Even though the U.S. economy will continue to “muddle
through” as it grapples with multiple headwinds that trace back to massive debt
deleveraging, “corporate America is delivering the goods, i.e., strong
earnings,” Doll told the audience of 450 advisers gathered at the JW Marriott
Orlando Grande Lakes. Doll also said he appears to have been right about at
least eight of the 10 predictions for 2012 he made at the beginning of the
year.
Advisers can form their “macro perspective for portfolio
construction, investment management and asset allocation” based on one key
trend that will dominate the markets and the economy for the foreseeable
future, Doll said: The post credit-bust world. “As it takes years for the
bubble to build, it takes years to repair—some of it voluntary, some of it
forced,” Doll continued.
“Corporate America ex-financials started deleveraging before
the bubble. Companies are in the best condition since the 1950s,” Doll said.
“After three years of deleveraging, consumers are making great progress on
interest expense as a percentage of income. Let’s hope the government starts
deleveraging someday.”
Amid the ongoing economic uncertainty and talk of a “fiscal
cliff” in the U.S., globally, central banks’ monetary policy is creating a
“sweet spot” for stocks, Doll maintained. “There’s a monetary party going on in
this planet,” he said. “Central banks will do whatever it takes—England, China,
Japan, Brazil and the European Central Bank are all trying to reflate. That is
when stock markets do their best, and even when their economies get there, their
markets all continue to do fine. This is lasting several years, supporting
fundamentals for economic growth and earnings growth. Even with sentiment for
cash and fixed income versus stocks at the extremes—this is the sweet spot.”
Doll added, “I believe yields and the U.S. growth rate will
continue to be on the plus side. These have kept me invested in risk and
equities. Get your underweight-equity clients to dollar-cost average back into
stocks.” For 2012, returns could be in the double-digits, Doll said. For the next 10 years, Doll predicts “an 8% equity world, with 6% coming from earnings and 2% from current yield.” As for all of the talk on the fiscal cliff of 2012, “There’s
complacency on the U.S.’s ability” to fix this problem, he added.
With regards to Doll’s annual 10 predictions for the coming
year, he said he appears to be on track for all of the following points for
2012 except, perhaps, not yet being able to pinpoint when interest rates will
rise (Prediction No. 5) or to accurately predict the outcome of the 2012
Presidential election (Prediction No. 8):
- European debt crisis begins to ease, even as
Europe experiences a recession.
- The U.S. economy continues to muddle through yet
again.
- Despite slowing growth, China and India
contribute more than half the world’s economic growth.
- U.S. earnings grow modestly but fail to exceed
estimates for the first time since the Great Recession.
- Treasury rates rise, and quality spreads fall.
“I’m half right, half wrong on this one, since Treasury rates have not risen,
and while I have predicted they would for the past seven quarters, I now
haven’t a clue when interest rates will rise,” Doll admitted.
- U.S. equities experience a double-digit return
as multiples rise modestly for the first time since the Great Recession.
- U.S. stocks outperform non-U.S. stocks for the
third year in a row. “We have plenty of problems but they have more problems,”
Doll said. “Corporate America is delivering the goods, doing a magnificent job
of delivering earnings and free cash flow yields. Corporate America cleaned up
its act. You see that in the income statements and balance sheets.”
- Dividends and buybacks hit a record high.
- Health care and energy outperform utilities and
financials. “Sectors remain cyclical in this risk-on/risk-off environment,”
Doll said.
- “Republicans retain the House and capture the
Senate,” Doll predicted. “I flipped a coin for the presidency.” Doll noted that
President Barack Obama is facing a decline in his “strong approval” rating of
44% at the time of his inauguration, which had fallen to 21% in December 2011.
“There’s also unemployment,” Doll added. Regardless of whether Obama or
Republican candidate Mitt Romney is elected, Doll has faith the government will
not hit a “brick wall over the fiscal cliff, and strike a deal.”
Until June 2012, Doll spent more than three decades with
BlackRock, most recently as chief equity strategist for fundamental equities.
Doll told the PANC audience he is now serving as a senior analyst with the
world’s largest asset manager as he decides how to spend the next 10 to 20
years of his career.