Displaying items by tag: volatility

Thursday, 25 October 2018 13:03

China Pledges to Support Markets at Any Cost

(Beijing)

Beijing made a big proclamation yesterday. The country is in the midst of a brutal bear market—its benchmark Shanghai Composite has fallen 27%—but yesterday the government made a big announcement. It said that it would do “whatever it takes” to stop its falling stock market. A large pledge of support came from Xi Jinping himself, which given his grip on power, means that it can likely be counted on. One analyst thinks the bear market might be nearing its end, saying “Bottoming is a process, and we’re starting to see some evidence of reversals and lows taking shape”.


FINSUM: The big x-factor for China is that a trade war and tariffs hurt them much worse than the West, so it is very hard for us to agree that the market rout there is ending.

Published in Eq: Dev ex-US
Thursday, 25 October 2018 13:01

We are Now in a Correction, What’s Next?

(New York)

Yesterday was a full-on panic in markets. Shares plunged across the board from a broad mix of worries about rates, earnings, the economy, and trade war. The Nasdaq was hit hardest, falling 4.4% into correction territory. Losses in the Dow and S&P 500 were enough to eliminate all gains for the year. Earnings have continued to be strong, but it has not helped support stocks much, if at all. The S&P 500 is now 9.4% off its 52-week high.


FINSUM: Our own view on stocks is that this will be a temporary hiccup and equities will steady themselves soon. Given that earnings growth is strong and the economy is still very healthy, it is hard to imagine a bear market starting.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Thursday, 25 October 2018 13:00

Gold is Back from the Dead

(New York)

It might come as no surprise, but that does not mean it isn’t noteworthy. Alongside the big surge in volatility this month, gold has risen considerably. The precious metal has risen 3.2% this month to $1,230 per ounce, no small feat considering that stocks initially started falling because of worries about rising rates. Gold has been shunned for most of the year as stocks rose, but is now being sought out as a haven from volatility. An analyst at UBS summarized the situation this way, saying “Price action in the past couple of weeks has shown signs that gold is slowly reasserting its role as a safe haven … In the near term, a pullback in the dollar, weakness in equities and the potential for a soft patch in US data would be upside catalysts for gold”.


FINSUM: Gold rising when the Dollar is strong and rates are being hiked is quite noteworthy. It will be interesting to see how fast gold might fall if this correction in stocks reverses.

Published in Comm: Precious
Wednesday, 24 October 2018 09:42

How Far Does the S&P 500 Need to Fall to be Cheap?

(New York)

The S&P 500 is off about 6% this month, almost enough to eliminate its gain for the year. At the same time, earnings have grown strongly. Put together, a good question emerges: when do stocks again become cheap? In the last several selloffs, stocks have found support when valuations fell to 15x earnings, so it seems a good target. Taking account of various earnings forecasts, it appears stocks would need to fall a further 14% from here to make it to that level.


FINSUM: That would put the S&P 500 near a bear market just to bring the p/e ratio back down to 15x. Bleak.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Monday, 22 October 2018 10:23

Bonds and Stocks are Rising in Unison

(New York)

The market is doing what everyone hoped it would. Just as the big losses of the last few weeks saw both stocks and bonds falling at the same time, both markets are now rising in unison. Stocks rose strongly on Friday and are up on positive news out of China today, while bond yields are also falling. China had its biggest trading day in three years as the government announced it would support the economy following the slowest economy growth in nine-years.


FINSUM: One thing to watch in Treasuries is that there is such a supply of them right now that demand itself is starting to negatively affect the bonds. Therefore, it is not just the Fed and rates weighing on Treasuries, but the sheer volume that the market is having trouble consuming.

Published in Eq: Total Market
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