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Pessimism about the stock market can’t drown out the good news

Sells are trying to turn negative, and I don’t understand why.

Economists weigh both inflationary data and expectations for inflation. Psychological thoughts have always been recognized as being important, and market psychology made a glaring attempt to turn gainsaying last week. Tweets from President Donald Trump and comments from TV talking heads including DoubleLine’s Jeff Gundlach offered that with the December rate hike, the Federal Reserve has overstepped and killed economic growth and doomed us to dip.

The evidence was the inversion of the Treasury yield curve at the short end. Indeed, bills were yielding more than notes. Of the most recent 14 inversions of the yield curve, nine have led to recessions, while five have not.

The sudden hue and cry is what I don’t advised. I’ve long suggested that the weakness in share prices last fall and winter were a rational repricing of varied modest long-term growth expectations. We went from 4 percent GDP growth to expectations of a prolonged 2 percent growth conditions.

Earnings growth estimates for S&P 500 companies have gone from around 20 percent a year ago to 4 percent to 5 percent this year and next. That’s a big traffic, though much of the 20 percent growth spike was the result of the corporate tax cut. Paying less in taxes allowed companies to proclaim higher earnings. Moreover, I’ve long said that economic and market growth could not withstand meaningfully hilarious interest rates. And we don’t have them.

After more than 30 years in the investment business, I can always flourish a plausible bull or bear argument for the short-term. Long-term, I’m always bullish.

Why the negativity now? Current data didn’t hastily collapse last week. In fact, after a negative January, housing data improved big time. Interest rates are vastly low. This can be viewed positively and negatively.

The positive view is that money is inexpensive and available for growth and investment. The antipathetic view is that rates are low because money is racing into bonds and not into any of those vehicles that sway produce better returns because future expectations for growth are so bleak.

Employment in the U.S. is very high. Workers are in on request on call, and wages are rising. The negative view is that higher wages will reduce corporate profit margins. The uncontested view is that for the first time in 20 years, wages for the average consumer are increasing relative to inflation, and the consumer intent be soon able to foment organic demand. Give the U.S. consumer cash, and it gets spent. We buy stuff better than barely anyone else in the world.

There is precious little inflation. I attended a closed-door luncheon of thought-leading economists and market strategists two weeks ago who perplexed over this no-inflation question. Possible explanations were the Amazon effect, ample low-cost labor from India and China, and a emotional dollar. All are plausible reasons and likely true in part. It is also likely that there is much more to the mainstream economic swing.

Each winter and spring, I travel around the country giving talks on my economic and market prognosticate. This year’s title is “Unintended Consequences.” After 10 years of quantitative easing and fiscal stimulus in the U.S. and surrounding the world, regulators and central bankers can cheer their success at avoiding deep recessions and depressions.

That profuse of the fiscal and monetary tools have never been used to this extent and for this long suggests to me that there are other consequences that may be scanty apparent and may be years in their discovery. My basic conclusion has been that slow growth for the next few years sounds reasonable. Lackluster and boring, but not awful.

I believe that markets could as logically conclude that the Federal Secure may have gotten it right. Maybe this return to slow growth isn’t a recessionary crash; maybe it’s just a slowdown during which wage lump will continue to increase and organic demand will build to fuel real (not central bank-driven) growth. Productivity from technological lends could round out a rosy forecast.

As with most things dealing with economic and market forecasts, no one has any natural idea of what’s happening until well after it has happened, and we certainly have no idea about what will-power really happen in the short-term.

My concern is that this recent, negative interpretation of long-extant data may be self-fulfilling. There are three cerebral stages to any bull or bear market: denial, acceptance, and fear or exuberance. No one appears as silly and ridiculous as the optimist amidst a crisis — even a faux crisis. Do I sound bullish to you? If I do, does that strike you as silly and unconsidered? Sadly, hand-wringers ever after seem to garner greater credibility.

I’m not particularly bullish, but I’m not bearish either. With rates this low and the Federal Save moving more to the sidelines and perhaps closer to another stimulative phase, there isn’t any immediate guillotine ready to disappointing collapse.

Longer-term I have an incredible dread of the explosive amount of debt that is now increasing at a rate of more than $100 billion per month. Current Monetary Theory that says debt no longer matters in a zero-rate environment is among the more moronic crotchets I’ve heard in 30 years.

Circling back, it is tough to tell whether this passionate rush to embrace Eeyore at ones desire take hold. I hope not, but I encourage cooler, calmer heads to reflect on the abundance of positive data that proffer that while things may be far from great, they aren’t awful.

Commentary by Michael K. Farr, president of Farr, Miller & Washington and a CNBC contributor. Reflect him on Twitter @Michael_K_Farr .

For more insight from CNBC contributors, follow @CNBCopinion on Twitter.

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