Displaying items by tag: bear market

(Chicago)

All the market focus has been on the Dow, but small caps beat the bigger index into a bear market. Even before the big falls of the last few days, the Russell was down 25%. Small companies account for about half of US economic activity and tend to feel the strongest effects when the economy falls, explaining the sharp decline. However, small caps also tend to outperform in the three months after such falls, as they also disproportionately benefit from an economic recovery.


FINSUM: Small caps were trading at all time highs right before this plunge, and as this situation begins to clear, it seems like a very good buying opportunity.

Published in Eq: Small Caps

(Houston)

Generally speaking, when oil prices fall it is considered good for the economy as it unleashes excess consumer spending. This is what happened in the last big drop in 2014-2015. However, this time around, there are likely to be no winners from the drop. Because the huge fall in prices is coming at a time of significantly reduced economic demand because of the coronavirus, it is hard to imagine that much excess economic activity will be created to account for the drop in oil-related industries.


FINSUM: Supply and demand are tumbling simultaneously across the economy (not just in oil), so it does not seem this will be a net positive like it has been in the past.

Published in Eq: Energy
Tuesday, 10 March 2020 14:28

Tech is Now in a Bear Market

(San Francisco)

The market is in a brutal position, everyone knows that. Peak losses hit 19% yesterday, just a hair off a bear market. The reality, though, is that some sectors are thoroughly in a bear market, including the biggest growth driver of them all—tech. The S&P info tech sector is down 20%, while Microsoft is down 20% and Apple 19%. Amazon and Facebook are both down 17%. IBM, Cisco, and older-guard tech companies are getting slaughtered down to the 25%+ range.


FINSUM: Some of these are smart to stay away from, but others could be good buying opportunities. For instance, social media companies are more exposed to consumer spending declines (and resultant advertising declines) that B2B tech companies offering cloud and other software infrastructure that is hard to cut from budgets.

Published in Eq: Tech

(New York)

Any advisor even remotely familiar with annuities will know that while the two share the nomenclature of being “annuities”, fixed and variable annuities are very different. Fixed annuities protect principal and give limited upside, all with the design of trying to outperform CDs. Variable annuities do not protect principal, but offer much more flexibility and choice in allocation and give good upside. They do have fairly stringent rules during the accumulation phase, but that can lead to good income in the payout phase. In terms of the current market, there are two ways to look at it, and the proper investment depends on the age and position of the client. If the client is younger and wants capital appreciation, then the current market may offer a good entry point for a variable annuity. If someone is nearing retirement, locking in principal protection is likely crucial, so fixed annuities would be preferable.


FINSUM: The reality is that a lot of clients are going to be liking the security of principal protection in the current environment (which makes some sense), so those are probably going to be the most apposite for the current market.

Published in Wealth Management
Monday, 09 March 2020 11:08

Trading Halted as Stocks Plummet

(New York)

Markets are off to their worst start in recent memory. With oil having plunged 30% earlier in the day, US markets opened to a very abrupt 7% decline. The sharp plunge triggered an automatic market halt of 15 minutes. At the time of writing, the Dow is down 6.37% and the S&P 500 is down 6.19%. US Bond yields plunged too, with the 10-year Treasury at one point having a 0.43% yield. Janus Henderson summarized the markets best, saying “In just over two weeks, investor sentiment has swung from complacency to panic … What started as a virus-driven de-risking has now mutated into a broad-based, multi-asset capitulation”.


FINSUM: It is looking ever more like global central banks are going to have to step in with coordinated stimulus. That said, a virus is a unique kind of panic that cannot be instantly resolved. A recession now appears more likely than not.

Published in Eq: Total Market
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