Believe It or Not, the Market Has
Three Silver Linings
Analysis by Mohamed A. El-Erian | Bloomberg
July 5, 2022 at 3:33 p.m. EDT
A monitor with stock market information on the floor of the
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., on Monday, June 27, 2022.
Money managers betting on a sustained global rebound will be left sorely
disappointed in the second half of this crushing year as a protracted bear
market looms, even if inflation cools. (Photographer: Bloomberg/Bloomberg)
To say that the first half of the year was painful for
investors would be a big understatement. They suffered large losses on their
holdings of stocks, corporate bonds, emerging markets, crypto and other assets;
and, for most of the last six months, they received no protection from
government bonds whose traditional risk mitigation attributes gave way to big
losses, too.
Indeed, other than oil and some other commodities, it was a
dismal picture all around in public markets. It is only a matter of time until
valuations in private equity follow suit.
This is an environment in which it is hard to argue for
silver linings, especially when so many analysts are warning that additional
losses may be ahead in both public and private markets. Yet three are already
evident.
First, genuine and
more sustainable value is being restored after a period in which asset
prices were lifted artificially and distorted by huge and predictable
injections of liquidity by central banks. Already some prominent individual
stocks are in oversold territory, having been technically contaminated by what
has been a generalized selloff as liquidity has been receding.
Second, after tracking equities lower and, in the process,
experiencing historic losses, government
bonds are resuming their role of risk mitigators in diversified investment
portfolios. This is better news for investors who, for most of the first
half of this year, felt that there was nowhere to hide.
One reason for the return of the traditional inverse
correlation between the price of government bonds (the “risk-free asset”) and
that of stocks (“risky”) is that the three main risk factors in play have
evolved sequentially — the third silver lining. Had they operated
simultaneously, the damage to markets and the economy would have been
significantly worse.
The market selloff started with surging “interest rate risk”
because of inflation and the sluggish policy reaction function of the Federal
Reserve. This hit both stocks and bonds hard. It was joined in the last few
weeks by higher “credit risk” as investors fretted that a late Fed scrambling
to catch up with inflationary realities would push the economy into recession.
The more these two risks persist, the greater the threat of unleashing the
third, more damaging risk factor: stress to market functioning.
For long-term investors, it will prove beneficial over time that markets are exiting an artificial regime that was maintained for far too long by the Fed and that resulted in frothy valuations, relative price distortions, resource misallocations and investors losing sight of corporate and sovereign fundamentals. The promise now is one of a more sustainable destination. Unfortunately, it comes with an uncomfortably bumpy and unsettling journey.
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