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Dramatic shift in risky asset sentiment
2022-02-28 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       NEW YORK: First, it was inflation. Then came shaky tech earnings. Now, Russia. Slowly, then all of a sudden, forces are gathering that threaten to wring out the excesses that defined the post-pandemic era in markets.

       Within the span of a month, sentiment toward risky assets – which bordered on euphoric – has shifted dramatically. Speculative equities that went straight up for years have fallen back to earth, brought down by the prospect of higher interest rates.

       Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sparked fears of a global energy crisis and raised the spectre of stagflation. It all adds up to a remarkable coda to a two-year run that saw financial assets of all kinds soar as the Federal Reserve’s pandemic response flooded the system with money.

       The result: Gambler spirits have cooled, the Nasdaq has been flirting with a bear market, and trillions of dollars are being erased from global stocks.

       On the way up, Wall Street’s old guard warned time and again that people would come to regret the prices they paid for everything from special-purpose acquisition companies to meme stocks and crypto.

       With United States shares now down in five of the past eight weeks, they’re feeling vindicated, as tightening monetary policy and war endanger what has been the most dramatic episode of speculation since the dot-com bubble. Wherever you look, markets appear vulnerable.

       “Zombie companies, non-earning companies, the ones that were getting rewarded for seemingly no reason – they are the ones that are suffering the most, and regardless of how much they’re suffering, they’re not going to go back to those levels,” said Liz Young, head of investment strategy at SoFi.

       “The sea change is that ‘Oh, we can’t pump liquidity into the system forever,’ and we shouldn’t.”

       Nobody is saying the broader market is doomed. Dip buyers, emboldened by years of conditioning, came out in force the last two sessions, swooping in after the Nasdaq 100 Index nearly closed in a bear market.

       Still, it took weeks of damage to the major benchmarks before they surfaced this time, a departure from last year when a single day’s decline was almost always enough to coax out the bulls.

       For those who rode even relatively safe stocks skyward, there’s a sense the safety net has been pulled. Surging commodities will worsen inflation, leaving central banks handcuffed, sworn to higher rates and in no mood for the spendthrift rescues of yesteryear.

       The US economy may be growing, but investors have pushed many share prices so far beyond expected earnings that even a 20% plunge would fail to make them obvious bargains.

       How extreme did pricing get? As recently as November, the Nasdaq 100 index was trading for almost six times the combined sales of its constituents, double the valuation of 18 months earlier and as high as any time in two decades.

       At 22 times annual earnings, S&P 500 companies were considered expensive at the start of 2020, before the Covid-19 crash hit. Within a year the ratio jumped to 32, nearly twice the historic level.

       Outside of the major indexes, the picture has frequently been one of full-blown bloat. Among smaller companies tracked in the Russell 2000, 47 surged 10-fold or more from the pandemic bottom through the end of last year.

       In February 2021, 93% of the index’s members were trading above their 200-day moving averages – the highest percentage on record.

       “You had such crowded positions and you could see it in a variety of markets,” said Sameer Samana, Wells Fargo Investment Institute senior global market strategist.

       “You could see it in equities, with tech and other speculative stocks. You could see it in crypto, you could even see it in smaller cap stocks.

       “We had this rolling bull market in risk assets in the fourth quarter when we realised that omicron wasn’t going to be as big of an issue as we had thought.”

       Even after rallying to end the week, the S&P 500 is still 8.6% below its all-time high set in January. Richly valued technology shares – the stock market’s pandemic darlings – are down more than 14% from their peak.

       While the revaluation has been swift, speculative areas are not out of the woods – at least from a valuation perspective. The Nasdaq 100, which bounced in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion, fetches 32 times earnings, down from around 40 at several points last year, but still above its historical average.

       Lofty valuations of the pandemic era may have seemed justifiable against a backdrop of rock-bottom rates and billions of dollars worth of stimulus from the Fed each month.

       With the central bank set to lift rates and end its massive bond-buying program in March, risk assets were already under pressure to start the year. Now, as Russia sends troops into Ukraine and the US levies sanctions, volatility is soaring.

       “With the amount of stimulus and liquidity in the system, valuations and expectations got silly,” said Dan Suzuki, Richard Bernstein Advisors’ (RBA) deputy chief investment officer. “Now that liquidity is starting to tighten and growth is starting to slow, those trends have reversed.” — Bloomberg

       


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关键词: market     companies     Nasdaq     assets     rates     liquidity     shaky tech earnings     stocks     crypto    
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