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Another ho-hum year for the economy likely in 2013

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Fears that China’s inflated stock market might tumble also proved unfounded, with the Shanghai exchange essentially flat on the year. A widely followed price index for European stocks was up by 11.9 percent through mid-December.

“Global equity markets seem to agree with my assessment that, having survived the third year of living dangerously, we can do it again for a fourth year,” Ed Yardeni, a veteran Wall Street researcher, wrote in a Dec. 17 investment note on 2013 prospects. “Europe and China seem to pose less danger for investors in the coming year. The U.S. economy is actually in remarkably good shape, as long as the fiscal cliff is averted, as I continue to expect.”

The big dangers in 2013, he said, are mostly geopolitical in nature. They include rising Middle East tensions and the possibility of conflict in the South China Sea, where several nations dispute territorial control over islands.

What happens abroad increasingly matters for U.S. corporations, many of whom operate in, or export to, China, Asia, Latin America and Europe. The influential Business Roundtable, the lobby for big corporations, still sees a complicated outlook for the broader global economy.

“It’s mixed,” said roundtable chairman James McNerney Jr., CEO of aircraft maker Boeing Co. “I think Europe promises to be slow growth or flat. There’s some hope it’s better as they begin to put some of their fiscal issues to bed.”

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