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- <text id=91TT0345>
- <title>
- Feb. 18, 1991: Pointing Toward Prosperity
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 18, 1991 The War Comes Home
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 56
- Pointing Toward Prosperity
- </hdr><body>
- <p>An exuberant stock market has all but declared America's
- recession over. The public isn't persuaded.
- </p>
- <p>By S.C. Gwynne/Washington--With reporting by William
- McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> If the economic news is really so bad, why is Wall Street
- so giddy? The grim tidings of late January and early February
- were enough to depress anyone: 232,000 more Americans lost
- jobs, housing starts sank to their lowest level since 1982,
- consumer confidence plunged to a 10-year low, the
- bank-insurance fund was proclaimed nearly broke and a costly
- war threatened to deepen a record federal deficit. Yet through
- it all, U.S. share prices marched merrily upward, rising 6% so
- far this year.
- </p>
- <p> The explanation is that investors aren't looking at the
- present. They're focused on the future--and they like what
- they see. Conventional wisdom on Wall Street holds that the
- market anticipates the effects of economic changes six months
- ahead, suggesting that the market bottom of Oct. 11 foreshadows
- a recovery beginning around April. Whatever the timing,
- investors clearly expect a remarkably short, shallow recession.
- They're not infallible, but collectively they seem to embody
- wisdom they may individually lack. Says James Grant, editor of
- Grant's Interest Rate Observer: "The question of the hour is
- whether the market is right. One always stands humbly before the
- market."
- </p>
- <p> An important reason for investor optimism is the Federal
- Reserve Bank's vigorous efforts to reverse this recession. In
- December the central bank cut the interest rate it charges
- member banks and reduced some of the reserves it requires them
- to keep, freeing around $13 billion of lendable funds. It
- reduced its interest rates again by an unusually large 0.5% in
- February and pumped further billions into the economy by buying
- securities on the open market, causing the prime rate and
- mortgage rates to drop. With the central bank so powerfully
- stimulating the economy, betting on a downturn seemed foolish.
- As they say on the Street: Never fight the Fed.
- </p>
- <p> Investors were also reacting to nuggets of promise among the
- gloomy economic headlines. An index of help-wanted advertising
- turned upward for the first time in five months. A survey by
- Chicago's Federal Reserve Bank of 28 well-regarded economists
- and analysts concluded that this recession could show a decline
- in gross national product of as little as 0.6%, vs. the average
- recessionary swing of 2.6% from peak to bottom. The amount of
- goods sitting in warehouses is extraordinarily low--as a
- proportion of sales, it's the lowest in more than a decade--and economists expect it to fall further in the next several
- weeks. Explains Kenneth Goldstein of the Conference Board, a
- national business-research organization: "Inventories are so
- scarce that any demand will result in an immediate injection of
- new production orders."
- </p>
- <p> Which raises the question of where that demand might come
- from. The most significant drag on the economy, say managers,
- economists, investors and consumers, is uncertainty. People
- seem paralyzed, partly by the war, partly by worry over the
- mess in the banking industry. In a TIME/CNN poll conducted last
- week by Yankelovich, Clancy & Shulman, 63% of respondents said
- they expect the economy to get worse, vs. 31% who expect it to
- improve. Says John McCoy, chairman and chief executive of
- Ohio-based Banc One, among the nation's most prosperous banks:
- "The numbers may indicate a moderate and short recession, but
- can you believe the numbers? The issue no one knows about is
- the length of the war. Whether it's car dealers or retailers,
- everyone is just not doing anything."
- </p>
- <p> Some executives insist that the war is not a serious
- business concern for them since their major fear--that
- hostilities would multiply the price of oil--proved
- unfounded. "We've never felt that war was as important as the
- Fed or financial markets," says Jerry Jasinowski, president of
- the National Association of Manufacturers. But the attitudes of
- individual buyers determine the shape of America's consumer
- economy, and they still seem tied to the war's progress. Darryl
- Hartley-Leonard, president of Hyatt Hotels, figures that "if
- the war were to end in April, there would be such euphoria that
- it would kick us right out of this recession."
- </p>
- <p> Wall Streeters are comforted that some of the smartest
- investors seem to be confident. Warren Buffett, the Wall Street
- legend who in a lifetime has turned $9,000 into more than $3
- billion, recently bought major stakes in troubled industries.
- He invested an estimated $250 million in Wells Fargo & Co. and
- $300 million in Champion International, a paper-products
- company. Laurence Tisch and his family-controlled Loews Corp.
- have sunk hundreds of millions of dollars into Bank of Boston
- and Continental Bank. Concludes security analyst Bruce Benteman,
- who tracks the nation's wealthiest stock pickers: "Everyone
- thinks our problems in banking and real estate are worse than
- they've ever been, but the smartest investors are saying these
- aren't anything that can't be dealt with."
- </p>
- <p> Most economists prefer to stress the uncertainty in the
- economy, but pin them down and their consensus is that growth
- should resume sometime in the second quarter. Not rapid growth--perhaps at an annual rate of only 1% or 2%. But when it
- comes, it will be a welcome change from the 2.1% shrinkage in
- the last quarter of 1990. Precisely how soon the U.S. recession
- will end seems to depend most on whether the war is long or
- short. While the answer to that one is anybody's guess,
- America's investors have emphatically made a judgment.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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