Investors are fleeing stocks and running to safe-havens like bonds
and gold, driven by concerns about economic growth and the
effectiveness of central banks' policies.
At the same time, tumbling energy prices are upending the economies
of oil-producing countries, further slicing into global economic
growth.
Only six weeks ago cheap oil prices were still expected to cushion
the global economy, and the Federal Reserve's decision in December
to raise interest rates for the first time since the end of the
financial crisis in 2008 was widely seen as a vote of confidence in
the world's largest economy.
In addition to the fall in U.S. stock markets, major stock indexes
worldwide have also been hit hard, despite efforts by the Bank of
Japan and the European Central Bank to spur growth through lower
interest rates.
Large institutions and sovereign wealth funds, who borrowed in euro
and yen, have been selling riskier assets, and are now buying back
those currencies, undermining central bank efforts.
With Thursday's decline, the S&P 500 stock index has lost 10.5
percent so far in 2016, its worst start to a year in history,
according to Bespoke Investment Group, an investment advisory in
Harrison, New York. The 10-year note's yield has fallen to 1.63
percent, its lowest closing level since May 2013.
Here are some of the chief issues weighing on the market now.
WHAT IS THE BIGGEST REASON FOR THE SELLOFF?
The slump in equity prices which began late last year has deepened
as banks grapple with negative interest rates in parts of Europe and
Japan and the flattening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve.
"One of the new themes in markets is that (quantitative easing) has
damaged the banks and that therefore it exacerbates the risk-off
environment," said Steve Englander, managing director and global
head of G10 FX strategy at Citigroup in New York.
Negative interest rates on central bank deposits and on government
bond yields undermine the traditional ability of banks to profit
from the difference between borrowing costs and lending returns.
With a decline of 18 percent on the year, S&P 500 financials are by
far the worst performing sector in 2016.
While the Federal Reserve has avoided introducing negative rates on
reserves, in Congressional testimony on Thursday, Fed Chair Janet
Yellen told lawmakers that the Fed would look into negative interest
rates if needed.
"I wouldn't take those off the table," she said.
WASN'T ENERGY THE PROBLEM?
Higher levels of U.S. oil output, thanks to fracking technology,
along with over-production by Saudi Arabia, contributed to a
world-wide oil glut, sparking a steep fall in energy and other
commodity prices at the start of last year.
At $27 a barrel, oil prices are now near 13-year lows and some
analysts say they expect to see prices drop further.
Tumbling oil prices resulted in sharp contractions in the economies
of oil-producing countries, and pushed up yields on corporate debt,
leading to defaults in the energy sector.
“Investors whose livelihood revolve around oil and gas and
commodities are liquidating because they need the cash," said
Stephen Massocca, chief investment officer at Wedbush Equity
Management in San Francisco.
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WHAT'S NEXT FOR THE FED?
Markets now do not expect the Fed to go ahead with its planned
interest rate rises this year. The federal funds futures market now
shows traders are not expecting the Fed to raise rates until at
least February of next year. At one point on Thursday, futures
contracts were even pricing in a slight chance of a rate cut this
year, and investors said some of the rally in gold prices resulted
from the possibility of a rate cut.
The move in fed funds futures has been accompanied by a rapid
decline in the spread between short-dated and long-dated U.S.
Treasury securities. The difference between the 2-year Treasury note
yield and 10-year note yield has narrowed to 0.95 percentage points,
the tightest it has been since December 2007. The flattening of the
yield curve has often preceded recessions in the past.
The narrowing yield curve spread shows investors are less confident
of economic growth, even though Yellen told Congress on Wednesday
that U.S. economy looks strong enough that Fed may stick to its plan
to gradually raise interest rates.
"Part of the problem is that the Fed is in a no-man's land right
now: not dovish enough for the doves and not hawkish enough for the
hawks, so it's not satisfying any point of view in the investment
markets," said Terri Spath, chief investment officer at Santa
Monica-based Sierra Investment Management.
WHEN WILL THE FALL IN STOCKS END ?
There are few signs yet that investors are dumping their holdings
wholesale, typically a mark of a market bottom, said Alan Gayle,
director of asset allocation at RidgeWorth Investments in Atlanta.
"It still seems to be focused on specific issues, whether it’s
credit or it’s oil. But clearly there is a more defensive tone that
the market is taking and we’re watching for signs of capitulation,"
he said.
Similarly, Credit Suisse noted that hedge funds have been selling in
February, but the scope of that selling "lacks the much anticipated
capitulation trade that would signal a bottom."
Credit Suisse also noted that macro-focused hedge funds have built
up large U.S. equity short positions which have been a decent
indicator of market direction in the past.
Even if the severity of the selling tapers off, 2016 will likely
continue to be a bad year for stocks, said Mohannad Aama, managing
director at Beam Capital Management in New York. The S&P 500 stock
index is down approximately 10.3 percent for the year to date, while
the Nasdaq Composite is down more than 15 percent over the same
time.
"Although we’ve being seeing good job numbers, the general feeling
is that the U.S. economy is nearing a peak and there is not much
left as far as trends to be talked about," Aama said.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf, Ann Saphir, Howard Marcus, Saqib
Ahmed, Jennifer Ablan, Chuck Mikolajzcak and David Randall. Writing
by David Randall and David Gaffen.)
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