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2006 Economic Outlook John Kim, CFA President Prudential Retirement January 5, 2006
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1 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition
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2 U.S. Economy in Transition % % % U.S. GDP F
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3 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy
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4 Healthy Underlying Fundamentals Highly flexible and resilient economy Efficient and competitive business sector Controlled wage and price inflation Strong corporate balance sheets Strong financial system Expanding business capital investments
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5 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline
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6 Energy Prices: Unsustainable Spikes
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7 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow
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8 A “Consuming” Consumer
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9 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow 5.Housing Cycle Downturn is Happening
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10 Historic Real Estate Busts
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11 Historic Real Estate Busts Price At TopYearPrice At BottomYearPercent Loss Austin $109,0001986$81,2001990-25.8 Detroit $63,7001981$55,9001984-12.2 Honolulu $268,6001994$225,5001999-16.0 Los Angeles $222,2001990$176,3001996-20.7 New York $213,1001989$197,5001991-7.3 Phoenix $106,2001987$100,7001990-5.1 San Francisco $286,6001990$261,0001994-9.6 Source: CNN, September 2005
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12 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow 5.Housing Cycle Downturn is Happening 6.Federal Reserve Tightening will End in 1st Quarter
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13 Path of Fed Policy is Much More Uncertain..an energy shock presents complex choices for monetary policy. It reduces output and employment for a time, which calls for easier policy, but it also temporarily raises inflation, which calls for tighter policy. Moreover, the size of these two effects is difficult to gauge in advance. --Janet L. Yellen, San Francisco Fed President September 8, 2005
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14 New Fed Chairman Adds to Uncertainty Continuity of policy? More dovish than predecessor? Politically savvy? Too blunt? Moves toward inflation targeting? Unconventional policy measures? Source: The Economist Prices as of 10/13/2005 Quotes from Intrade Exchange
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15 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow 5.Housing Cycle Downturn is Happening 6.Federal Reserve Tightening will End in 1st Quarter 7.Dis-inflationary Bias will Renew
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16 Few Signs of Energy Inflation Passing through to Core
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17 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow 5.Housing Cycle Downturn is Happening 6.Federal Reserve Tightening will End in 1st Quarter 7.Dis-inflationary Bias will Renew 8.Corporate Profit Growth will Decelerate
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18 U.S. Corporate Profits Source: Bloomberg
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19 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow 5.Housing Cycle Downturn is Happening 6.Federal Reserve Tightening will End in 1st Quarter 7.Dis-inflationary Bias will Renew 8.Corporate Profit Growth will Decelerate 9.Global Economy will Slow
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20 Global Economic Growth: Solid, Yet Slowing Source: IMF WEO, September 2005 IMF World Economic Outlook Projections Current Projections 200420052006 World Output5.14.3 Advanced Economies3.32.52.7 United States4.23.53.3 Euro Area2.01.21.8 Japan2.72.0 UK3.21.92.2 Emerging/developing economies7.36.46.1 China9.59.08.2
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21 2006 Economic Forecast 1.U.S. Economy will be in Transition 2.Underlying Fundamentals will Remain Healthy 3.Energy Prices will Decline 4.Consumer Spending will Finally Slow 5.Housing Cycle Downturn is Happening 6.Federal Reserve Tightening will End in 1st Quarter 7.Dis-inflationary Bias will Renew 8.Corporate Profit Growth will Decelerate 9.Global Economy will Slow 10.Baby Boomers will Finally Grow Up
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22 Boomers Turn 60 Famous Boomer Birthdays Diane Keaton – January 5 Cher – May 20 Donald Trump – June 14 George W. Bush – July 6 Bill Clinton – August 19 Suzanne Somers – October 16 Jimmy Buffett – December 25 Looming Crisis in Retirement and Healthcare Grass roots sentiment for structural change
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Happy New Year!
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