Meet the Street: The Case for 'Muddling Through'
Here are three years of recent market history condensed into one sentence: The premillennium excess of 1999 begat a massive tech bubble that popped in 2000, which produced a slowdown of corporate profits in 2001 as the economy contracted and officially entered a recession. Got all that?
Now that we're all caught up, what will happen in 2002? To answer that question, TheStreet.com talked with Christoph Bianchet, an economist with Credit Suisse Asset Management. A recent ¿migr¿ to New York from Zurich, where he was a portfolio manager, Bianchet brings a global perspective to the table, and he is fluent in German, English, French and Spanish (Today also happens to be his birthday.) According to Bianchet, 2002 will be a decent year, one with growth due to the shrinking of inventories rather than an increase in demand. In other words, don't get too excited; the recovery will be slow and not entirely pain-free. TSC: Let's start with a basic figure. How much do you think gross domestic product will grow in 2002? Bianchet: I have currently penciled in 1.9% growth, which is somewhere in the middle of the pack. It's tough to keep track of consensus right now. I would think it's rather on the optimistic side. TSC: What's your case for such optimism?Bianchet: Let me first say one thing. In comparison to what we had been experiencing over the past five years until the end of 2000, [1.9% growth] is very disappointing and well below the potential growth rate the Fed and most of the economists have in mind. We're talking about something that is not really exciting. What brings me to this relatively bullish opinion -- at least in comparison to other economists' forecast -- is I think the biggest contribution will come from a simple inventory adjustment. It's a very cyclical thing that has to happen, because we were running down inventories to such an extent this year that a rebound just has to happen. TSC: But if you look at telecommunications equipment, last year we were in a similar situation. People were talking about how their inventories would go down and how we'd have a second-half recovery this year. And yet that inventory problem didn't sort itself out. Bianchet: Correct. In some areas, especially in some technology areas, there is still an excess in inventories. We are still talking about running down inventories further, I'd think, in the first quarter and maybe even in the second. But just from GDP accounting, you get a positive contribution. I don't know how familiar you are with that calculation. When we're running down inventory this quarter at an annual rate which will probably exceed $100 billion, and in the subsequent quarter we get inventories being run down by, let's say, $50 billion. ... Even if inventories are continuing to run down, if it's at a slower pace than the current quarter, you're still going to see a positive contribution to GDP. It's the change of the change that goes into the calculation. TSC: So that's supply. Do you see demand for a lot of things picking up in 2002?
![]() Christoph Bianchet, Economist, Credit Suisse Asset Management |
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