Leuthold Says Stocks Will Surge, Depression Avoided

Tony321

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Leuthold Says Stocks Will Surge, Depression Avoided (Update4)
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By Betty Liu and Lynn Thomasson

March 4 (Bloomberg) -- Steve Leuthold, whose Grizzly Short Fund returned 74 percent last year betting against U.S. stocks, said now is the time to buy equities because investors are too fearful about the economy.

“These comparisons people make with the Great Depression are totally out of touch with reality, and pretty stupid,” he told Bloomberg Television in an interview today. “We’ve been in much worse, much more panicked and more scary situations in the U.S.”

The economy isn’t as bad as it was in 1974, when stocks began rebounding, said Leuthold, who oversees $3.2 billion at Leuthold Weeden Capital Management in Minneapolis. He predicted the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index will surge to at least 1,000 in 2009, representing a gain of 44 percent from yesterday’s 12-year low of 696.33.

The index rose 2.4 percent to 712.87 today on speculation China will add to a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) spending plan and U.S. lawmakers will reach agreement on a plan to stem mortgage defaults.

Because a rally is likely, Leuthold said investors shouldn’t buy his Grizzly Short Fund. It has returned 26 percent in 2009. Short seller Bill Fleckenstein, who warned of the housing bubble in 2005, closed his 13-year-old bear market fund last year because valuations made it “too dangerous” to bet on more losses, he said in a interview last month.

China, Korea, Taiwan

The Leuthold Core Investment Fund, which bets on stock gains, is most concentrated in biotechnology companies, automotive retailers and education providers, Leuthold said. Investors should also buy equities in China, Korea and Taiwan because their economies are growing faster and the Asian banking system hasn’t been battered by subprime loans as badly as U.S. financial institutions, Leuthold said.

The Chinese economy may grow 7.7 percent this year, compared with a 2 percent contraction in the U.S., according to the median economist estimates in a Bloomberg survey. North American financial firms have reported $811.2 billion in credit losses and writedowns tied to mortgage defaults, 27 times more than banks in Asia, according to Bloomberg data collected since the housing slump began in 2007.

“We’re going global,” he said. “Global investing is the way of the future.”




http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aoOD10XZvOPE&refer=home


These assholes/analyst will try anything to make money. He made money shorting stocks on the way down, now he's trying to make a quick buck trying to convince inexperienced investors to buy stocks. Anyways, most analysts are saying that the economy will not improve until the US/European banks are stablized but more on the down side because the European banks are in worst shape than the US banks.
 

WoodPeckr

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Hope he's right. We need some 'happy talk'.
However El Rushbloe ain't gonna like that....he's hoping for failure!....:rolleyes:
 
E

enduser1

Well,

Actually, IMHO I find it interesting that so many people are saying the bottom is in. Its everybody. This tells me that the bottom has a long way to go.

EU
 

WoodPeckr

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enduser1 said:
This tells me that the bottom has a long way to go.

EU
We are in for the most part unchartered territory.
Things can go either way. Nobody really knows.....:eek:
 

Mia.Colpa

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It seems we have to talk our way out of this recession, economic stimuli around the world ain't working, so let's brainwash ourselves and hope for the best. :cool:
 

WoodPeckr

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Lots of people hope he's correct.
 
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