How the Stimulus Could Affect Stocks

Wall Street warily eyes government rebates

By Kirk Shinkle

Posted: April 22, 2008

Specialty retailers as a whole might not be so lucky. Oppenheimer's Meyer remains generally downbeat, noting that in the last recession, a weighted average of her group underperformed the S&P 500 by 25 to 35 percent. It's off just 10 to 15 percent in this downturn. She predicts any rebate-inspired rally will simply be a "head fake" before the next leg down.

One short-term exception, she says, could be urban fashion retailer Citi Trends. The company saw notable one-time gains during both the last tax rebate and after government checks were cut following Hurricane Katrina, when same-store sales jump above 20 percent from single digits in earlier months. "Citi's customers are used to spending their disposable income on clothing," she says.

Better bets remain the fastest growers that have managed to buck much of the sector slowdown already. There, Urban Outfitters and J. Crew top Meyer's list of picks. "They are absolutely on top of their game and poised to have a terrific year," she said of J. Crew, while at Urban, "you would never know we're in a recessionary environment based on traffic in their stores."

stimulus

Personally, I am from middle america, wages are zero and if wall street worries about how much of my money they will get, I'm not concerned about that. I concentrate on continued unemployment from a state that is the highest in the nation ranking unemployed workers. I need this help to "make it" while continuing to seek employment. I've already filed bankruptcy and my unemployment has stopped. So what will I do with my stimulus? pay my winter gas bill. $600. could not even pay my rent in a modest apartment. Think Wallstreet has troubles, think again!

Barbara Fulmer of MI @ Apr 23, 2008 07:43:28 AM

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