• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

PIMCO'S Gross says stocks are appropriately valued

NEW YORK
Fri Jul 27, 2007 11:04am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks and high-yield corporate bonds are back to appropriate levels, the world's biggest bond fund manager said on Friday, a day after fears of spreading problems in the housing market triggered a rout in global stock and credit markets.

Bonds

Speaking on CNBC Television, Bill Gross, chief investment officer for Pacific Investment Management Co., also said he does not believe an economic recession is looming.

Corporate earnings are holding up fine in a reasonably performing U.S. economy, Gross said, dismissing a notion that the turmoil in markets was signaling a sharp deceleration in the economy.

After he spoke, the government reported that the U.S. economy grew at a 3.4 percent annual pace in the second quarter, higher than Wall Street economists had predicted.

"There's nothing wrong with stocks at this point," Gross said. That said, he would be neither a buyer nor seller of stocks at the moment.

His comments came a day after U.S. and global stock markets swooned, corporate credit markets tumbled and government bonds soared. Major U.S. stock indexes .DJI .IXIC fell by more than 2 percent each, with the largest 3,000 U.S. stocks losing some $420 billion in value.

On a price-to-earnings basis, stocks are now the cheapest they've been since early April, with the S&P 500 .SPX valued at 15.34 times prospective 2007 earnings. A week ago the benchmark U.S. equity index was trading at a multiple of more than 16.

Investors fled to the safety of U.S. Treasuries. Benchmark government note yields, which move opposite to their price, fell to their lowest in two months, ending Thursday just above 4.8 percent. They were lower still on Friday morning, dropping to 4.75 percent.

At the heart of the market's anxiety are questions about how far the meltdown in the U.S. housing market will spread. Already it has resulted in tightening credit for both consumers and corporations. Investors are worried it could stall consumer spending and limit access to the financing needed for the corporate buyouts that have supported stock prices recently.

Gross' comments come three days after he said defaults on subprime mortgages were spreading into U.S. credit markets, producing a "sudden liquidity crisis" in the high-yield bond sector. These loans go to borrowers with spotty credit.

On Thursday, buyers went essentially on strike in the U.S. junk bond market thanks to a mounting backlog of derailed corporate buyout financings. The concern also afflicted high-grade corporate bonds, widening the yield spread on top-quality bonds by about 5 basis points.



More from Reuters

Photo

Senate on track to pass healthcare bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democrats moved closer on Monday to passing landmark healthcare legislation by Christmas after scoring a win in the first big test vote and gaining the support of a powerful lobbying group for doctors. | Video

A view of a cemetery for foreign prisoners in the settlement of Spassk in central Kazakhstan December 10, 2009. REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov

Despair in the Kazakh steppe

In icy Kazakhstan, barbed wire and crumbling barracks stand in testament to the decades of cruelty millions of ethnic Germans endured in Soviet gulag camps during Stalin's Great Terror campaign.  Full Article | Slideshow 

Two men shake hands in a file photo.    REUTERS/File

Let's make a deal

The battered M&A sector will make a tepid recovery in the coming year and three hot sectors will lead the way, according to a Thomson Reuters analysis.  Full Article