The Oracles of Goldman Sachs
I have always admired Goldman Sachs as the smartest of the smart, as "the" Investment Banking firm. When I haven’t gotten a chance to catch up with emails and reports, and I go back and notice "forecasts" and predictions from columnists or analysts, I love taking a look at how accurate they were.
From a report a friend of a friend shared from Goldman’s predictions late this spring/early summer, sent to prospective clients, a small sample:
We expect core inflation to be contained in a range of 2.5-3.0%.
[Instead we are witnessing deflation]
We expect that the Fed will continue easing in 2008 with the Fed Funds rate ultimately settling at 1.25% to 1.75%.
We anticipate 10-Year Treasury yields to range between 3.5-4.0% for 2008.
[We wish]
And the kicker:
Our central case scenarios for 2008 call for operating earnings of $75, respectively, and reported earnings $67. These estimates result in an S&P 500 price target of 1475-1540 for 2008 year end.
They also provided a "Bad case" scenario, where the S&P would end in 2008 at "1200." That was their bad case scenario. Well, we are still a few weeks away from year-end, but so far it’s tanked far below, at 896 AFTER a nice rally (it hit a low of 752 on Nov 21). Their "positive case" was S&P 500 hitting 1600.
So much for my thinking at least Goldman knows what’s going on.
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Jeffrey Sachs and Markey Mark
Besides the fact that Jeff Sachs (the uber-economist) is a smart and good guy, I just realized he looks like Mark Wahlberg’s older brother (or young Dad). If you don’t believe me, watch him on the Fareed Zakaria GPS interview of Oct 12. But in the meantime this will have to do as proof:
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Socrates only knew one thing….
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