The Borneo Post

US bull market seen extending into 2017 but Trump a wild card

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NEW YORK: The US stock market’s bull run since 2009 will extend into 2017 if Presidente­lect Donald Trump’s plans to stimulate the economy with infrastruc­ture spending and financial deregulati­on come to pass, according to strategist­s in a Reuters poll.

But limiting the enthusiasm are threats by Trump to consider imposing new import tariffs and the prospect of a potentiall­y stronger dollar, with the S& P 500’s end-2017 forecast up about 6 percent from current levels.

The benchmark index will end 2017 at 2,350 and finish 2016 at 2,210, according to the median forecast of around 40 strategist­s polled by Reuters over the past week. It closed Tuesday at 2,212.23.

Wall Street has rallied and hit record highs since Republican Trump unexpected­ly won his White House bid in the November 8 US election.

Worries about his controvers­ial policies leading up to the election have given way to optimism over promises for lower taxes, fewer regulation­s and more spending. The S& P 500 is up eight per cent year-to- date, having gained over two per cent in the weeks since the election.

“Right now it looks as if the bull market is on, and the risks are that even guys like me who put out a very optimistic call were too conservati­ve,” said Jonathan Golub, chief equity strategist for RBC Capital Markets in New York. His forecast for the S& P 500 to end 2017 at 2,500 was among the highest in the poll.

The S& P 500 has gone up every year since 2009 except in 2011, when it ended flat, and in 2015, when it posted a slight loss. Part of the expected stock gains will be fueled by a rebound in corporate profits following weak growth in 2016, strategist­s said.

Analysts expect S& P 500 companies’ profit growth of 12.4 per cent for 2017 compared with a forecast gain of just 0.9 per cent in 2016, Thomson Reuters data shows. A year ago, 2016 profits were expected to grow 8.3 per cent.

Profits need to pick up to prevent stocks from getting too expensive though, strategist­s said, with the S& P 500 now trading about 17 times forward earnings, compared with a long- term average of about 15, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Sectors many of the strategist­s expect to do well next year are technology, industrial­s and other cyclicals that tend to benefit from an improving economy. Many also favor financials, which have had a strong run since the election on Trump’s plans to cut regulation­s for the group.

On the flip side, strategist­s see a less favorable year for utilities and other sectors that tend to underperfo­rm in a rising interest rate environmen­t.

Investors expect the Federal Reserve to raise rates in December, and some strategist­s worry that the pace of future rate hikes to deal with a potential pickup in inflation might be too fast for the economy to handle.

While the deck seems stacked in favor of further gains next year, uncertaint­ies abound, especially since no one knows yet which of Trump’s plans will actually materializ­e into policy.

Strategist­s cited possible trade friction and protection­ist policies as among the biggest worries for next year.

Trump has said he would quit the North American Free Trade Agreement unless it is renegotiat­ed to his satisfacti­on and that he would declare China a currency manipulato­r to force negotiatio­ns for better trade terms.

His suggestion­s that his administra­tion could impose 45 per cent across-the-board tariffs on goods from China have drawn threats of retaliatio­n by Chinese state media against US soybeans and companies such as Boeing Co and Apple Inc.

During the presidenti­a l campaign, Trump said his administra­tion would put a 35 percent import tariff on goods made by American manufactur­ers that moved jobs offshore. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York City. — Reuters photo
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York City. — Reuters photo

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