The bear market ends, so was that it?
After more than a decade of near uninterrupted growth,
investors were shaken from their complacency in January of this year by a sudden
and sustained fall in the market.
In hindsight (always the ideal but unavailable investment
tool) the reasons were obvious. Inflation was proving persistent – where previously
it was believed to be “transitory”.
Central banks had been too slow to act and were now
desperately trying to regain the initiative. They were pushing interest rates
up rapidly which impacted the expected future returns of many darlings of the
stock market.
Then Putin invaded Ukraine and sent further shockwaves
through the economies of the world, as the cost of fuel and food rocketed
upwards.
Once a stock market index falls by 20% from its peak,
it is described as being in a “Bear Market”. If it rises by 20% from the
trough, then it is described as being in a “Bull Market”. Bear market conditions
were swiftly registered by most major indices in the first quarter of 2022.
With inflation rising, interest rates rising, the war
continuing, and China still clinging to its “Zero Covid” policy, it seemed to
most observers of the markets that the only way was down.
The average person, who might not regularly read the
financial news, would be forgiven for thinking that by August, the fall in the
markets had simply continued.
Too late to do anything about it, so best to just
close your eyes and ride it out now.
They would therefore be surprised to learn that the US
market (specifically the S&P500, which other markets tend to follow) rose
by 9.1% in July alone.
Its best month since November 2020 and its best July
for more than fifteen years.
That growth continued into August. While the market is
not yet in Bull territory, the Bear market is technically therefore over.
So was that it?
Has the market correction now happened? Have we seen
the bottom and now the market simply rises again from here?
From where we stand I’m afraid to say that I think
that’s unlikely.
There are just too many headwinds for the global
economy.
Central banks in particular appear to have developed an almost manic determination to regain control of the situation with ever higher interest rates (regardless of the fact that most of the causes of inflation are “supply-side” aka “cost-push” and therefore unaffected by interest rates).
The practitioners in financial markets are most adept
at their use of language (often to help sell stuff, for example “this bond is
not junk, it’s high yield!”)
If the rise in the markets in July and August turns
out to be a brief respite in a downward trend, they would describe that as “a
dead-cat bounce”.
While not particularly pleasant (the trading floor in
my day was a true bear-pit), the idea of the market mimicking an unfortunate
moggy making its final fall from a great height, is certainly evocative.
So if this is only a brief respite in otherwise continuous
market fall, what should you do?
I would suggest that as we can’t know where the market
will actually go from here, such a recovery is not the time to make a
major reassessment of your strategy.
That said it could be an opportunity.
All portfolios have a couple of holdings for whom the long-term
prospects might not be so bright now.
These could be the firms who depended on cheap funding
and had not achieved profitability yet. Some of these have been termed the “meme
stocks”. Trendy but perhaps built on shaky foundations.
These are the stocks that have typically fallen the
most this year.
The recent rise in the market could present a valuable
opportunity to exit these positions, or at least trim the position.
Other than this the (perhaps temporary) end to the
bear market should not alter your long term strategy of regularly adding to your
portfolio and thereby taking advantage of dollar/cost
averaging.
Equities have proven to be the best performing asset
class over the last hundred years or so. For all the problems that the world
faces right now, I see no reason for that to change.
Disclaimer: This communication is purely meant as information for general interest. It is in no way to be taken as financial advice or relied upon in any way for investment decisions.
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