Wednesday, July 7, 2010

DB Positioned for Continued Bullish Outlook

Deutsche Bank has become a proponent of the double dip philosophy... Their analysts are of the mindset that we are in a mid cycle slowdown. In a recent publication on their site, DB gave us 4 illustrations why becoming bearish right now could be a premature move:

“First, the move towards fiscal policy tightening appears generally to be relatively measured. This year, we expect the euro area and China to run somewhat expansionary fiscal policies while the other countries are likely to embark on some fiscal restraint. Next year,
almost all countries are forecast to tighten policy, but the contractionary fiscal impulse seems fairly modest in most cases. The UK does show a substantial fiscal drag in 2011, equal to about 2-1/2% of GDP, and in the US it reaches 1-1/2% of GDP, but for other major areas (euro zone, China, and Japan) it is generally 1% of GDP or less, not enough to induce a serious downturn, in our view.”

DB1 DEUTSCHE BANK: 4 REASONS TO REMAIN BULLISH

Second, while fiscal policy is tightened, we expect monetary policy to remain expansionary. Earlier expectations of an exit from the low interest rate and non-standard monetary policy have been shifted well into 2011 (affecting growth only as of 2012).

Third, with discretionary spending on durables and structures already having fallen to recent historical lows, this key driver of economic downturns has much less room to be compressed than it did before the crisis began (Chart 3). Indeed, this is one reason double dip recessions are so rare. The more and the longer such spending is compressed, the more pent-up demand builds to support the eventual expansion. Durable goods that have worn out eventually need to be replaced.

db2 DEUTSCHE BANK: 4 REASONS TO REMAIN BULLISH

Fourth, with pent-up demand beginning to show through into consumer and business spending, we believe that the economy is developing sufficient momentum through 2010 to deflect the upcoming headwinds to a significant degree. A positive feed-back loop between investment, employment, and consumption seems to have emerged in most major countries.

Source: Deutsche Bank