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In the markets: In advance of the Christmas holiday, US stocks rallied in low-volume trading along with oil and other commodities. The gains brought the large cap S&P 500 index back into positive territory for the year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 424 points to end the week at 17,552. The LargeCap S&P 500 gained +2.76%, and is now up 1.5% year to date. The MidCap S&P 400 and SmallCap Russell 2000 gained +2.97% and +3.01%, respectively. The Nasdaq composite rose +2.55%, ending the week at 5,048. Canada’s Toronto Stock Exchange Index gained also, rising +2.3%. Among European markets, the United Kingdom’s FTSE led the way up with a pop of +3.3%, Germany’s DAX gained +1.1% and France’s CAC 40 advanced a less-robust +0.8%. In Asia, Australia’s ASX and Hong Kong both gained +2%, but the Japanese Nikkei slipped -1.1% - its fourth weekly loss. In commodities, crude oil rocketed over +9%, ending the week at $38.12 per barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude oil. Precious metals also participated in the rally as Gold gained +1%, rising $10.80 an ounce to $1075.80 and Silver tacked on 2% to $14.38 an ounce. In US economic news, the Labor Department reported that initial jobless claims declined by 5,000 to 267,000. The smoothed 4-week average rose slightly to 272,500, a 3-month high, but has held below 300,000 for most of 2015 after hitting a long-term low in July. US average home prices have now officially surpassed their 2007 peak, according to Federal Home Financing Agency (FHFA) report. Prices increased +0.5% on a seasonally-adjusted basis, according to the report, which matched the median estimate of the 16 economists polled by Bloomberg. The FHFA’s monthly index is now +0.3% higher than the level reached in March 2007. Nevada, Colorado, and Arizona had the biggest increases. The National Association of Realtors reported that existing home sales declined -10.5% last month to an annual rate of 4.76 million units, the lowest annual rate in almost 2 years, which missed expectations by a wide margin. Existing-home sales fell -3.8% versus a year earlier. NAR blamed the weak housing numbers on a lack of supply. In contrast to existing home sales, new housing starts jumped in November with single-family starts and permits hitting the highest levels in nearly 8 years. The Commerce Department reported that new home sales rose +4.3% to a 490,000 annual rate. The Commerce Department reported that US GDP rose at a 2% annual rate in the 3rd quarter. The US is on pace for a 10th straight year of failing to achieve the desired 3% annual growth rate. Exports were slightly weaker than previous estimates thanks to a stronger dollar, but business investment rose at a 9.9% rate - the best in a year. Consumer spending rose at a solid 3% pace on a stronger job market and lower gas prices. The Chicago Federal Reserve’s National Activity index declined last month to -0.3; the index is now negative for the 4th straight month. The 3-month smoothed moving average of the National Activity Index fell to -0.2, the lowest since the beginning of the year. The National Activity Index is made up of indicators that attempt to show whether economic growth is above or below historical trends. The production-related indicators fell further into negative territory. The employment indicators were positive but declined. Consumption and housing indicators remained negative but improved. In the United Kingdom, retail sales grew weaker than expected coming in at 19 according to the business lobby group CBI. Expectations had been for a reading of 21. The British economy gained 0.4% over the previous quarter. Year over year, GDP grew 2.1%. In the Eurozone, consumer confidence improved to -5.7 beating estimates of -5.9. The index reached its highest level since the summer and the latest reading is well above its long-term average. Producer prices in Germany, Europe’s largest economy, declined -0.2% last month. Consumer goods declined 0.1% while energy fell -0.2%, and capital goods increased by +0.1%. Finally, it’s that time of the year again. Each year, the best-and-brightest at every major Wall Street investment firm present their highly-educated and generously-compensated prognostications for the coming year. There are 22 such luminaries bearing the title “Chief Market Strategist” at well-known firms like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Each year they are asked to forecast what the stock market will do over the next year. They have access to the best information, Ivy League-educated economists, teams of analysts, and connected politicians. We can’t expect their track records to be perfect, but surely these folks produce truly superior predictions…right? Morgan Housel, a columnist at investing site The Motley Fool (www.fool.com), dug deep into the numbers and what he found was disappointing, to say the least. The average S&P 500 forecast of these experts was off by an average of 14.7% per year, a difference of more than 150% of the actual average return of the S&P 500. Note too in the chart below that as a group the experts did not predict even a single down year, instead choosing to always see a rising market. A blindfolded monkey with darts would have been substantially superior to this august group – and would cost a lot less, too! (sources: Reuters, Barron’s, Wall St Journal, Bloomberg.com, ft.com, guggenheimpartners.com, ritholtz.com, markit.com, financialpost.com, Eurostat, Statistics Canada, Yahoo! Finance, stocksandnews.com, marketwatch.com, wantchinatimes.com, BBC, 361capital.com, pensionpartners.com, cnbc.com, FactSet; Figs 3-5 source W E Sherman & Co, LLC)