Displaying items by tag: buy the dip
Are Millennials Buying the Dip?
(New York)
The stock markets have had some very small slumps but rebounded quickly in the last 12-months. The refusal to…see the full story on Magnifi’s site
“Buy the Dip” is Dead
(New York)
One of the behaviors that we like to follow to see the underlying health of markets is whether investors are “buying the dip”. Such behavior tends to indicate a fundamental belief in the direction of the market. Therefore, the recent drop off in investors doing so is worrying, but not for the reason that seems obvious. The lack of buy the dip is because until this week, the market had rarely fallen this year. That has meant buying behavior has been concentrated in the hands of bulls not afraid the buy into a rich market, which left many discount-seekers looking from the outside in. Now, many top analysts, and likely investors alongside them, have turned bearish.
FINSUM: The velocity of the market’s gains this year has been very impressive, but it naturally makes a lot of people worry it could come down just as fast.
A Big New Problem: Nobody is Buying the Dip
(New York)
One of the guiding mantras of the markets since at least 2015 has been to buy the dip. The generally idea was that the market was on an upward trend, so every little downturn presented a good buying opportunity. One of the big problems with the markets right now is that such dip-buying has all but evaporated. With a trade war raging and a recession on the horizon, investors have lost faith that the direction of the market is upward, which means each dip now represents additionally downside risk instead of a buying opportunity.
FINSUM: That core belief in the direction of stock prices has been badly shaken and it is hard to imagine it will return any time soon.
“Buy the Dip” Has Come to an End
(New York)
For many years the prevailing mantra in the equity market had always been “buy the dip”. Every time the market fell, investors bought the dip and encouraged others to do so. However, that approach seems to have disappeared in the carnage of the last couple of weeks. Whereas falls used to be followed by rallies that pushed the market higher, the last few weeks has been characterized by more sustained losses with shallower rallies. Nordea Asset Management’s chief strategist sums up the mood change well, saying “We’ve seen a shift from buying on dips to selling into strength … We’re increasingly moving from glass half full to glass half empty; that’s the narrative here”.
FINSUM: We think that view sums it up well. While we do believe stocks won’t enter a bear market right now because earnings and the economy are solid, we sense that something in investors’ psyches has fundamentally changed.
Why the Bond Market Could Get a Lot Uglier
(New York)
One of the guiding ideologies of the bond market over the last few years has been to buy the dips. Every time that bond yields have risen some, it has been smart to go long bonds as they inevitably came back down. However, this time looks very different. The difference is that central banks are no longer fixed to their ultra-low rates policy, which means there is no big magnet that pulls rates and yields ever downward.
FINSUM: So in our view what is really happening right now is a market wide price discovery period for bonds. Because the underlying situation is changing, no one is comfortable judging bond yields and prices. This worry has spread to equities, but in our view the root anxiety is in fixed income.