Results for Outlook 2010
Money Morning Mid-Year Forecast: Why China’s Economy Will Exceed Expectations in the Second Half of 2010
[Editor's Note: This is the latest installment in Money Morning's ongoing Midyear Economic Forecast series, which has covered such topics as oil, gold, and the U.S. dollar.]
The rapid growth China’s economy experienced in the first half of the year was a blessing and a curse. It helped propel the world out of a disastrous recession, but it forced policymakers into action to prevent overheating – which scared off many investors.
But the fact is that while most of the world was struggling to keep the engine of economic recovery from sputtering to a halt, China spent the first half of 2010 with its foot on the brake. And now that the Red Dragon has reigned in growth, the second half of 2010 will likely look very different from the first.
Money Morning Chief Investment Strategist Keith Fitz-Gerald says nearly everyone felt the first quarter’s 11.9% growth in Chinese gross domestic product (GDP) was “too hot.” But the 10.3% growth China saw in the second quarter will likely be topped in the second half.
The reasons for that are simple:
- Exports remain strong.
- Chinese stocks are oversold.
- China’s property market isn’t the ticking time bomb many analysts believe it is.
- And policies implemented to cool growth in the first half of the year will likely be relaxed in the next six months.
“From an investment perspective, the single biggest concern right now is how hard and for how long the Chinese government will keep tapping on the brakes,” says Fitz-Gerald. “I personally don’t think it’s going to be too much longer – an easing sometime in the third quarter now seems realistic.”
How to Profit From a Slowing U.S. Economy In the Second Half of 2010
[Editor's Note: This is the latest installment in Money Morning's ongoing Midyear Economic Forecast series, which has covered such topics as oil, gold, and the U.S. dollar.]
As much as the architects of the U.S. stimulus might otherwise wish, it’s becoming increasingly apparent that the U.S. economy won’t be hot-rodding its way into a higher gear in the year’s second half.
At best, the U.S. economy will chug along in low gear – managing only minimal overall growth, while bouncing over economic speed bumps that exist in more than a few key sectors. At worst, the engine of economic recovery will sputter, or stall completely – leaving Americans stranded alongside the fiscal roadside, or to roll backward into a double-dip recession.
Money Morning Mid-Year Forecast: India is on the Path to Double-Digit Growth
India could be well on it's way to becoming the world's most appealing opportunity… if it learns how to control inflation and cut it's debt. Read this report to discover the opportunities and challenges facing India's economy right now. And, find out the best ways to make a bundle on India's growing economy.
Money Morning Mid-Year Forecast: India is on the Path to Double-Digit Growth
If it’s able to control inflation and cut its debt, India could well become the world’s most appealing investment opportunity.
Europe is choking on debt and scrambling to salvage its beleaguered currency. The United States is saddled by high unemployment and struggling to preserve its wobbly recovery. Even China – which has had to reign in its stimulus to cool its red-hot property market and curb inflation – may have peaked.
Yet India’s gross domestic product (GDP) is shooting sharply higher, and many economists think economic growth in the subcontinent is about surge into the double-digits for the first time ever.
Money Morning Midyear Forecast: The U.S. Economy is Headed For a Second-Half Slowdown
[Editor's Note: This look at the U.S. economy is the latest installment in Money Morning's ongoing Midyear Economic Forecast series, which has covered such topics as oil, gold, and the U.S. dollar. The series is slated to continue.]
Most textbook economists say that the U.S. economy is engaged in a broad-based recovery. But while there’s a consensus that there’s no “double-dip” recession on the horizon, the evidence suggests the nation’s economy is headed for a slowdown in the second half of 2010.
The reason: In a market that derives 70% of its growth from consumer spending, the last half of this year will be all about those consumers – and about the economy’s inability to generate enough jobs to keep the nation’s cash registers ringing.
If you add to that concern the end of the various government stimulus efforts, possible fallout from the Eurozone debt contagion, and oil in the Gulf of Mexico defiling the shores of four states, you end up with an economic outlook that’s clouded with uncertainty.
And that uncertainty will continue to stifle hiring and will result in another round of consumer belt-tightening – and a continued economic malaise.
After a Strong First Half, Is the U.S. Dollar Headed for a Reversal?
[Editor's Note: This midyear U.S. dollar forecast is the latest installment of a new Money Morning ongoing "Midyear Forecast" series that will make economic projections for key global-economic sectors for the last half of 2010. As that series continues, look for forecasts for the U.S. economy, China, and other emerging markets.]
In spite of an assortment of economic uncertainties at home, the U.S. dollar has been the star of the currency world for most of 2010. Spooked by persistent and seemingly insurmountable debt problems in the European Union – and the specter of unsustainable growth and potential inflation in China – investors fled European and Asian currencies for the perceived relative safe haven of the dollar.
But the U.S. dollar may have topped out.
Let me explain …
Money Morning Mid-Year Forecast: Oil Prices Down but Not Out
[Editor's Note: This oil preview is the latest installment of a new Money Morning series that will make economic projections for key U.S. sectors for the last half of 2010. As part of that series, look for forecasts for the U.S. stocks, the dollar, China, and other emerging markets.]
While it looked like they were headed towards the $90 a barrel level, oil prices hit a wall in the spring. Rattled investors who worried about the direction of the global economy shunned black gold in favor of real gold as a means of preserving capital.
But don’t be fooled. The spring retreat simply set the stage for a second-half rally.
After starting the year at about $81 a barrel, prices climbed as high as $86 a barrel before plunging to $64 on May 25.


