A Bad Omen for Stocks

Fourth quarter stumble goes counter to typical year-end trend--Searching for Alpha, the monthly index newsletter for January 2008

For the first time since 1997, domestic equities lost ground in the last three months of the year. While this outcome is certainly not unexpected given the problems in subprime mortgages, corporate credit, and housing, both the holiday mindset and end of year buying typically propel stocks higher in the fourth quarter.

A lack of buying interest is troublesome, in my view, because it is evident that the same large players that bid stocks up in the last few weeks of the year aren't particularly interested in owning stocks going into January. Whether this means lower prices in the first quarter of 2008 remains to be seen, but it seems as though we may be in for a bit more short-term pain.

I'm a bit more sanguine longer-term. There are a lot of bargains to be had in the equity markets. Housing stocks, financial firms, and retailers are trading at historically low valuations, and will eventually rebound sometime next year. Global stocks are still attractive as well, and with the 11% drubbing it took in '07, I also expect Japan to recover.

And yes, Virginia, rate reductions will make a positive contribution to the markets. A combination of cheap money and a lack of attractive income-producing investments should put a shine on the fortunes of equity investors.

The Monthly Index Report for December 2007

Index

Dec-07

QTD

YTD

Description
S&P 500 Index* -0.86%

-3.82%

3.53%

Large-cap stocks
DJIA*

-0.80%

-4.54%

6.43%

Large-cap stocks
Nasdaq Comp.*

-0.33%

-1.83%

9.81%

Large-cap tech stocks
Russell 1000 Growth

-0.36%

-0.77%

11.81%

Large-cap growth stocks
Russell 1000 Value -0.97%

-5.80%

-0.17%

Large-cap value stocks
Russell 2000 Growth

0.63%

-2.11%

7.05%

Small-cap growth stocks
Russell 2000 Value

-0.85%

-7.27%

-9.78%

Small-cap value stocks
EAFE

-2.25%

-1.71%

11.63%

Europe, Australasia & Far East Index
Lehman Aggregate 0.28%

3.01%

6.97%

U.S. Government Bonds
Lehman High Yield

0.29%

-1.29%

1.87%

High Yield Corporate Bonds
Calyon Financial Barclay Index**

0.43%

3.22% 8.33% Managed Futures
3-mo. Treasury Bill*** 0.28% 1.12%

5.20%

All returns are estimates as of December 31, 2007. *Return numbers do not include dividends.

** Returns are estimates as of December 27, 2007.

Ben Warwick is CIO of Memphis-based Sovereign Wealth Management. He can be reached at ben@searchingforalpha.com.

About the Author
Ben Warwick, Quantitative Equity Strategies

Ben Warwick, Quantitative Equity Strategies

Veteran investment strategist Ben Warwick brings 20 years of investment management expertise to AdvisorOne.com in his blog, Searching for Alpha. His market and economic insights provide readers with an insider’s view on generating alpha through asset allocation, the use of strategic portfolio “tilts” and alternative investments.

Ben Warwick founded Quantitative Equity Strategies (QES) in 2002 as a platform for implementing his quantitative investment strategies. The firm manages assets with traditional long-only equity and fixed income, private equity, managed futures and alternative investment mandates. QES has developed an industry leading expertise in building investment programs that can replicate alternative returns, while offering daily liquidity and transparency. These products include the HFRq, a hedge fund replication strategy developed in concert with Hedge Fund Research in Chicago; the Managed Futures Beta Index, with Aspen Partners; and the Nomura QES Modeled Private Equity Returns Index (PERI), which was developed with Nomura Bank and Preqin, the leading source of information in the private equity industry.    

He is the author of several books, including "Searching for Alpha: The Quest for Exceptional Investment Performance," (Wiley, 2000) and "The Handbook of Managed Futures," with Carl Peters, (McGraw-Hill, 1996).  He can be reached at ben@qesinvest.com.

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