Wall Street's Top Permabull Suddenly Becomes Its Biggest Bear
n the past we had given Tom Lee of Fundstrat, formerly of JPMorgan, a hard time for his relentless, unforgiving permabullishness, which cost investors massive losses during the 2008 financial crisis, when the S&P500 closed some 40% below his target price of 1,450, but in retrospect had been proven right during this unprecedented monetary- and debt-fueled rally, which has taken the S&P, and global debt, to never before seen levels (such as the Dow 19,999.63) where valuations are now more absurd than at any time in history.
Furthermore, as Bloomberg writes, "it was Lee’s bullishness that made him the least accurate strategist on Wall Street in 2015, when the S&P 500 slid 0.7 percent." He doubled down in 2016 as the benchmark climbed 9.5% when his his target overshot once again."
To be sure, reading his reports over the years, it seemed that nothing could ever dent his bullish ways: so convinced was he that there is nothing that could possibly derail the market, that a negative outlook seemed inconceivable.
Which is why we were stunned to read in his latest Fundstrat note released today - a time when everyone is convinced the market is going nowhere but higher - that the S&P 500 would will finish the year at 2,275, roughly 3% lower than the median forecast of a group of 18 strategists which form Bloomberg's consensus. His caution is driven by concerns about policy risk and a yield curve adjustment, which he sees translating into an S&P 500 decline to 2,150 by mid-year before the index rebounds according to Bloomberg.
"The bond market is signaling inflation confusion and a flattening long-term yield curve" Lee wrote, adding that this generally leads to a 5 to 7% selloff.
Once past the first-half selloff, Lee sees inflation expectations recovering, reversing four years of disinflationary trends. He also cited deregulation as potentially providing a “significant boost” to corporate business activity. Like Morgan Stanley, Lee expects an 11% earnings expansion, a forecast that, while lower than the 12.3 % estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, would still mark the S&P 500’s best year since 2010.
So with Lee out of the top permabull spot, that means that "Wall Street’s new king bull is Jonathan Golub, the chief U.S. market strategist at RBC Capital Markets. He has a year-end target of 2,500. Oppenheimer & Co.’s John Stoltzfus is the second-most bullish, with a 2,450 forecast."
Good luck to them all.
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Although I disagree the market is headed down in the short term his concerns are well founded and may come to light a year down the line if the US moves towards mass government deficits, protectionism, and demands that allies pay for protection which will most likely lead to them not paying which will lead to loss in US military sales. Of course the military spending drop can be balanced with domestic spending like on more nukes, but this is exactly what drove the USSR into eventual economic collapse. Government deficit spending is not a long term economic answer.
Tyler, thanks for your information. Best regards and happy new year