Displaying items by tag: bear market

(New York)

One of the world’s most famous fund managers has just gone on the record warning investors that the next recession is likely to lead to a brutal reckoning for markets. Paul Tudor Jones, famed for making a killing in the stock market crash of 1987, said that “highly dubious” asset prices are going to be hit as monetary policy exhausts quickly. He is worried that the US does not have any fiscal stabilizers to help ease a recession. Jones believes that interest rates will normalize and that asset prices will fall in the very long run.


FINSUM: This is a lot of doom and gloom, but it is hard to imagine it really being this bad. A bear market, maybe, but a total collapse seems unlikely.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Wednesday, 20 June 2018 08:44

Recession Alert—The Yield Curve Just Inverted

(New York)

Investors beware, the strongest predictor of recession has just rung its bell. An inverted yield curve has predicted all six of the US recessions going back 60 years. And while all of investors’ focus has been on whether the Treasury yield curve will invert, the global yield curve already has. The yield on the ICE Bank of America index of government bonds due in 7 to 10 years has already inverted, with such yields being lower than for 1 to 3 year bonds. While the US economy is currently looking strong, there is growing weakness in Europe, China, and emerging markets, which seems to have inverted the curve. The IMF says the clouds over the world’s economy are “getting darker by the day”.


FINSUM: It is seeming more and more like we will have a global recession. Though, the US seems like it will be the last to succumb to it. One thing to remember—in the US it takes an average of 18.5 months from when the curve inverts to when we reach the peak of the growth cycle.

Published in Macro
Wednesday, 20 June 2018 08:34

Tariffs Push Chinese Stocks into Bear Market

(Beijing)

With the US-led tariffs battle in full swing, Americans tend to focus on how such tariffs are affecting our own country. However, to understand how things may play out, we need to see what is happening on the other side. While US markets have taken a shallow hit from the potential trade war, Chinese shares are plummeting, and a very near to a bear market. Both the country’s Shanghai and Shenzhen indexes are at almost a 19% loss from their peak in January, just a hair off the 20% loss that qualifies as a bear market. According to one Chinese securities analyst, “It’s mainly the trade war that has created such panic in the market because the latest developments have surpassed the expectations of many people in China”.


FINSUM: We wonder how much this kind of market pressure will compel the Chinese government to give in to some of the US’ demands? The counter point to that view is that since the country is not a democracy, the government doesn’t really have to worry all that much if people are upset. That is a very blunt view of the situation, but one we think is fundamentally true.

Published in Macro
Wednesday, 13 June 2018 09:35

Big Banks Just Entered a Bear Market

(New York)

In what might be a sign of a rough patch to come for the global economy and markets, 16 of the largest global banks have collectively just entered a bear market, falling 20% from their peak. Those 16 come from among the 39 global “sifis”, or systemically important financial institutions. One research analyst says “If these banks are supposed to be systemically important then policymakers ought to be watching them to see what is happening”.


FINSUM: The odd part about these falls is that rising interest generally help banks, as they have wider net interest margins. So why the downturn?

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Thursday, 29 March 2018 06:46

The Bear Market May Have Just Arrived

(New York)

It is not pleasant to think about, but investors may need to face reality—the bear market may have arrived this winter. Stocks are already well into a correction and the immediate path forward doesn’t seem bright. All that said, not all the indicators are showing a bear market to come. Bank of America has assembled 19 indicators which have forecasted bear markets in the past. Right now, only 13 of the 19 indicators have been tripped, meaning the market may have room to move higher. While 13 out of 19 may sound high, this level was usually reached two years before the peak in prices in previous bear markets.


FINSUM: If you buy into these types of indicators, the big x-factor is how quickly the other 6 could be tripped. The big problem, of course, is that the returns at the end of a bull market tend to be the strongest, so one does not want to take all their chips off the table.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
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