Stock
Market Plunges Again – Global Stocks Down 5 Weeks In A Row – 8
Trillion Dollars In Wealth Wiped Out
26
October, 2018
It’s
not over. The worst October stock market crash since 2008 got
even worse on Friday. The Dow was down another 296 points, the
S&P 500 briefly dipped into correction territory, and it was
another bloodbath for tech stocks.
On Wednesday,
I warned that there would be a bounce, and we saw that happen on
Thursday. But the bounce didn’t extend into Friday.
Instead, we witnessed another wave of panic selling, and that has
many investors extremely concerned about what will happen next week.
Overall, global stocks have now fallen for five
weeks in a row,
and during that time more
than 8 trillion dollars in global wealth has been wiped out.
That is the fastest plunge in global stock market wealth since the
collapse of Lehman Brothers, and it is yet another confirmation that
a major turning point has arrived.
The
wild swings up and down that we witnessed this week are very
reminiscent of what we saw in 2008.
Markets
just don’t go down in a straight line. In fact, some of the
best days in all of Wall Street history happened right in the middle
of the last financial crisis.
When
markets are very volatile, the overall trend tends to be down.
So what investors should be hoping for are extremely boring days on
Wall Street when not much happens. That has been the usual
state of affairs for much of the past decade, but now volatility has
returned with a vengeance. The following is how CNBC summarized
the carnage that we witnessed on Friday…
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 296.24 points lower at 24,688.31 after dropping 539 points at its lows of the day. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.1 percent to 7,167.21. At its lows, the tech-heavy Nasdaq had fallen more than 3 percent.
The S&P 500 fell 1.7 percent to 2,658.69 and briefly entered into correction territory, trading more than 10 percent below its record high reached in September. The average stock market correction, since WWII, results in a 13 percent drop and lasts for four months if it does not turn into a full-fledged bear market.
Larry Benedict, CEO of The Opportunistic Trader, said traders “don’t want to be long heading into the weekend.” He added, “S&P now down on the year and people are more afraid to be long today than they were when market was 10 percent higher.”
And
when you step back and take a longer-term view of things, the
devastation is breathtaking. The following facts come from Zero
Hedge…
- Dow down 9% from record high (down 4 of last 5 weeks)
- S&P down 10.1% from record high (down 4 of last 5 weeks)
- Nasdaq down 13% from record high (down 4 weeks in a row)
- Dow Transports down 15.2% from record high (down 6 weeks in a row)
- Small Caps down 15.8% from record high (down 6 weeks in a row)
More
importantly, global systemically important bank stocks have now
fallen for 5 weeks in a row, and they have now plunged more than 30
percent from the peak.
In
other words, the “too big to fail banks” around the world have
already seen almost a third of their value wiped out.
There
are quite a few global candidates that could potentially become “the
next Lehman Brothers”, and once one “too big to fail bank” goes
down, it could escalate this new financial crisis very rapidly.
But
for most ordinary Americans, the main concern is about keeping their
own money safe. Thanks to low returns almost everywhere else,
more retirement money is in the stock market than ever before, and
many Americans are very
anxious about
what a stock market crash would mean for their savings…
Nearly 40 percent of Americans said they were “anxious” about stock market volatility, according to Allianz Life’s 2018 Market Perceptions study, mainly because they worried they would not be able to protect their retirement savings.
In
the end, a lot of people are going to get completely wiped out.
Hopefully
you will not be one of them.
Of
course the mainstream media continues to insist that everything is
going to be just fine. In fact, CNN is telling people that now
is “a
good time for investors to double down on their investments”…
Experts say big sell-offs are often a good time for investors to double down on their investments. One recommended looking for companies that are expected to post healthy gains in sales and earnings. A strong balance sheet and a steadily growing dividend don’t hurt either.
“With earnings season in full force, this is when stock pickers can add a lot of value,” said Ernesto Ramos, managing director of active equities with BMO Global Asset Management. “There really was no good reason for the market to be down as much as it was Wednesday.”
That
is about the exact opposite from the
advice that they should be giving,
but unfortunately this is the narrative that we get from the
corporate media before every major crisis.
October
has historically been the
most volatile month for stocks,
and without a doubt this has been a wild month. Of course the
midterm elections are coming up early next month, and those results
could potentially spook investors. But once we get past that,
hopefully the markets will start to settle down.
But
if things continue to unfold as they did in 2008, this crisis could
continue to escalate during the months ahead, and that would
especially be true if some sort of “trigger event” sent a major
surge of panic through the marketplace.
At
this point, investors are extremely jumpy. For example, even
though Amazon reported very good earnings this week, the stock
crashed on Friday because revenue growth was slightly below
expectations.
Any
piece of bad news could send the markets tumbling right now, and if a
major disaster were to happen we could be talking about a total
collapse.
THIS TIME IS DIFFERENT - THE BEGINNING OF THE GREAT COLLAPSE
26
November, 2018
The
largest asset bubble in the history of our planet is approaching the
end of its lifespan, but that’s just the opening act. This time is
different.
Few
imagined how far the Fed would go to reinflate the economy in the
wake of the 2009 crisis. It started with TARP, then “quantitative
easing” QE1, QE2, and QE3. To stave off the last crisis the Federal
Reserve slashed interest rates to zero and bailed out the banks by
buying up 4.5 trillion of dollars of their distressed assets. At its
peak the
Fed was spending 40 billion on mortgage backed securities a month.
This buying spree continued until October 29th, 2014.
Most
of these distressed assets are still on the books (see chart below).
The fed began gradually selling these securities in 2017 at a rate of
9 billion per month and has continued into 2018. The unwinding of the
fed balance sheet has the exact opposite effect as quantitative
easing, in fact economist refer to it as quantitative tightening. It
reduces the amount of liquidity (available cash) in the system.
To
further complicate matters, the federal reserve began gradually
increasing interest rates in 2015, and has yet to bring them back to
pre-crisis levels. Recent statements indicate that the fed is
unlikely to stop raising interest rates in response to recent market
volatility. Like quantitative tightening, increasing interest rates
has the effect of reducing liquidity.
By
itself, the tightening of monetary policy at the beginning of a stock
market downturn presents a fundamentally different dynamic than was
seen when the dot com bubble burst in 2001, or the housing bubble
burst in 2007. The fed was positioned to slash rates in each of those
cases, effectively injecting the system with cheap credit. This time
around the fed
has no ammunition.
Don’t take my word for it. Just ask former Dallas Fed president
Richard Fisher.
Trump
just started a trade war with China. This showdown is in its early
stages, and
is set to escalate.
The full effects haven’t even begun to be felt yet.
This
time really is different.
To
be continued…
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.