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Dump those global-recession worries, the big money says

11:29 AM, May 14, 2008

Few big money managers buy the idea that we’re headed for a global recession, a new Merrill Lynch & Co. survey shows.

If you want something to worry about, focus on inflation, they say.

The money pros’ views are more optimistic on the economy than U.S. consumers’ views in a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll this month. (Those results are here.) But the two are of the same mind on inflation.

Merrill polls money managers worldwide each month for their take on markets and the economy. The latest survey, performed May 2-8, tallied the opinions of about 200 managers who oversee a total of $615 billion.

Just 18% of the managers said they believed the world has tipped into recession, down from 24% in April. And most don’t see a global recession on the horizon. Only 6% said a recession was "very likely" in the next 12 months and 23% said one was "fairly likely." Sixty-nine percent said recession was either "fairly unlikely" or "very unlikely," up from 58% in April.

Inflation is what’s making these investors nervous. Asked where they thought global core inflation would be in 12 months, 53% now expect it to be higher, up from 44% who said so in April.

And that, in turn, is affecting the managers’ views of where long-term interest rates are headed. Thirty percent now say long-term bond yields will go "a lot higher" in the next 12 months, up from 18% in April, while 50% expect yields to be "slightly higher" and 20% see them unchanged. None predicted yields would fall.

Given the fund managers’ views on the economy and interest rates, maybe it’s no surprise that global stock markets continue to rally -- and that government bond yields continue to rise.

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Comments

Are these money managers the same geniuses who were buying up all the toxic mortgage backed CDOs they could get their hands on 3 years ago?

Why should anyone trust their judgment now when it was so lacking in the recent past?

And we should BELIEVE Merrill and the Wall Street cabal, because...???? Not one has been charged with RICO, fraud, theft, breach of fiduciary duties, ad nauseum??????? Hahahahahahahahashahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!

These are probably the same pros that thought the dot com boom would never end and never saw the sub-prime meltdown or if they did counted on a government bailout. Here is my prediction. By the end of 2008 oil will be selling for $150-$200 a barrel and we will definitely be in a global recession like the U.S. is now. Peak oil is here to stay. The IEA is predicting that by 2020 global oil production will drop to 58,000,000 b/d. If that happens inflation will be the least of our worries because we will be in a depression and if we have any gasoline it will be severely rationed and cost over $20 a gallon in 2020.

Randy Dauley
Dallas, TX

The U.S. economy is being stressed and inflation is back. The challenge for the Next President is to make the economy the foremost priority.

http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2008/05/44th-president-your-first-challenge.html


It is being all but ignored by the current administration and Congress.

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Our Blogger
Tom Petruno
Tom Petruno
Tom Petruno has been chronicling financial markets' highs and lows since 1979, and has been the Times' financial columnist since 1990. He writes on markets, corporate finance and the economy, and how it all ties in to individual investors' portfolios.

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