The document discusses panic selling that occurred in global stock markets on Monday in reaction to Russia's actions in Ukraine, and the subsequent rebound on Tuesday. It notes that panic selling is an emotional reaction rather than being based on fundamentals, and that past panic selling events have presented good buying opportunities as markets recovered. The document advocates that long-term investors can benefit from such volatility and sees panic selling events as opportunities to invest in equities.
Focus on things that matter and that you can control! I offer this letter up for information purposes only, not to pretend that you or I have any control over what happens (or doesn't happen) in Washington. Staying focused on your financial plan is key to working towards your goals.
« Market Perspectives » est notre revue mensuelle des marchés. Elle présente de la façon la plus synthétique possible :
- notre analyse des principaux faits marquants et indicateurs macro susceptibles de dessiner les marchés sur le mois.
- notre vision sur les différentes classes d’actifs
Cette revue sera continument enrichie avec nos indicateurs quantitatifs.
La plupart de nos analyses sont disponibles sur www.finlightresearch.com
Our monthly publication “Market Perspectives” presents a synthetic view of all the asset classes we cover.
The report is composed of six sections covering Macro, Equities, FI & credit, FX, Commodities and Alternatives.
Each section is preceded by a summary of our views on the related asset class.
Most of our publications are available on our web site www.finlightresearch.com
« Market Perspectives » est notre revue mensuelle des marchés. Elle présente de la façon la plus synthétique possible :
- notre analyse des principaux faits marquants et indicateurs macro susceptibles de dessiner les marchés sur le mois.
- notre vision sur les différentes classes d’actifs
Cette revue sera continument enrichie avec nos indicateurs quantitatifs.
La plupart de nos analyses sont disponibles sur www.finlightresearch.com
Our monthly publication “Market Perspectives” presents a synthetic view of all the asset classes we cover.
The report is composed of six sections covering Macro, Equities, FI & credit, FX, Commodities and Alternatives.
Each section is preceded by a summary of our views on the related asset class.
Most of our publications are available on our web site www.finlightresearch.com
‘Deflationary Boom Markets’
‘Deflationary Boom Markets’ is the name of the game. Deflation forces Central Banks into action. Central banks to push Bonds and Equities higher, inflating the bubble some more, although on a rougher path and with higher volatility than we got accustomed to in recent years.
Focus on things that matter and that you can control! I offer this letter up for information purposes only, not to pretend that you or I have any control over what happens (or doesn't happen) in Washington. Staying focused on your financial plan is key to working towards your goals.
« Market Perspectives » est notre revue mensuelle des marchés. Elle présente de la façon la plus synthétique possible :
- notre analyse des principaux faits marquants et indicateurs macro susceptibles de dessiner les marchés sur le mois.
- notre vision sur les différentes classes d’actifs
Cette revue sera continument enrichie avec nos indicateurs quantitatifs.
La plupart de nos analyses sont disponibles sur www.finlightresearch.com
Our monthly publication “Market Perspectives” presents a synthetic view of all the asset classes we cover.
The report is composed of six sections covering Macro, Equities, FI & credit, FX, Commodities and Alternatives.
Each section is preceded by a summary of our views on the related asset class.
Most of our publications are available on our web site www.finlightresearch.com
« Market Perspectives » est notre revue mensuelle des marchés. Elle présente de la façon la plus synthétique possible :
- notre analyse des principaux faits marquants et indicateurs macro susceptibles de dessiner les marchés sur le mois.
- notre vision sur les différentes classes d’actifs
Cette revue sera continument enrichie avec nos indicateurs quantitatifs.
La plupart de nos analyses sont disponibles sur www.finlightresearch.com
Our monthly publication “Market Perspectives” presents a synthetic view of all the asset classes we cover.
The report is composed of six sections covering Macro, Equities, FI & credit, FX, Commodities and Alternatives.
Each section is preceded by a summary of our views on the related asset class.
Most of our publications are available on our web site www.finlightresearch.com
‘Deflationary Boom Markets’
‘Deflationary Boom Markets’ is the name of the game. Deflation forces Central Banks into action. Central banks to push Bonds and Equities higher, inflating the bubble some more, although on a rougher path and with higher volatility than we got accustomed to in recent years.
1. Reflation Phase To Be Temporary, More Downside Ahead
Earlier on in 2016, ‘random and violent markets’ went off to panic mode out of (i) fears over China’s messy stock market and devaluing currency, (ii) plummeting oil price, (iii) strong US Dollar. Today, we believe complacent markets are similarly illogical and over-shooting, this time on the way up. As we re-assess the validity of the underlying risks, we expect a shift in narrative in the few months ahead and a sizeable sell-off for risk assets.
2. Four Key Conviction Ideas
We analyze below our key ideas for the next 12 months:
Short Chinese Renminbi Thesis. In Q1, China only managed to keep GDP in shape by means of graciously expanding credit by a monumental 1 trn $. Unsurprisingly, at 250% total debt on GDP, you cannot borrow 10% of GDP per quarter for long, without a currency adjustment, whether desired or not.
Short Oil Thesis. Long-term, we believe Oil will follow a volatile path around a declining trend-line, which will take it one day to sub-10$. Within 2016, we expect global aggregate demand to stay anemic and supply to surprise on the upside, inventories to grow, primarily due to the accelerating speed of technological progress.
Short S&P Thesis. To us, the S&P is priced to perfection, despite a most cloudy environment for growth and risk assets, thus representing a good value short, for limited upside is combined with the risk of a sizeable sell-off in the months ahead.
Short European Banks Thesis. We believe that micro policies at the local level, while valid, are impotent against heavy structural macro headwinds, and only the macro environment can save the banking sector in its current form in the longer-term. Macro structural headwinds for banks these days are too heavy a burden (negative sloped interest rate curves, deeply negative interest rates, deflationary economy, depressed GDP growth, over-regulation, Fintech), and will likely push valuations to new lows in the months/years ahead.
Fasanara Capital Investment Outlook | February 1st 2015
1. Seismic Activity On The Rise
2. No Volatility No Gain
3. The Role Of Optionality
4. Crystal Ball
5. Deflation Is A Multi-Year Process
6. Three Big Trades for 2015
« Market Perspectives » est notre revue mensuelle des marchés. Elle présente de la façon la plus synthétique possible :
- notre analyse des principaux faits marquants et indicateurs macro susceptibles de dessiner les marchés sur le mois.
- notre vision sur les différentes classes d’actifs
Cette revue sera continument enrichie avec nos indicateurs quantitatifs.
La plupart de nos analyses sont disponibles sur www.finlightresearch.com
Our monthly publication “Market Perspectives” presents a synthetic view of all the asset classes we cover.
The report is composed of six sections covering Macro, Equities, FI & credit, FX, Commodities and Alternatives.
Each section is preceded by a summary of our views on the related asset class.
Most of our publications are available on our web site www.finlightresearch.com
Rumpelstiltskin at the Fed by Harley Bassman, PIMCO, executive vice presiden...Nigel Mark Dias
Rumpelstiltskin at the Fed by Harley Bassman, PIMCO, executive vice president & portfolio manager
SUMMARY
Has the Federal Reserve reached the bottom of its policy toolkit? Many things are still possible, at least in theory, including negative interest rates (which we believe would be ineffective and potentially harmful) or a “helicopter drop” of money. Another option is to resurrect a successful plan from 83 years ago: Purchase a tremendous amount of gold at a price substantially higher than market levels.
A massive Fed gold purchase program might finally lift the anchor on inflationary expectations and consumers’ spending habits. It would increase the price of a globally recognized store of value. It almost sounds like a fairy tale – but it’s happened before.
Though it seems incredibly farfetched, a massive Fed gold purchase program could echo a Depression-era effort that effectively boosted the U.S. economy.
Warren Buffett famously railed against the shiny yellow metal in 2012 when he noted all the gold in the world could be swapped for the totality of U.S. cropland and seven ExxonMobils with $1 trillion left over for “walking-around money.” His point was that these assets can generate significant returns while owning gold produces no discernable cash flow.
While this observation is certainly true, the rub is that this is not a fair comparison since gold is not an asset; rather, it should be considered an alternate currency. Pundits often describe the five factors that define “money”:
Its supply is controlled or limited,
It is fungible/uniform – this is why diamonds cannot qualify,
It is portable – this is why land cannot qualify,
It is divisible – thus art cannot be money, and
It is liquid – this means people will readily accept it in exchange.
By this definition, gold is certainly a form of money, and to Mr. Buffett’s point, one also earns no cash flow on paper dollars, euros, yen or yuan.
Credit Suisse Global Investment Returns Yearbook 2016 Credit Suisse
Against the backdrop of the first interest rate increase by the Federal Reserve in almost a decade, the Credit Suisse Research Institute’s Global Investment Returns Yearbook examines similar episodes since 1900 and derives potential implications for future economic and financial market developments.
- Download the full report: http://bit.ly/1QSo6qn
- Order hard copy: http://bit.ly/1T9sTbe
- Visit the website: bit.ly/18Cxa0p
1. Reflation Phase To Be Temporary, More Downside Ahead
Earlier on in 2016, ‘random and violent markets’ went off to panic mode out of (i) fears over China’s messy stock market and devaluing currency, (ii) plummeting oil price, (iii) strong US Dollar. Today, we believe complacent markets are similarly illogical and over-shooting, this time on the way up. As we re-assess the validity of the underlying risks, we expect a shift in narrative in the few months ahead and a sizeable sell-off for risk assets.
2. Four Key Conviction Ideas
We analyze below our key ideas for the next 12 months:
Short Chinese Renminbi Thesis. In Q1, China only managed to keep GDP in shape by means of graciously expanding credit by a monumental 1 trn $. Unsurprisingly, at 250% total debt on GDP, you cannot borrow 10% of GDP per quarter for long, without a currency adjustment, whether desired or not.
Short Oil Thesis. Long-term, we believe Oil will follow a volatile path around a declining trend-line, which will take it one day to sub-10$. Within 2016, we expect global aggregate demand to stay anemic and supply to surprise on the upside, inventories to grow, primarily due to the accelerating speed of technological progress.
Short S&P Thesis. To us, the S&P is priced to perfection, despite a most cloudy environment for growth and risk assets, thus representing a good value short, for limited upside is combined with the risk of a sizeable sell-off in the months ahead.
Short European Banks Thesis. We believe that micro policies at the local level, while valid, are impotent against heavy structural macro headwinds, and only the macro environment can save the banking sector in its current form in the longer-term. Macro structural headwinds for banks these days are too heavy a burden (negative sloped interest rate curves, deeply negative interest rates, deflationary economy, depressed GDP growth, over-regulation, Fintech), and will likely push valuations to new lows in the months/years ahead.
Fasanara Capital Investment Outlook | February 1st 2015
1. Seismic Activity On The Rise
2. No Volatility No Gain
3. The Role Of Optionality
4. Crystal Ball
5. Deflation Is A Multi-Year Process
6. Three Big Trades for 2015
« Market Perspectives » est notre revue mensuelle des marchés. Elle présente de la façon la plus synthétique possible :
- notre analyse des principaux faits marquants et indicateurs macro susceptibles de dessiner les marchés sur le mois.
- notre vision sur les différentes classes d’actifs
Cette revue sera continument enrichie avec nos indicateurs quantitatifs.
La plupart de nos analyses sont disponibles sur www.finlightresearch.com
Our monthly publication “Market Perspectives” presents a synthetic view of all the asset classes we cover.
The report is composed of six sections covering Macro, Equities, FI & credit, FX, Commodities and Alternatives.
Each section is preceded by a summary of our views on the related asset class.
Most of our publications are available on our web site www.finlightresearch.com
Rumpelstiltskin at the Fed by Harley Bassman, PIMCO, executive vice presiden...Nigel Mark Dias
Rumpelstiltskin at the Fed by Harley Bassman, PIMCO, executive vice president & portfolio manager
SUMMARY
Has the Federal Reserve reached the bottom of its policy toolkit? Many things are still possible, at least in theory, including negative interest rates (which we believe would be ineffective and potentially harmful) or a “helicopter drop” of money. Another option is to resurrect a successful plan from 83 years ago: Purchase a tremendous amount of gold at a price substantially higher than market levels.
A massive Fed gold purchase program might finally lift the anchor on inflationary expectations and consumers’ spending habits. It would increase the price of a globally recognized store of value. It almost sounds like a fairy tale – but it’s happened before.
Though it seems incredibly farfetched, a massive Fed gold purchase program could echo a Depression-era effort that effectively boosted the U.S. economy.
Warren Buffett famously railed against the shiny yellow metal in 2012 when he noted all the gold in the world could be swapped for the totality of U.S. cropland and seven ExxonMobils with $1 trillion left over for “walking-around money.” His point was that these assets can generate significant returns while owning gold produces no discernable cash flow.
While this observation is certainly true, the rub is that this is not a fair comparison since gold is not an asset; rather, it should be considered an alternate currency. Pundits often describe the five factors that define “money”:
Its supply is controlled or limited,
It is fungible/uniform – this is why diamonds cannot qualify,
It is portable – this is why land cannot qualify,
It is divisible – thus art cannot be money, and
It is liquid – this means people will readily accept it in exchange.
By this definition, gold is certainly a form of money, and to Mr. Buffett’s point, one also earns no cash flow on paper dollars, euros, yen or yuan.
Credit Suisse Global Investment Returns Yearbook 2016 Credit Suisse
Against the backdrop of the first interest rate increase by the Federal Reserve in almost a decade, the Credit Suisse Research Institute’s Global Investment Returns Yearbook examines similar episodes since 1900 and derives potential implications for future economic and financial market developments.
- Download the full report: http://bit.ly/1QSo6qn
- Order hard copy: http://bit.ly/1T9sTbe
- Visit the website: bit.ly/18Cxa0p
This Presentation is about the Financial Market in India.
Aim is to provide basic information regarding Stock market, Bombay Stock Exchange(BSE) and National Stock Exchange of India (NSEI).
A tutorial to basics of stock markets, basically for newbie's. Explains what is stocks, how trading happens, kinds of trading and some basic terminologies.
The Great Fall in China August 2015 - Special market bulletin St. James's PlaceMichael de Groot
Monday 24th August 2015 saw one of the biggest stock market crashes in China. St. James's Place published a special bulletin to let their investors know to stay clam and that the incident wasn't unexpected. This bulletin contains some great advice.
Gold advanced overnight to open at 1332.50/1333.50. It retreated to a low of 1328.25/1329.25 as investors gauged the pace of economic recovery in the U.S. while Chinese data showed a decline in the rise of home prices for the first time in over a year.
Markets still coming to terms with China devaluation this weekHantec Markets
Market sentiment has been rocked hugely by the shock decision of the People’s Bank of China to devalue the yuan last week. The move is twofold, helping to liberalise the currency in preparation for potentially making it into the basket of the International Monetary Fund’s basket of Special Drawing Rights, but also will help China to benefit in the wake of ongoing economic slowdown.
Trump continues to be a driver of market sentimentHantec Markets
Traders that have been getting worked up by the impact of "risk on, risk off" are now having to get used to this morphing into "Trump on, Trump off" (as dreadful as this sounds). You even have some expanding this with "Trumpflation" and "Donald down", but this will be the final time you hear these terrible terms on these pages. Anyway, Donald Trump continues to have a significant impact on market sentiment across financials with forex and commodities especially driving off moves on Treasury yields and the dollar. With a light economic calendar this is likely to continue this week.
The euphoria of the past year carried into the first quarter of 2014 only to be rudely interrupted by geopolitical events as Russia took over the Crimea. The hue and outcry was heard around the world and global markets were shaken by this event.
1. This commentary is not intended as investment advice or an investment recommendation. It is solely the opinion of our investment managers
at the time of writing. Nothing in the commentary should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell securities. Past performance is no
indication of future performance. Liquid securities, such as those held within DIAS portfolios, can fall in value. Global Financial Private
Capital is an SEC Registered Investment Adviser.
Thought for the Week (291):
Panic Selling
Synopsis
Equities sold off hard on Monday due to concerns over Russia’s move to deploy troops into southern Ukraine, and markets rebounded just as fast on Tuesday as the situation eased.
Panic selling is a kneejerk reaction driven by human emotion rather than fundamental analysis, and equity markets are frequently impacted by this behavior.
Markets put securities on sale every day, and the Investment Committee welcomes panic selling because these events represent some of the best times to buy equities.
What Happened on Monday?
On Monday, Russia’s leader, Vladimir Putin, ordered troops to be deployed into Ukraine’s southern region known as Crimea. This area is predominantly Russian by decent and still loyal to the Russian government. Putin’s explanation for this aggressive move was to protect the Russian population living there from potential persecution from Ukraine’s newly formed government.
Arguably the most heated standoff with the U.S. since the end of the Cold War is exposing the weakness of Russia’s economy that has been built solely on contributions from the energy industry. Oil and gas account for more than half of Russia’s exports, and with energy prices stagnant, the growth potential is all but exhausted. Growth forecasts for Russia’s economy have been cut more than once over the last 12 months, which has prompted Moscow to sound the recession alarm.
Furthermore, Russia supplies Western Europe with approximately 40% of their natural gas, of which 80% is transported via pipelines that stretch across Ukraine. Russia has a history of cutting off the supply of natural gas during conflict and has done so numerous times over the past decade.
Putin’s troop buildup in Crimea triggered the biggest stock selloff in Russia in over five years, down over 11%, and their currency weakened so much against the U.S. dollar that the Russian central bank was forced to intervene to prevent further losses.
World markets followed suit as The S&P 500 and Europe markets lost anywhere from 0.75% to over 3% in value. However, according to Oxford Economics, the following 2012 gross domestic product (GDP) numbers, which is a gauge of economic activity, highlight just how small Ukraine’s economy measures versus the U.S. and the world:
Ukraine: $95 billion
U.S.: $14.5 trillion
World: $72.4 trillion
Therefore, if the entire Ukraine economy were to disappear, then the impact to world GDP would be approximately 0.13% (95 billion ÷ 72.4 trillion).
Simply put, rather than assessing the true impact to the global economy, traders chose to “shoot first and ask questions later” by selling feverously throughout the day.
2. This commentary is not intended as investment advice or an investment recommendation. It is solely the opinion of our investment managers
at the time of writing. Nothing in the commentary should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell securities. Past performance is no
indication of future performance. Liquid securities, such as those held within DIAS portfolios, can fall in value. Global Financial Private
Capital is an SEC Registered Investment Adviser.
What Happened on Tuesday?
On Tuesday, the U.S. woke to news that Putin chose not to escalate Russia’s involvement in Ukraine (for now). We cannot be sure why he chose to withdraw further aggression given that he had been clearly planning this move for weeks. Perhaps it had to do with the threat of sanctions from the U.S. and Europe. Perhaps not.
NOTE: One conspiracy theory that the Investment Committee believes hold some merit is that Putin backed off on Tuesday given the financial impact to Russia. He is a large owner of equities, and most of his allies are very powerful and wealthy individuals in Russia who lost billions in the 11% selloff in the Russian equity market on Monday.
Markets immediately rallied hard across the globe, as concerns over a full-blown invasion seemed highly unlikely. In fact, the S&P 500 saw its best day of 2014, erased all the losses for 2014, and even reached a new all-time high.
Panic selling is a kneejerk reaction driven by human emotion rather than fundamental analysis, and equity markets are frequently impacted by this behavior. To demonstrate, the chart below shows just how often the S&P 500 has been under pressure from panic selling.
Source: Yahoo! Finance
Let’s walk through some of the more recent selloffs and determine which have been predicated upon changing fundamentals:
January 2014: Concerns over a looming correction of 10%+ in equities and fears in emerging markets spooked equities. However, company earnings were reported to be quite healthy and contagion from emerging markets were overblown.
October 2013: Investors panicked over the government shutdown and potential default on U.S. debt. Both ended up to be nothing more than political charades and masking economic data that pointed to a slow and steady recovery in the U.S. and Europe.
August 2013: The truly terrible events that occurred in Syria caused the S&P 500 to decline almost 1.5% the day the news was reported. Most companies in the U.S. have next to no
3. This commentary is not intended as investment advice or an investment recommendation. It is solely the opinion of our investment managers
at the time of writing. Nothing in the commentary should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell securities. Past performance is no
indication of future performance. Liquid securities, such as those held within DIAS portfolios, can fall in value. Global Financial Private
Capital is an SEC Registered Investment Adviser.
exposure to Syria, however, they sold off for the sole reason that investors’ appetite for risk reversed.
June 2013: Fears over tapering of the Fed’s quantitative easing program caused panic worldwide and little was spared. But the Fed would only taper their bond buying if they felt that our economy was getting stronger, so stocks should do well in an improving economy. This counterintuitive behavior fortunately did not last long, and today tapering has been well received by investors.
Despite all of this panic selling, the only notable trend that emerged is that equities climbed higher each time because the catalyst for each selloff had nothing to do with the fundamentals of our economy and/or the fundamentals of the companies that compete in our economy.
Simply put, long-term investors can profit handsomely by spotting trends, and therefore, we have used these selloffs as opportunities to put cash to work.
Implications for Investors
In a span of just two trading days, we saw volatility spike and equity prices whipsaw over next to no change in the underlying fundamentals of the U.S. economy, the world economy, and/or companies that participate in these economies.
NOTE: If anything, we may actually see some good come out of Putin’s aggression in the form of increased exports of energy from the U.S. to other countries. Western Europe could certainly use an additional source of natural gas, and we would be a very welcome supplier given our vast resources and stable government.
The bottom line is that we’ve seen this behavior before and we will see it again. The Investment Committee even welcomes such irrational selling and we continue to sit patiently, waiting for these wonderful buying opportunities to emerge.