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Red Ink Nightmare

IMG Auteur
Publié le 06 juin 2012
400 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 1 minutes
( 2 votes, 5/5 )
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SUIVRE : Europe

 

 

 

 

It wasn't all that long ago that the bulls were talking about a strengthening U.S. economy "decoupling" from weakening economies elsewhere, allowing companies based here to continue to thrive.


Well, like so much of the nonsense that Wall Street spews forth on a regular basis, this particular notion has proved, once again, to be wide of the mark, as the New York Times reveals in "Europe's Fade Becomes Drag on Sales for U.S. Companies":


Just a few months ago, market watchers were optimistic that the American economy had decoupled from Europe's problems, able to grow even as the Continent faltered.


While most of the focus has been on oppressive debt and debilitated banks in the euro zone, concerns are shifting to the drag that recession in Europe is exerting on the global economy. Over the weekend, President Obama reflected the growing anxiety by saying that Europe's economy is "starting to cast a shadow on our own as well" and that it was partly to blame for the recent slowdown in job creation in the United States.


The economy of the European Union, which holds the 17 nations that use the euro currency and 10 others, is a larger economic unit than the United States or China.


Corporate profits have been one of the brightest spots in the American economy, but the decline in European revenues is part of the reason that analysts have recently ratcheted down their expectations for profit growth in the second quarter. In the case of technology companies, analysts say they believe that about a third of all revenue comes from Europe.


Through the first few months of this year, when technology stocks were leading markets up, the networking giant Cisco was sharing in the good times, ready to leave behind recent difficulties tied to bad acquisitions.


Last month, though, Cisco's chief executive acknowledged that the company's economic outlook in Europe had "gotten worse," helping to push the company's shares down 11 percent in one day.


A. M. Sacconaghi, a technology analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Company, said, "As push has come to shove, we have started to see a real shift in outlook."


Given that one widely followed gauge of economic activity is wallowing in contraction territory in major economic regions around the world, as shown below, it probably won't be long before another Wall Street fantasy becomes a red ink nightmare.




Michael J. Panzner 


 


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