to temper global recession fears evident during the past two years' Spring Slides. For example, China has cut reserve requirements three times in the past six months.
  • Second, housing is showing signs of improvement, as both new and existing home sales are rising at a 5-7% pace, and home prices are now on the rise.
  • Third, gasoline and food prices are decelerating, which helps to explain why consumer sentiment has been rising along with retail sales in May despite the market decline.
  • Finally, auto production schedules are robust for the next quarter and likely to support manufacturing activity, which had fallen in May through July of the past two years and contributed to the market decline.

We will be on the lookout for signs that the Spring Slide may be as steep as the past couple of years. However, we will also be preparing our shopping list to take advantage of this broad pullback in the markets as it runs its course.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

The economic forecasts set forth in the presentation may not develop as predicted and there can be no guarantee that strategies promoted will be successful.

Stock investing may involve risk including loss of principal.

Investing in specialty market and sectors carry additional risks such as economic, political or regulatory developments that may affect many or all issuers in that sector.

Quantitative Easing is a government monetary policy occasionally used to increase the money supply by buying government securities or other securities from the market. Quantitative easing increases the money supply by flooding financial institutions with capital in an effort to promote increased lending and liquidity.

The mention of individual companies noted herein is not for a recommendation to buy or sell the company nor the products and services they provide. We do offer any opinions or analysis on individual securities.

The Federal Open Market Committee action known as Operation Twist began in 1961. The intent was to flatten the yield curve in order to promote capital inflows and strengthen the dollar. The Fed utilized open market operations to shorten the maturity of public debt in the open market. The action has subsequently been reexamined in isolation and found to have been more effective than originally thought. As a result of this reappraisal, similar action has been suggested as an alternative to quantitative easing by central banks.

This research material has been prepared by LPL Financial.

To the extent you are receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to such entity.

LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC

Tracking # 1-070089| Exp. 5/13

If you no longer wish to receive this email communication, remove your name from this specific mailing list, or opt-out of all mailing lists.

We are committed to protecting your privacy. For more information on our privacy policy, please contact:

Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff
565 8th St
Paso Robles, CA 93446

805-226-0445
Jennifer.Langstaff@LPL.com

The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your financial advisor prior to investing. All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.

Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff is a Registered Representative with and Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC

 

This newsletter was created using Newsletter OnDemand, powered by S&P Capital IQ Financial Communications.

May 15, 2012

WEEKLY MARKET COMMENTARY

Having trouble viewing this email? Click here.
WEEKLY MARKET COMMENTARY
Update on Risks and Opportunities in the Financial Markets
May 2012



Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff
Legacy Retirement Advisors
LPL Registered Principal
565 8th St
Paso Robles, CA 93446
805-226-0445
Jennifer.Langstaff@LPL.c
om
www.LegacyCentralCoast.c
om

CA Insurance Lic# 0B63553


Weekly Market Commentary | Week of May 14, 2012

Highlights

  • At the heart of it, all markets come down to buyers and sellers.
  • U.S. stocks are being purchased by foreigners and corporations while notable selling is coming from individuals and insiders, or top executives, of companies.
  • We believe the forces of selling will win out over the buying power in the coming months.

Look Who's Buying and Selling

We devote this commentary each week to assessing the many reasons markets may rise or fall. But at the heart of it, all markets come down to just one thing: buyers and sellers. Taking a look at who is buying and who is selling can tell us something about the durability of the market's performance and what may lie ahead.

Presently, there are four notable trends in buying and selling in the stock market. U.S. stocks are being purchased by foreigners and corporations while selling is coming from individuals and insiders, or top executives, of companies.

Foreigners are Buying

Purchases of U.S. stocks by foreigners in the first quarter of 2012 shows that demand by foreigners has rebounded from the uncharacteristic selling that took place in the second half of last year. Net purchases of U.S. stocks by foreigners in the first quarter totaled about $10 billion, according to the U.S. Treasury.

Companies Are Buying Back Shares

After taking advantage of the market rebound in 2009, corporations issued shares in 2010. However, since then they have returned to near record levels of net share repurchases.


Corporations have become net buyers of shares as rising cash flow and wide profit margins compel them to shrink their share count to boost earnings-per-share as revenue growth slows.

Individual Investors are Selling

Individual investors have been net sellers, measured by the flows of mutual funds that invest in U.S. stocks. They have been selling for 12 straight months. During the past 12 months, investors in these funds have sold more than they did during 2008.

Insiders are Selling

Selling by insiders, or top executives, of companies has been well above average. As of the latest week, according to data tracked by Argus Research of the number of shares insiders have sold and those that they have bought on the NYSE, the sell-to-buy ratio was 7.1-to-1.0 This is a historically high level of insider selling.

Should this data be seen as an important signal by those "in the know" of impending doom for corporate America? History offers a very different interpretation. Corporate insiders were buying in 2007 at the peak, and they were selling in 2009 as stocks were bottoming. Back in August of 2007, around the peak of the stock market, insiders at Financial companies were doing the most buying in 12 years. At the time, this trend was interpreted by some as a buy signal for Financials just before the companies in this sector fell more than 80%. Given this track record, we do not interpret the insider selling as a signal of impending losses. This fact does not suggest that they are acting on any inside information that would benefit an individual investor and instead may be selling in response to a three year bull market that doubled the value of the overall stock market.

Projecting the Trends

We expect foreigners and companies to continue to be net buyers while insiders remain sellers in the coming quarters. Fuel for a new bull market would most likely have to come from individual investors. One of the trends powering bond prices higher, and yields lower, is the strong demand from individuals as they continue to shift their investments from stocks to bonds.

The potential for money to flow into the stock market and lift stocks is significant. However, individual investors must first become disillusioned with bonds. Since bonds have offered returns over the past thirty years that are competitive with stocks and provided much lower volatility, many are reallocating their portfolios toward bonds as they seek to provide for a comfortable retirement. It may take a period of rising interest rates from near historic lows to demonstrate the potential for losses and volatility that bond investors in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s experienced to reverse the individual investor money flows back to stocks.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

The economic forecasts set forth in the presentation may not develop as predicted and there can be no guarantee that strategies promoted will be successful.

Stock investing may involve risk including loss of principal.

Investing in mutual funds involve risk, including possible loss of principal. Investments in specialized industry sectors have additional risks, which are outlined in the prospectus.

Bonds are subject to market and interest rate risk if sold prior to maturity. Bond values and yields will decline as interest rates rise and bonds are subject to availability and change in price.

Investing in specialty market and sectors carry additional risks such as economic, political or regulatory developments that may affect many or all issuers in that sector.

This research material has been prepared by LPL Financial.

To the extent you are receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to such entity.

LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC

Tracking # 1-068395| Exp. 5/13

If you no longer wish to receive this email communication, remove your name from this specific mailing list, or opt-out of all mailing lists.

We are committed to protecting your privacy. For more information on our privacy policy, please contact:

Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff
565 8th St
Paso Robles, CA 93446

805-226-0445
Jennifer.Langstaff@LPL.com

The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your financial advisor prior to investing. All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.

Jennifer & Ryan Langstaff is a Registered Representative with and Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC

 

This newsletter was created using Newsletter OnDemand, powered by S&P Capital IQ Financial Communications.