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Stocks just crashed and buying the dip looks tough
Recent history has taught us to buy the dip. Even the eye-watering declines in February proved worth buying. On Wednesday the Dow Jones closed down 800+ points and the S&P 500 dropped 3%. It’s a big move for one day but 3% is a natural pullback and many will be buying the dip. But this time looks different. This may not be a dip worth buying.

Today
Perhaps fortunately, a flight to safety is pushing bond yields lower this morning- countering the worry about rising rates. If investors are calmly look at the fundamentals, falling rates today should ease the sell-off. But. More often than not, massive one day drops mean fundamentals go out the window and traders dive for cover.

Strength of the rebound in doubt
The rebound is US equities since the February crash have a few question marks. The rising price of the S&P 500 index has been accompanied by falling volumes- typically a sign of waning enthusiasm from buyers. On the Russell 2000, the stocks most shorted in the February crash have significantly outperformed on the rebound. So short-covering was a significant factor. According to fund flow data, funds from US retail investors (excluding dividend reinvestments) have dried up completely since February. In the past few months, a sign of defensive investing has shown up in the outperformance of high dividend-yielding sectors like healthcare.

Reasons a crash could be on the cards
We are probably all familiar with the risk-factors for today’s market. The trade war, the Italian budget, rising protectionism, a growth slowdown in China, anxiety over US mid-term elections – even Brexit. These are all valid concerns that have shown up in world markets. Emerging markets entered a bear market months ago and European shares have not made new record highs this year. In the US, the impact of these global concerns has been masked by Trump’s tax cuts. Tax cuts coupled with a higher available return on cash has seen capital return to the country while US companies have initiated plans for a record-breaking $1bn in share buybacks. Markets are looking 12 months ahead to when the positive impact of Trump’s fiscal stimulus fades and voting with their feet.

The real issue: a liquidity crunch
The central concern- that has building and is now rising to the surface is the issue of a shortage of US dollars- and its impact on the price of the dollar and US interest rates. Overseas investors have found it harder and costlier to get hold of US dollars this year thanks to quantitative tightening and the large new issuance of treasury bills. This is an issue when global debt is higher- and dollars represent a higher proportion of that debt- than in 2007. When debt is high, and the cost of borrowing reaches a certain level, the natural result is a rise in defaults and a more difficult time for the global economy. The IMF’s global growth warning this week has clearly hit a few nerves.

Why a crash can still be avoided
The reason many have looked over rising yields and a stronger dollar as an issue is because the US economy looks very strong. The idea of the US sneezing and the rest of the world catching a cold isn’t a worry when the American economy has such rosy cheeks. And with earnings running near 20% y/y, corporations look even healthier. A few well-received earnings reports could do a lot to ease fears.
The current dip in confidence can be allayed were the Federal Reserve to signal it is easing off its quantitative tightening and rates rises. But the Powell Fed has shown more confidence in the face of market uncertainty and we don’t expect any change in tone. We expect the Fed will hold on for the ride. The aim being to signal strength of its policy convictions. The silence from the Fed to this market weakness will be deafening.

Dow Jones and US yields at important juncture
The biggest worry for any fund manager is the inability to diversify- ie when stocks and bonds move down in unison. This what is staring them in the face right now. The chart below shows a potential shorter term double top in the Dow at the same time as a breakout of a longer term double bottom in 10yr treasury yields.

Dow vs US 10yr yields


The information and comments provided herein under no circumstances are to be considered an offer or solicitation to invest and nothing herein should be construed as investment advice. The information provided is believed to be accurate at the date the information is produced. CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Please note that 79 % of our retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing money.

14-12-2020

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10-12-2020

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9-12-2020

S&P 500 closes over 3,700
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8-12-2020

Global stock market cap reaches $100 trillion for 1st time
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4-12-2020

Pfizer vaccine supply chain problems
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2-12-2020

Dollar Purge Continues
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1-12-2020

Bitcoin hits record high
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30-11-2020

OPEC meeting starts
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