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도널드 콘 연준리 부의장, '경제전망' 연설(원문)

기사입력 : 2008년05월21일 08:56

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※ 번역할 언어 선택

Vice Chairman Donald L. Kohn
At the National Conference on Public Employee Retirement Systems Annual Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana
May 20, 2008

The Economic Outlook

These have been challenging times for the U.S. economy. Homebuilding and house prices have gone through prolonged and deep declines; the resulting broad pullback in financial markets from risk-taking and credit extension has transmitted some of the weakness in the housing sector to other types of spending. At the same time, a substantial run-up in the prices of petroleum and other commodities has simultaneously increased inflation and damped spending on other goods and services. I don't need to tell you that challenging times for the economy are also challenging times for those entrusted with managing pension funds. So I thought you might find it useful this morning for me to review where I think the economy is and where it might be going. That, in turn, depends critically on developments in financial markets, and I'll have something to say about those developments as well. Finally, I'll end with a few thoughts about what the recent turbulence in financial markets may imply for the administration of public pension funds.1

Recent Economic Developments
Economic activity this year has been quite sluggish. The weakness in activity continues to be shaped by the fallout from the contraction in housing markets that began two years ago. The demand for housing continued to decline early this year, and sales could fall even further in coming months, given the tightness in mortgage lending. Nonprime mortgages have all but disappeared from the mortgage market. Moreover, with only limited securitizations of prime jumbo loans, rates on those loans are relatively high, and their share of total originations has shrunk significantly since last July. Rates for fixed-rate conforming loans have dropped to close to 6 percent. But even there, the good news is tempered somewhat because, with delinquencies on prime mortgages rising, the government-sponsored enterprises have tightened their standards for conforming loans and added fees for borrowers with lower credit scores and less collateral. All prominent measures of house prices are now showing declines. Although lower prices would eventually help bolster housing demand, the expectations of further declines in prices may currently be exacerbating the difficulties in housing markets.

In this environment, homebuilders have made only limited progress in reducing the very large overhang of unsold new homes despite having cut starts to a level not seen since early 1991. Single-family starts fell to an annual rate of 690,000 in April; the pace of new activity has now dropped by a 1/2 million units in each of the past two years. The supply of existing homes on the market also remains quite high and is likely to be augmented in coming months by rising foreclosures. As a result, further cuts in construction appear to be in train.

The sharp contraction in housing was at the center of the slowdown in economic activity that began late last year. By early this year, however, the spillovers from the housing market correction onto other sectors of the economy began to show through more clearly; consumer and business spending, which had slowed at the end of 2007, has remained on a shallow trajectory since then.

In particular, spending on consumer goods, including new motor vehicles, has been soft. Since last fall, rising prices for energy and food have made a significant dent in the purchasing power of consumers' incomes. Moreover, despite some improvement in the stock market recently, households' net worth has deteriorated since the beginning of the year as the prices of homes have declined; and credit conditions have tightened. In reaction to these adversities, households seem to have become extremely downbeat about prospects for jobs and income.

Business spending for equipment and software edged down in the first quarter, and the environment for capital spending remains difficult; businesses are uncertain about the economic outlook, and lenders have adopted more stringent lending standards. However, while conditions are quite tight for riskier firms, credit does appear to be more readily available to investment-grade businesses.

More difficult financing conditions also seem to be leaving an imprint on nonresidential construction, which now appears to be softening after a couple of years of sharp gains. According to our April Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices, a large majority of banks, which are the largest provider of commercial mortgages, reported tightening standards on commercial real estate over the preceding three months.2 The issuance of securitized commercial real estate loans, which funds a little more than one-fourth of all outstanding commercial mortgages, has slowed to a trickle. Sales of commercial properties fell sharply in the first quarter, and late last year prices appeared to have begun to decline.

A bright spot has been the external sector. Although the pace of real activity in some foreign economies also appears to be slowing, the overall rate of expansion in our trading partners--especially emerging Asian economies such as China--remains solid. Some of the pullback in U.S. demand has been absorbed by declines in imports, and the decline in the dollar has made U.S. firms more competitive in export markets, though it has also accentuated inflation concerns.

The deceleration in economic activity has been reflected in the labor market, where layoffs have risen and hiring has slowed. Payroll employment has now fallen for four consecutive months. The combination of job losses and the greater difficulty in finding jobs has pushed the unemployment rate up to 5 percent in recent months.

Financial Market Developments
As I've just noted, the tightening of financial conditions as a result of stresses in financial markets has been an important factor in the recent slowdown of the U.S. economy. In recent weeks, however, U.S. financial markets have improved somewhat. Equity prices have risen noticeably since mid-March. Spreads on both investment-grade and speculative-grade corporate bonds have generally narrowed over the same period, and investment-grade companies, including financial institutions, have been able to raise funds in credit markets. Financial intermediaries have also tapped equity markets to bolster capital depleted by the recognition of losses on loans and securities.

Clearly, some of the extraordinary increase in risk aversion that we saw earlier this year has been reversed. Apparently, a combination of factors has contributed to a perception that financial markets and the economy are less likely than some had feared to experience very adverse outcomes: Among those factors were Federal Reserve actions to bolster liquidity and ease monetary policy, the success of a number of financial institutions in raising capital, and incoming economic data and earnings reports that were not as weak as market participants had expected.

Still, the persistence of relatively wide spreads in many markets suggests that investors continue to be worried about credit quality; the issuance of speculative-grade bonds has been scant this year; and securitization markets for many types of mortgages continue to be impaired. In addition, term bank funding markets remain under pressure as banks and other lenders in these markets conserve capital and liquidity and limit risk-taking. Banks have further tightened lending standards across a wide range of business and consumer loans.

These findings generally suggest that market participants remain wary, and in that environment, improvements in financial markets are vulnerable to negative news on the economy or the extent of credit losses. I expect further, but gradual, improvement in financial markets. Credit flows need to be re-channeled and re-intermediated with less leverage, less rollover risk, and greater compensation for taking risk than before the turmoil began last year. Securitized assets need to be simpler, more transparent, and less reliant on the imprimatur of a credit rating agency. Lenders and other investors need to gain greater confidence that they understand the extent and incidence of the losses arising from the lax lending practices of recent years and the current economic slowdown. Those processes are likely to be slow and they may be set back from time to time, but they will ultimately succeed in giving us a more robust financial system than we had a year ago.

The Economic Outlook
Although the current financial and economic situation remains quite difficult, I believe that the most likely scenario over the next year or so is one in which economic activity firms during the second half of this year and then gathers some strength in 2009. In the near term, consumer spending is likely to receive a boost from the rebates that are now flowing to taxpayers. Although the timing and the magnitude of the spending response are uncertain, economic studies of the previous experience suggest that a noticeable proportion of households respond reasonably quickly to temporary cash flows. Of course, the stimulus to domestic production will depend on the extent to which the additional demand is met by a temporary drawdown of inventories or an increase in imports rather than by an expansion in domestic output. But to date, businesses appear to be keeping tight control on inventories, and a reasonable assumption is that we will see a temporary lift to the economy in coming months.

The pace of activity should continue to improve next year, with an important part of the gains coming from the abatement of the forces currently restraining activity. That said, a number of factors suggest that the recovery could be relatively moderate. I've already mentioned my expectation that financial market functioning and risk appetites will continue to improve, but that recuperation will require some time. As all that happens, the policy easing the Federal Reserve has put in place over recent months will begin to show through more in reductions in the cost of capital and the greater availability of credit. The demand for housing is not likely to rebound substantially for a while after this episode, but the drag on growth from declining activity and prices in the housing market will ebb as excess inventories are worked off and affordability improves. Consumption should pick up along with the improvement in jobs and income, though a gradual increase in the saving rate would be expected now that households will no longer be counting on increases in the value of their homes to finance retirement or other future spending. With a lag, business investment should turn up as prospects for a sustained expansion of economic activity become clearer. And both households and businesses should benefit from a leveling-off in the prices of energy and other commodities along the path implied by futures markets.

As with any forecast, mine is subject to a number of uncertainties. One is the extent of the housing correction ahead of us. If the retrenchment in house prices becomes deeper than anticipated, its effect on lenders and financial markets could further damp overall economic activity. We are in uncharted waters when the financial system becomes so disrupted, though we should consider ourselves fortunate that we have very few similar historical episodes on which to base our judgments. In such circumstances, uncertainty about how credit conditions will evolve and how businesses and households will react to changing terms and conditions means that we can have even less confidence than usual in our economic forecasts.

Inflation
Another area of concern is the implications for inflation as a result of the recent run-up in the prices of energy, food, and other commodities. The recent news on inflation has been mixed. Core inflation has moderated a little so far this year. However, we have seen no relief from the pressures of rising prices for energy and food; thus headline inflation has been quite elevated. These prices have continued to rise despite slowing demand in the United States and, to a lesser extent, in other countries. Over the past few years, emerging market economies have increased demand for many of these commodities, and world supply has not kept pace with this growing demand. For oil, non-OPEC production, particularly in the North Sea and in Mexico, has proved disappointing, and OPEC production has remained restrained. As for food prices, bad weather has combined with higher production costs to restrain supplies. Consequently, agricultural inventories have been drawn down to low levels and have not been available to absorb the rising demand. Furthermore, higher energy prices have affected agricultural prices not only through higher costs of production but also by boosting the demand for biofuels.

Some observers have questioned whether the news on fundamentals affecting supply and demand in commodities markets has been sufficient to justify the sharp price increases in recent months. Some of these commentators have cited the actions of the Federal Reserve in reducing interest rates as an important consideration boosting commodity prices. To be sure, commodity prices did rise as interest rates fell. However, for many commodities, inventories have fallen to all-time lows, a development that casts doubt on the premise that speculative demand boosted by low interest rates has pushed prices above levels that would be consistent with the fundamentals of supply and demand. As interest rates in the United States fell relative to those abroad, the dollar declined, which could have boosted the prices of commodities commonly priced in dollars by reducing their cost in terms of other currencies, hence raising the amount demanded by people using those currencies. But the prices of commodities have risen substantially in terms of all currencies, not just the dollar. In sum, lower interest rates and the reduced foreign exchange value of the dollar may have played a role in the rise in the prices of oil and other commodities, but it probably has been a small one.

The rise in commodity prices presents particular challenges for monetary policy because such increases both add to near-term inflationary pressures and damp demand. A tendency for increases in commodity prices to become a factor in ongoing pricing and wage-setting more generally would be a worrisome development that would over time tend to undermine economic welfare.

In the near term, headline inflation is likely to continue to be boosted by the direct effects of the recent increases in the prices of energy and food. If, as futures markets suggest, those prices level off later this year, prospects seem reasonably good for headline inflation to move back in line over time with core inflation. And I expect core inflation to ease off slowly as commodity prices level out and as economic slack creates competitive conditions that inhibit increases in labor costs and prices. Despite the elevated headline inflation of the past four years, we have seen little evidence of faster wage inflation. And healthy gains in productivity have helped to hold down labor cost pressures on prices.

My expectations for moderating inflation and limited spillover effects from commodity price increases depend critically on the continued stability of inflation expectations. In that regard, year-ahead inflation expectations of households have increased this year in response to the jump in headline inflation. Of greater concern, some measures of longer-term inflation expectations appear to have edged up. If longer-term inflation expectations were to become unmoored--whether because of a protracted period of elevated headline inflation or because the public misinterpreted the recent substantial policy easing as suggesting that monetary policy makers had a greater tolerance for inflation than previously thought--then I believe that we would be facing a more serious situation.

Monetary Policy
The Federal Open Market Committee will be monitoring inflation developments closely for any sign that our longer-run objective of promoting price stability is threatened. At the same time, we also need to continue to carefully assess whether, after a period of near-term softness in economic activity, the economy is likely to be on track for sustained economic expansion over time. With the information now in hand, it is my judgment that monetary policy appears to be appropriately calibrated for now to promote both rising employment and moderating inflation over the medium term. But a large measure of uncertainty surrounds that judgment and as the economy evolves, so will the appropriate stance of policy.

Lessons for Public Pension Systems
Now let me shift my focus to what pension fund managers might glean as lessons learned from the recent turmoil in financial markets and some of the structural challenges that lie ahead. From what we have seen so far, public pension systems generally appear to have avoided the worst of the damage resulting from the recent tumult. For example, while a number of public funds evidently held structured credit products such as collateralized debt obligations, the overall level of exposure to those products appears to have been relatively small.

Nonetheless, the recent experience does point up some serious considerations as pension funds address the challenges in meeting their obligations in coming years. One is that public pension systems--like all investors--need to be diligent about understanding and managing the risks on their balance sheets. Too many investors seem to have placed too much faith in credit rating agencies, and too few seem to have developed their own views of the risks embedded in their holdings. Of course, developing such views is no small undertaking. But if ever a demonstration of the value of doing so were needed, the recent episode certainly provides it.

Perhaps the biggest challenge facing public pension systems is inadequate funding. Even by current measures of liability, which themselves may not be fully revealing, last year about three-fourths of public pension systems were underfunded, and about one-third were funded at less than 80 percent. Lengthening life expectancies and tight public budgets are making existing pension promises ever more difficult to keep--and the problem is significantly magnified if promised health benefits are included.

The funding situation puts systems under a great deal of pressure to reach for higher returns by investing in riskier assets. But as has been so clearly and forcefully demonstrated over the past year, there is no free lunch with risk-taking: The price is volatility, the extent of which should be well disclosed and the implications of which should be well understood.

The generally high weight on equity and real estate investments in the typical public pension fund portfolio has increased in recent years. Part of that exposure has come from increased investment in private equity, real estate investment trusts, and hedge funds. Indeed, some funds have allocated 25 percent or more of their portfolios to these "alternative" categories.

With exposures like those, public pension systems should maintain formal risk-management procedures that are independent of the selection and evaluation of managers and that are carefully designed to minimize conflicts of interest that can weaken the risk-management function.

I mentioned earlier that current measures of pension liabilities might be less than fully revealing. Why might that be so? The chief reason is that public pension benefits are essentially bullet-proof promises to pay. We all have read about instances in which benefits were lost when a private-sector pension sponsor declared bankruptcy and terminated the plan. In the public sector, that just hasn't happened, even when the plan sponsor has run into serious financial difficulty. For all intents and purposes, accrued benefits have turned out to be riskless obligations. While economists are famous for disagreeing with each other on virtually every other conceivable issue, when it comes to this one there is no professional disagreement: The only appropriate way to calculate the present value of a very-low-risk liability is to use a very-low-risk discount rate.

However, most public pension funds calculate the present value of their liabilities using the projected rate of return on the portfolio of assets as the discount rate. This practice makes little sense from an economic perspective. If they shift their portfolio into even riskier assets, does the value of the liabilities backed by their taxpayers go down? Financial economists would say no, but the conventional approach to pension accounting says yes. Unfortunately, the measure of liabilities that results from this process has a real consequence: It pushes the burden of financing today's pension benefits onto future taxpayers, who will be called upon to fund the true cost of existing pension promises.

Another challenge that everyone involved in public pensions faces is the issue of transparency. Unlike private pension funds, public pension systems do not account for liabilities in a standardized way. As a result, public employees, taxpayers, municipal bond investors, credit rating agencies, and other market participants have a hard time comparing funding levels across systems and over time.

What steps can pension funds take to improve transparency and help clarify their long-run challenges? Ideally, they would disclose a standardized measurement of funding status, using consistent and appropriate measures of liability. They might also disclose how their asset allocation affects the volatility of the returns on their assets and how their funding ratios and cash flow might be affected by various outcomes in the financial markets. Such practices almost surely would be welcomed externally. But they might also pay dividends internally, because the funds might find that the information about the volatility built into their systems changes their views about the amount of risk they want to shoulder.

Public pension funds hold more than $3 trillion in assets and cover nearly 20 million workers and retirees. Those funds are clearly vital to the business of state and local governments across the country as well as to the public employees they cover. The potential improvements I have touched on today--adhering to best practices with regard to risk management and grappling with some of the difficult structural issues that currently face public pension systems--would help strengthen public pension systems and should minimize the risks to public employees, the governments that employ them, and the taxpayers that finance them both now and in the future.

Footnotes

1. Paul Smith, David Wilcox, and Joyce Zickler, of the Board's staff contributed to the preparation of these remarks. The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily represent the views of other members of the Board or the Federal Open Market Committee.

2. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2008), "The April 2008 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices" (April).

※출처: Federal Reserve

[뉴스핌 베스트 기사]

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추경호 체포동의안 본회의 통과 [서울=뉴스핌] 이바름 기자 = 12.3 비상계엄 당시 국민의힘 의원들의 계엄해제 표결을 방해한 의혹을 받는 추경호 국민의힘 의원에 대한 체포동의안이 27일 여당 주도로 국회 본회의를 통과했다. 국회는 이날 본회의를 열고 '국회의원(추경호) 체포동의안'을 상정해 표결을 진행했다. 투표 결과 재석 180인 가운데 찬성 172표, 반대 4표, 기권 2표, 무 2표로 가결됐다. 불체포특권이 있는 현역 국회의원에 대한 체포동의안은 재적 의원 과반 출석에 출석 의원 과반 찬성이 가결 조건이다. [서울=뉴스핌] 윤창빈 기자 = 추경호 국민의힘 의원이 27일 서울 여의도 국회에서 열린 본회의에서 본인의 체포동의안에 대한 신상발언을 마치고 나서며 동료 의원들의 격려를 받고 있다. 2025.11.27 pangbin@newspim.com 국민의힘 의원들은 표결에 반발하며 표결에 참여하지 않고 본회의장에서 퇴장했다. 이들은 로텐더홀에서 정부여당 및 특검 규탄대회를 벌였다. 신동욱 국민의힘 최고위원은 규탄대회에서 "우리가 추경호"라며 "반드시 싸워서 심판해야 한다"고 말했다. 추 의원은 지난해 12월3일 윤석열 전 대통령이 비상계엄을 선포했을 당시 국민의힘 원내대표로서 의원총회 장소를 국회와 당사 등으로 여러 차례 바꿔 국민의힘 의원들의 계엄해제 표결 참여를 방해했다는 의혹을 받고 있다. 내란 특별검사(조은석 특검팀)은 지난 3일 추 의원에 대해 내란중요임무종사 혐의로 구속영장을 청구했다. 법무부는 이틀 뒤인 5일 국회에 체포동의요청서를 제출했으며, 13일 국회 본회의에 보고됐다. 국회가 동의함에 따라 법원은 조만간 추 의원에 대한 구속 전 피의자 심문(영장실질심사)을 실시한다. 결과에 따라 추 의원의 구속 여부가 결정된다. 추 의원은 투표 전 신상발언 기회를 얻어 특검 수사는 정치탄압이라고 주장했다. 추 의원은 "특검은 제가 언제 누구와 계엄에 공모, 가담했는지 어떠한 증거도 제시하지 못하면서 영장을 창작했다"며 "특검은 계엄 공모를 입증하지도, 표결을 방해받았다는 의원을 특정하지도 못했다"고 강조했다. right@newspim.com 2025-11-27 15:41
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영국계 단타, 11월에만 5조 팔았다 [서울=뉴스핌] 이나영 기자= 연중 고점을 기록한 코스피가 11월 들어 조정을 받는 가운데, 외국인 매도세를 주도한 주체는 영국계 자금으로 나타났다. 9~10월 단기 매수세로 코스피를 4000선 위로 끌어올렸던 영국계 투자자들은 이달 들어 약 5조원 규모의 주식을 순매도하며 수급 전환의 중심에 섰다. 금융감독원과 한국거래소 자료를 종합하면, 영국계 자금은 상반기까지는 관망세를 보이다가 9월부터 순매수로 전환해 지수 급등을 견인했다. 그러나 11월 들어 매도세로 돌아서며 단기간에 코스피를 다시 4000선 아래로 밀어냈다. 전문가들은 이를 투자 이탈보다는 업종 재배치·수익 실현·헤지 전략 등 다층적 조정 흐름으로 해석하고 있다. ◆ 영국계, 활발한 거래에도 낮은 보유 비중…'단타 성향' 뚜렷 27일 한국거래소에 따르면, 영국계 투자자는 이달 1일부터 24일까지 코스피와 코스닥 시장에서 총 4조9900억원을 순매도했다. 같은 기간 외국인 전체 순매도 금액은 13조5328억원으로, 영국계 자금이 차지하는 비중은 36.9%에 달한다. 이는 지난 10월 영국계가 2조4000억원을 순매수하며 전체 외국인 순매수(4조2050억원)의 절반 이상을 견인했던 흐름과는 대조적이다. 영국계 자금은 올해 외국인 매매에서 가장 활발한 움직임을 보였다. 지난 1~8월 유가증권시장에서 영국계 투자자는 총 557조원 규모(매수 273조9270억원, 매도 283조730억원)를 거래하며 외국인 전체 거래액의 44.7%를 차지했다. 국적별 기준으로는 거래 비중 1위였지만, 보유 비중은 10%대 초반에 머무는 등 높은 회전율이 특징적이다. 이는 중·단기 차익 실현에 집중하는 유동적 자금 특성을 드러낸다는 분석이다. 실제 영국계 자금은 9월 2조2000억원, 10월 2조4000억원 등 두 달간 총 4조6000억원어치를 순매수하며 국내 증시 랠리를 이끌었다. 이 기간 외국인 전체 순매수의 상당 부분을 담당했고, 코스피는 9월 말 3424포인트에서 10월 말 4107포인트까지 약 20% 급등했다. 이후 이달 3일에는 장중 사상 최고치인 4221.87포인트를 기록했다. 당시 외국인의 현·선물 동반 매수가 지수 상승을 뒷받침했고, 거래 비중에서도 영국계 영향력은 두드러졌다. 하지만 11월 들어 매도세로 돌아서면서 코스피는 한 달 새 300포인트 넘게 밀리며, 전날(26일) 기준 3960.87로 마감했다. ◆ 수익 실현 흐름 속 업종·자산군 재배치 뚜렷…"ETF 투자도 변화 감지" 코스피 4000선을 끌어올렸던 외국인 수급이 11월 들어 주춤하면서, 이번 수급 전환의 배경에는 반도체 중심의 차익 실현과 업종 간 포트폴리오 조정이 복합적으로 작용한 것으로 풀이된다. 실제로 외국인 자금은 특정 업종에서 수익을 실현한 뒤, 해외 자산이나 새로운 산업군으로 비중을 재조정하는 흐름을 보였다. 이 같은 변화는 상장지수펀드(ETF) 매매에서도 뚜렷하게 나타났다. 코스콤 ETF체크에 따르면 최근 일주일간 외국인이 가장 많이 순매수한 상품은 'KODEX 레버리지'(93억8000만원)였고, 이어 'TIGER 미국필라델피아반도체나스닥'(64억2000만원), 'TIGER 차이나항셍테크'(64억원), 'TIGER 차이나전기차SOLACTIVE'(55억200만원) 등이 뒤를 이었다. 순매수 상위 10개 ETF 중 절반이 중국 테크 및 미국 증시 관련 상품으로 구성돼 외국인 자금의 관심이 해외 주요 지수로 이동한 모습이다. 반면 외국인은 국내 주식형 ETF를 중심으로 대규모 매도에 나섰다. 같은 기간, 'TIGER 2차전지TOP10'(-79억원), 'TIGER200선물레버리지'(-68억원), 'KODEX AI반도체'(-56억9000만원) 등이 외국인 순매도 상위에 올랐으며, 상위 10개 가운데 9개가 국내 ETF였다. 개별 종목에서도 자금 재배치 흐름 뚜렷하게 나타났다. 이달 1~25일 외국인 순매도 상위 종목에는 SK하이닉스, 삼성전자, 두산에너빌리티, KB금융, NAVER, 한화오션 등이 포함됐다. 반면 셀트리온, 이수페타시스, LG 씨엔에스, SK바이오팜 등이 외국인 순매수 상위권을 차지했다. 전통 반도체주에서 인프라, 바이오, AI 관련 종목으로 수급이 분산되는 모습이다. 시장에서는 이 같은 움직임을 외국인 자금의 '이탈'이라기보다는 전략적 '재편'으로 해석하고 있다. 현물 매도를 통해 일부 비중을 축소하는 동시에, 선물·옵션을 활용한 헤지 전략이나 국채 등 대체 자산으로의 분산 투자가 병행되고 있다는 분석이다.  전문가들은 이러한 흐름이 외국인 자금의 유출보다는 포트폴리오 조정 과정의 일환으로 볼 수 있다고 보고 있다. 김석환 미래에셋증권 연구원은 "반도체 업종의 내년 이익 전망치가 빠르게 상향되고 있어 외국인 수급이 재개될 여지가 충분하다"며 "외국인 유입에 기반한 증시 상승 기대는 여전히 유효하다"고 분석했다. 이상현 메리츠증권 센터장은 "코스피 4000 돌파는 단기 유동성이 아니라 기업 실적이 만들어낸 구조적 상승이었다"며 "현재 조정은 큰 흐름이 끝났다는 신호가 아니라 다음 단계 상승을 위한 숨 고르기 성격이 강하다"고 강조했다.    nylee54@newspim.com 2025-11-27 08:20
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