Wednesday, February 6, 2008

If recession hits, dollar and Wall St may fare best

(Reuters) - Sticking with equities and buying dollars might be the best way to profit if a U.S. economic recession materializes, as investors may have already discounted the gloomiest scenario for the world's largest economy.

As the chances of a U.S. recession, typically defined as two quarters of economic contraction, increased late last year, investors executed classic investment strategies associated with recession risks -- selling stocks and buying government bonds.

World stocks, measured by MSCI, are down 15 percent from November's record highs. the S&P 500 main U.S. stock index .SPX shed more than 11 percent from all-time highs while benchmark U.S. yields have hit 4-1/2 year lows.

"The text book trade for recession is to sell equities and buy bonds. Sell cyclical and IT and buy pharmaceuticals and other sectors negatively correlated with the economic cycle. But this has been already done," said Luca Paolini, strategist at Credit Suisse in London.

"This time, in terms of equities versus bonds, the valuation story is compelling for equities. So overweighting equities will prove profitable."
 

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