Ed Yardeni Quotes (19 Quotes)


    After rounding up all the usual bearish suspects to blame for the market's disappointing performance this year, I've narrowed the problem to the price of oil, ... Investors fear that higher energy costs must eventually depress earnings growth.

    Because of competitive pressures, it is difficult to raise prices. Companies have to raise their productivity, which keeps inflation down.

    I think the folks at the Fed would like to raise the federal funds rate as high as they can short of seriously depressing economic growth. They want to make sure they have plenty of room to ease next time they have to do so.

    It's been clear that the Fed concluded rates were too low,

    The actual end users, the businesses that actually need these commodities, are discovering that they are making more money by accumulating inventory than turning it into products. It's sort of creating a panic-buying situation, scrambling to hoard.


    Earnings are still going to grow as interest rates and inflation remain low.

    These people could be in some serious trouble.

    Nobody believed in the model when it said that stocks were 60 percent overvalued and nobody believes in it now, ... Valuation is like beauty -- it's in the eye of the beholder.

    The bigger bubble is actually in the financing of homes. Mortgage lenders have loosened their lending standards. Rather than telling a lot of would-be buyers, particularly in places like California, that they don't qualify, they're coming up with all sorts of so-called innovative alternative financing.

    The surprises should be on the upside. It all adds up to very good fourth-quarter numbers.

    Investors should keep that experience of 1999 and early 2000 in mind when looking at the model. The model is not a market timing tool, ... Stocks could stay undervalued for a while.

    For two years, we've seen this tremendous increase in prices, yet the core inflation rate has stayed at 2.3 percent or less, and the only explanation for that is globalization means inflation is contained.

    There could be a severe recession. That doesn't mean there won't be life on the planet Earth in the year 2000, 2001 and beyond.

    The Fed's going to be raising rates because it realizes that good times will be followed by bad times, ... To have a rate of one percent whenever we have bad times again is simply not prudent.

    And so Daiei keeps stumbling along, introducing competitive pressures that shouldn't be there -- prices fall and the entire industry struggles. Deflation, ... is companies that are losing money not going out of business.

    The market goes through these bizarre mood swings. All of a sudden, people are concerned that we're in a soft patch and that it may get worse before it gets better.

    When fixed-income investors conclude that the central bank isn't going to raise rates any time soon, ... there tends to be a convergence of rates.

    Early in 2004, I predicted that energy's share of the SP 500's market capitalization would rise from just below 6 at that time to 15 before the end of the decade. In January, its market-cap share was up to 12.1, while its share of earnings had risen to 9.1 from 6.0 in early 2004.

    What is really new in the commodity world is the extent to which hard commodities have been converted to financial assets through exchange-traded funds and hedge funds.


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