Reliable Brokers
Online Investing
Alerts & Analysis
Easy Trading

Wall Street in 2016: What could possibly go wrong?

Update : 29 Dec 2015, 09:21 PM

By all rights, 2016 should be a good year for the US stock market.

The Federal Reserve’s recent rate hike signals confidence in the economy and presidential election years typically reward investors. Most experts are predicting a seventh year for the current bull market, with strategists in a recent poll expecting the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index to end 2016 at about 2,207, roughly 8% higher than it is now.

But a lot could go wrong. The same strategists have cataloged a long list of worries - everything from a destabilizing US election to a meltdown far away - that could hit stocks hard.

Here is their laundry list of concerns. For those who’d rather stay optimistic, remember the old chestnut: Wall Street climbs a wall of worry.

Companies might stop earning profits

Most of the 30 strategists polled by Reuters cited weak earnings as their prominent concern. With S&P earnings growth projected to be flat in 2015, stocks already are pricey. The market is trading at roughly 19.3 times trailing earnings, well above its 15 average. Any stumble in earnings would make stocks even pricier.

Thomson Reuters analysts now expect revenue to grow 3.9% in 2016, meaning any increases in costs could keep earnings flat for a second year in a row.

“If labor costs start moving up a bit and interest expense is moving up ... it’s going to be hard to keep margins up,” said Bob Doll, chief equity strategist at Nuveen Asset Management in Princeton, New Jersey.

Strong dollar could keep inflicting pain

The dollar, up 8.4% against a basket of currencies in 2015, is expected to see further gains next year as the United States hikes rates while other countries continue easy money policies.

That could further pressure sales of US companies with heavy international exposure because it makes US goods more expensive overseas.

“If we have a similar movement to last year, then we’re going to have roughly a $28bn hit to corporate America,” said Wolfgang Koester, chief executive of currency risk consulting firm FireApps. He said he expects the dollar to shave 3 to 4 cents from first-quarter earnings of US companies with foreign exposure.

The public could elect a fringe candidate

Stocks historically do well in a presidential election year, with the S&P gaining in 13 of the 16 presidential election years since 1950, regardless of which party won, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac.

But strategists wonder if 2016 might be one of the exceptions to the trend, with outliers like Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders running this year.

“The more extreme the candidate, the less well-received the candidate typically is by the stock market,” said Kristina Hooper, US investment strategist at Allianz Global Investors. She said she expected election activity throughout the year to contribute to market volatility.

The fed could get aggressive

The stock market rallied on Dec 16 when the US Federal Reserve announced its first rate hike along with strong hints that it would move slowly on future increases.

But if the central bank continues to raise rates without seeing higher inflation or an earnings pick-up, that could dent stocks. “Rate hikes should be a consistent worry,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer of Solaris Group in Bedford Hills, New York.

As rates rise, stocks could become less attractive compared with other asset classes like bonds.

Commodities could fall

The continuing decline in oil prices, which has hurt energy companies and the banks and investors that lend to them, has some investors spooked. 

Top Brokers