Meet the Street: A New Kind of Recovery
This isn't going to be your father's economic recovery, says H. Vernon Winters.
That's because this recovery won't be led by increased consumer or corporate spending, as has been the case in most past recoveries, says Winters, the chief investment officer for Mellon Private Wealth Management, which manages $50 billion in assets for high net worth individuals. Instead, the exhaustion of retail inventories will be what revives the economy. Winters further says the economy may have bottomed out, but that the "shallow recession" the U.S. is in likely will last at least a few more months. And it will be quite some time before corporate spending regains momentum, he says. As for consumer spending, it's been strong and, Winters believes, should continue to be. Winters is advising his clients to look to high-yield bond
funds, small-
and mid-cap
stocks and international equities. Here's his take on what investors would be wise to do.
TSC: Over the past 20 months, time and again, investors have been hearing how a recovery is just around the corner. What do you foresee for the year 2002 that investors can really count on at this point?
![]() H. Vernon Winters Chief Investment Officer, Private Wealth Management, Mellon |
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and the major indices, if any?
Winters: We don't make those projections, but I will say that in this environment, broader diversification makes a lot of sense. Think about it: You could go back to the beginning of the long-term secular market in 1982. All you really needed to do was [invest in] large-cap and long bonds. That was a marvelous strategy. But I think both of those have peaked out in terms of the relative performance they are going to deliver. You need to diversify.
Small- and mid-cap are one way of doing that. I think international investments, though, are also going to [have some strong returns] compared to the U.S., if you look out to the much more modest downturn that they experienced in Europe. Even Japan, which has been a drag on everything, is likely to turn around. There is very little downside left in Japan.
As well, we think the large spreads on high-yield bonds provide an excellent reason for investment, and we are recommending these instruments to our investors as an alternative in the equity portion, not the fixed-income portion, of their portfolios.
TSC: And consumer spending? Do you expect it to continue to hold up in light of all of the continuing layoffs, even at the successful companies, which now seem to be jumping on the layoff bandwagon?
Winters: Yes. Consumers will continue to spend. Consumers, in general, are continuing to make more money.
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