<H1 class=times24 style="FONT-WEIGHT: normal; MARGIN: 0px">olished Performance<DATEANDTIMESTAMPWITHBR /></H1>
<DIV style="ADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 0px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 0px; FONT: bold 11px Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif; PADDING-TOP: 12px"><SPAN id=byl style="FONT: bold 11px Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif">By <B>MICHAEL SANTOLI</B><DATEANDTIMESTAMPWITHBR /></SPAN><BR></DIV><SPAN class=verdana12>
< class=verdana><B>FOR ALL THE STOCK MARKET'S TROUBLES ALONG THE WAY</B>, 2006 is ending in positively agreeable fashion for investors. And this agreeable market has fostered plenty of agreement among Wall Street handicappers that 2007 will be, you guessed it, another decent year for stocks.</P>
<P class=verdana>Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke survived his probationary period.</P>
<P class=verdana>The housing market tanked. The Democrats snatched control of Congress in a nasty midterm election, and Americans were assaulted daily by reminders of a brutal war in Iraq. Through it all, except for a brief and scary spell last summer, investors have enjoyed a powerful -- and, so far, tireless -- rally.</P>
<P class=verdana>Were the book to close today on 2006, the major indexes would have notched their fourth straight year of gains, with returns above the long-term average, at that. The Standard & Poor's 500 stock index is up 12.7% to 1407 year to date, and its total return with reinvested dividends approaches 15%. That's more than double the total return for the Dow Jones Corporate Bond Index and triple what 10-year Treasuries have delivered.</P><IMG class=imglftbdy height=272 alt=[graphic] hspace=0 src="http://online.barrons.com/public/resources/images/BA-AH201_out_20061208140545.jpg" width=245 align=left border=0>
<P class=verdana>The Dow Jones Industrial Average is ahead by 14.6%, to 12,278, and in October hit a new all-time high, more than six years after first surpassing 12,000. And while lagging a bit owing to the sluggish performance of mega-cap technology shares, the Nasdaq Composite has gained more than 10%.</P>
<P class=verdana>Perhaps it's a bit imprecise to say investors "enjoyed" this year's generosity, as professional investors have had a bear of a time keeping pace with the bull run. More than 70% of active large-cap fund managers were trailing the market as of Oct. 31. To have exploited the year's twists and turns fully, one would have had to bet heavily on a commodity boom until May, a sharp slowdown and commodity bust into summer and a recovery led by consumer spending this fall.</P>
<P class=verdana>What's more, much of the fuel for the recent rally was provided by stubborn short sellers, who expected the market to swoon into the midterm elections, as history suggested it would. Their plans foiled, the shorts were forced to cover their positions, sending stocks even higher.</P>
<P class=verdana>The market's gains are all the more impressive given that all the year's upside, and more, has come since midyear, when concerns about slower economic growth and commodity-fueled inflation culminated in an 8% pullback in the indexes, the largest decline of the bull market that began in late 2002. Stocks have risen in each of the past five months and in 11 of the past 12.</P>
<P class=verdana>This winning streak so far has exceeded the forecasts of all but one of the Wall Street strategists surveyed by <I>Barron's</I> a year ago (Prudential's Ed Keon), and has emboldened this year's group to pencil in still more upside for '07. Collectively, the Street's forecasters are looking for an 8% gain (that's both the average and median prediction), which would place the S&P 500 at around 1520 by year end, on the threshold of its all-time record of 1550 set in early 2000.</P>
<P class=verdana>Neatly summing up the group's general view, Goldman Sachs' longtime chief investment strategist, Abby Joseph Cohen, says: "Share prices properly reflect a favorable fundamental picture for 2007. Growth is moderating, inflation pressures are abating and the [Federal Reserve] is expected to maintain a friendly stance. Equity valuation is supportive." Cohen thinks the S&P 500 can rise 10%, to 1550 in a year.</P>
<P class=verdana>"We're cautiously optimistic," says Michael Ryan, chief strategist for the wealth-management group at UBS, who has an S&P target of 1500. "The market is fairly valued, at a level where neither bear nor bull markets usually begin."</P>
<P class=verdana>Says Henry McVey at Morgan Stanley: "Stocks look cheap relative to bonds at current levels. When you have a 6.5% earnings yield [the inverse of the price-earnings ratio], and a 4.5% bond yield, we want to own equities."</P>
<P class=verdana><B>WHATEVER THE VALUE</B> of the Street's so-called experts in an inherently unpredictable world, it's always worthwhile to understand where the consensus sits, where the play callers are in broad agreement and, therefore, what areas are susceptible to surprise or even shock.</P>
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<TD class=medcptnocrd><B>A Three-peat for Energy?</B> Energy has a shot at a third straight year as the best-performing sector, a rare feat. Dark-horse contender telecom is its only rival.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<P class=verdana>For starters, each of the nine strategists featured in this story is expecting an up year for stocks, as are numerous others whose outlook <I>Barron's</I> solicited. Often there is at least one bear in the group, and last year there were two. Contrarians might argue that the Street is too happy for the market's good.</P>
<P class=verdana>That said, no one is calling for huge upside. The most ardent bull -- Ed Keon, again -- thinks the S&P can rise 13%. Everyone else is bunched between 2% and 10%. In this post-bubble environment, strategists feel scant motivation to make audacious forecasts.</P>
<P class=verdana>Likewise, there's a tight range of opinion about several aspects of the current outlook. All the strategists see 10-year Treasury yields of 4.5% to 5.10%, and all but one firm -- JPMorgan -- is calling for the Fed to ease. Yet a majority assumes either a flat yield curve or one that remains inverted by the end of '07. Clearly, the crowd would be unprepared for any bond-market volatility and floored if the Fed did nothing, or worse, tightened.</P>
<P class=verdana>To summarize the prevailing view, the economy is in a classic midcycle slowdown, engineered by the Fed's 17 rate increases through last June and abetted by slumps in the housing and auto markets. Economic growth will ebb, but a recession will be averted. Inflationary forces will cool. Rates will stay tame. The Fed will begin cutting rates by midyear.</P>
<P class=verdana>Corporate-earnings growth will recede from its torrid double-digit pace into the mid-single digits. But investors will pay up in terms of slightly higher price-earnings multiples on stocks as they cheer the Fed and gain confidence that economic growth will persist. Liquidity is abundant, companies are flush with cash and buyout activity is accelerating.</P>
<P class=verdana>Got that?</P>
<P class=verdana>Of course, arguments are what make markets -- or at least what make them interesting. Therefore, we offer the following look at the key themes separating this year's bulls from bears, or at least the snorting bulls from their timid cousins.</P>
<P class=b13><B>Party Like 1995?</B></P>
<P class=verdana>By far, the most beloved bullish analogy for the coming year is the mid-'90s pause in the economic expansion that launched the great bull market of the late 1990s.</P>
<P class=verdana>The circumstantial similarities are obvious: Growth was slowing, and the Fed was lifting rates to forestall inflation. Stocks endured a churning, range-bound period, and the Fed then reversed and eased credit as growth troughed. The stock market marched higher through the year, ending '95 with a gain of 30%,</P>
<P class=verdana>It would be sweet if history repeated, or at least rhymed. Cash-laden companies today are spending and global economies growing, offsetting the drag of a recession in construction and a slowdown in manufacturing. In other words, the deck is stacked for a hoped-for soft landing.</P>
<P class=verdana>Yet it's hard to argue the current period has seen the kind of financial pain that preceded the late-'90s gain. In 1994, the bond market crashed as the Fed's tightening stunned the investment community. Although the indexes were flat and never quite fell 10% from peak to trough, more than 40% of New York Stock Exchange-listed stocks fell at least 30%. That's hardly the case today. Too, bond yields plunged in '95, something no one is expecting now. Mexico's peso collapsed and Orange County, Calif., went bust.</P>
<P class=b13><B>The Fed's Intentions</B></P>
<P class=verdana>Richard Bernstein, chief quantitative strategist at Merrill Lynch, notes that Wall Street sentiment was so sour through 1995 that strategists on average were recommending equity weightings of less than 50% as the market took off. Bernstein's 2007 targets won't be unveiled until Tuesday, but he continues to look for single-digit index returns.</P>
<P class=verdana>It was the unwinding of anxiety in '95, and the ability of companies to generate earnings far exceeding expectations, that provided the lift for the equity market that year. Granted, none of the strategists are suggesting as much upside today, but the bullish thesis rests now, as then, on the notion that a refreshing, stock-friendly pause and an accommodating Fed are the probable outcomes.</P>
<P class=verdana>In 1994 and '95, the Fed's first tightening and easing maneuvers blindsided investors. In recent years, a more transparent central bank has encouraged the Street to anticipate changes in policy. This probably has smoothed the market response, as the steady bond market suggests.</P>
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<TD class=medcptnocrd><B>How'd They Do?</B> On balance, Wall Street's strategists were insufficiently optimistic a year ago. Three nearly pegged the S&P's current level, one overshot it, and most were far too cautious -- or bearish.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<P class=verdana>Binky Chadha, chief strategist at Deutsche Bank, is looking for the same sort of "soft landing" that distinguished the 1990s, and places a 75% probability on such an outcome. He thinks the current quarter will see only 1% growth in the nation's gross domestic product and prove the low point for growth in the cycle. He expects the Fed to cut short-term rates by a quarter of a percentage point early in 2006.</P>
<P class=verdana>Yet because alternative scenarios -- a hard landing, or reaccelerating growth with no Fed move -- would be bad for stocks, he recommends investors buy insurance against declining prices via options, which today are cheap.</P>
<P class=verdana>The Institute for Supply Management manufacturing index last month fell below 50, implying contraction in activity. Citigroup's Tobias Levkovich notes that each time in recent history the ISM breached 50 on the downside, the Fed eased within six months.</P>
<P class=verdana>The most aggressive call for sharply lower short-term rates is for policy makers to lop 1.25 percentage points off today's 5.25% federal-funds rate in 2007. Ryan of UBS and Goldman's Cohen share this view. Ryan thinks GDP growth of only 2%, and lower headline inflation, will clear the way for such a move and lead to a dramatic re-steepening of the yield curve.</P>
<P class=verdana>Tom McManus of Bank of America suspects the market is "overly confident" about the prospect of an imminent rate cut. "We don't deny that the Fed might cut rates in '07, but it won't likely be as fast as the markets would like it," he says.</P>
<P class=verdana>At the moment, the bond market is betting heavily that the Fed is itching to lower rates, presumably to head off a housing-induced slowdown. Yet this presumes that Chairman Bernanke's recent emphasis on the continuing inflation threat is mere lip-flapping rather than genuine vigilance.</P>
<P class=verdana>Abhijit Chakrabortti of JPMorgan was last year's most vocal bear, and he's passing for same this year, although with a prediction that the market will gain just 2% in 2007. He believes steady growth and inflation readings above the Fed's comfort zone will leave Bernanke & Co. on hold or prompt more rate increases. If the Fed defies expectations and either keeps rates unchanged or lifts them, "it will prove to be a significant and speedy downside catalyst for the market," he says.</P>
<P class=verdana>McVey at Morgan Stanley has a different reason for thinking the Fed will hold off trimming interest rates for as long as possible. "The last thing [Bernanke] wants to do is create more irrational exuberance in the private-equity market," he says. "Liquidity is still plentiful."</P><IMG class=imgnonbdy height=478 alt=[BA-TIMELINE.jpg] hspace=0 src="http://online.barrons.com/public/resources/images/OA-AI093_BATIME_20061208192315.jpg" width=730 border=0></SPAN> |