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Wall St. Strategists Quietly Summon the Bull for ’13

By Michael Santoli

Any investor who started watching the markets in the last decade would have a hard time believing there was a time when the casual utterances of popular Wall Street investment strategists would send the Dow surging or skidding. It's like hearing that the "experts" used to predict the weather by studying animal guts, or that Americans once respected their Congressmen.

It's been a long time and two bear markets since the likes of Goldman Sachs' Abby Joseph Cohen or Prudential's Ralph Acampora could send the buy and sell orders flying as their words hit the wires. Heck, for a while there in the 1990s, even secondhand rumors of an "asset-allocation shift" by Elaine Garzarelli, credited by some with predicted the 1987 crash, could tangle the tape.

Today brokerage-house strategist tend to be more modest personages, unburdened by wide renown, articulating their earnings forecasts and their sector recommendations to institutional investors and their own firm's brokers, most of them emitting a Standard & Poor's 500 index forecast only with self deprecation and reluctance.

The public can't summon much excitement about stocks, the indexes have gone sideways for a dozen years while being cut in half twice, and Wall Street firms see little to gain in having an attention-hogging market handicapper going out on a limb with bold market calls.

Yet with all that said, it would be a mistake to ignore the collective work of the dozen or so strategists who represent the larger investment banks to clients and the media. For one thing, individually they put out some useful parsing and packaging of economic and market analysis. As a group, they've gotten things roughly right in their general tone of measured bullishness two of the last three years.

For another, in aggregate they offer a decent idea of where professional-investor psychology rests, given that they tend to reflect, consciously or not, what their institutional clients are up to. When they cluster along one end of the skepticism-to-optimism spectrum, it can pay to be alert for the market defying the cozy consensus.

A year ago, depending on exactly which strategists are sampled, the average S&P 500 forecast for the end of 2012 was around 1375, a call for nearly a 10% expected gain from the 1257 level where it ended 2011. The index is now at 1409, a 2.5% overshoot (for now) of the average prediction, which in this game qualifies as a mere rounding error.

In 2010 the Street forecasters pretty well nailed it, too, when the market also rose just under 10%.