Displaying items by tag: bear market

Tuesday, 30 October 2018 12:52

Morgan Stanley Says Another Rout is Coming

(New York)

Is there gain ahead or pain ahead? That is the question on every investors’ mind. Well, Morgan Stanley has an answer. The bank’s chief US equity strategist, Michael Wilson, says that the answer is more pain. The bank thinks we are in a “rolling bear market” and that stocks will reach bear status soon. “We think we get there in four to eight weeks”, says Wilson. The bank defines a bear market as a drop of 20% or more with no recovery for 12 months. “Risk-reward remains unattractive for us”, he added.


FINSUM: Morgan Stanley thinks a lot of these losses come down to the change in central bank policy. We agree with that but we also think investors are just anxious about what lays ahead in terms of a possible recession, trade war, and beyond.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Tuesday, 30 October 2018 12:51

Goldman’s 9 Stocks for the Coming Rally

(New York)

Goldman Sachs thinks this selloff is “overdone” and that a rally is coming. The bank thinks the current market presents a good buying opportunity and forecasts the market to rise 7% before the end of the year. According to the bank “The recent sell-off has priced too sharp of a near-term growth slowdown. We expect continued economic and earnings growth will support a rebound in the S&P 500”. To play the rebound, the bank says to look at stocks in its “high quality” basket. These include: Mastercard, Cognizant Technology Solutions, Alphabet, Accenture, Ansys, C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Edwards Lifesciences, International Flavors & Fragrances, and Ross Stores.


FINSUM: That is a very wide selection of choices, but more interesting to us is Goldman’s view on a recovery. We agree that this selloff seems to be an overreaction relative to the fundamentals.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Tuesday, 30 October 2018 12:48

Asset Managers are Plunging

(New York)

If you think the market has been bad overall, take a look at the asset management sector, which has been brutalized in the last few weeks. The S&P index of asset managers has fallen 14% this month, compared with a 9.3% drop for the market overall. That adds to a lot of pain already this year—the index has lost almost 25% of its value in 2018 and is headed for the biggest loss since 2008. Some, like leader BlackRock, have been hit very hard just this month with shares down 17%.


FINSUM: Weak fees and poor fund flows are the immediate problem, but they are a major issue because they support investors’ fears of disruption in the industry.

Published in Eq: Value
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, 04 October 2018 09:53

Emerging Markets See Biggest Selloff Since March

(Istanbul)

The big selloff in bonds has caused a wipeout in emerging markets. The sector, which has seen broad turmoil this year, just witnessed its biggest selloff since March. That fact is quite eye-opening given that the period includes all the worries over Turkey. The big losses have largely been driven by the appreciating Dollar, which hurts EM economies and assets. With the US economy going so well and the Fed likely to increase the pace of hikes, EMs look vulnerable. The MSCI EM Index fell 2% today.


FINSUM: There are some idiosyncratic problems, but EM economies don’t look as weak as this year’s market performance would suggest. It is really US strength that is hurting EM assets.

Published in Eq: EMs
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