Time to buy: Retail investors swoop in when stocks falter
Send a link to a friend
[January 12, 2022] By
John McCrank
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. retail investors
have been dip-buyers so far in 2022, snapping up equities that funds
have shed from their portfolios in light of a more hawkish Federal
Reserve, but with a focus on quality stocks as opposed to speculative
names.
Growth and technology stocks, which typically generate lower returns in
higher-interest rate environments, have had a rocky start to the year as
big investors respond to expectations the Fed will raise interest rates
as many as four times in 2022, driving short-dated Treasury yields to
nearly two-year highs.
Still, weakness in stocks has been met with retail investors seeing
opportunities to buy. On Monday, after falling almost 3% earlier in the
day the technology-heavy Nasdaq recouped all its losses for the day in
afternoon trading, and it gained again on Tuesday.
"Buy the dip has been successful for how many – 8 or 10 years now – and
I think that people still see opportunities when they look around for
potential investments and the U.S. stock market is still the best game
in town," said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at retail brokerage
TD Ameritrade, which is owned by Charles Schwab Corp.
Clients of TD Ameritrade returned to buying this month after having been
net-sellers in December, with heavy selling in the final week of the
year as the Omicron COVID-19 wave began to hit hard, said Kinahan.
The busiest day this year for Apex Clearing, which processes trades for
brokerages including SoFi Technologies Inc and Firsttrade, was Jan. 5,
when the S&P 500 dropped around 2%, with a buy-to-sell ratio of 1.91, a
spokesperson for the company said. The S&P experienced a similar drop
the next day, and retail investors were again net-buyers, she said.
Individual investors have been focusing on stocks such as Tesla Inc and
Apple Inc, as well as tech-focused and leveraged exchange-traded funds (ETFs),
while they reduced their buying of securities related to gaming, space
exploration, and cannabis themes, said Giacomo Pierantoni, Head of Data
at Vanda Research.
"Retail investors have continued to buy large-cap tech and ETFs,
providing a cushion, but they aren't buying the dip aggressively in
speculative assets," such as cryptocurrencies and hyper-growth stocks,
he said.
[to top of second column] |
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., January 10, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
With risk appetite still low, some of the main picks in the past week for TD
Ameritrade clients have been big tech stocks such as Apple and Microsoft Inc
Corp, as well as blue-chips, including McDonald's Corp, Walt Disney Co and AT&T
Inc, Kinahan said.
A BIGGER FORCE
Retail investors have become a bigger force in the markets in the past couple of
years as retail brokerages have moved to commission-free trading and social
media has made it easier for individuals, many working from home due to the
pandemic, to coordinate on trading ideas. That can put them at odds with the
patterns of institutional investors.
Bank of America Securities analysts said retail clients and hedge funds were
buyers of U.S. equities last week, with around $500 million in net buys, as the
S&P 500 fell 1.9%.
The bank's institutional clients, meanwhile, began the year with their biggest
outflows since mid-January of 2021.
That phenomenon was also seen on Monday when retail investors notched their
third consecutive day of buying more than $1 billion in equities, according to a
note from JPMorgan analysts.
Monday's net total of $1.07 billion in equities bought by retail was in the 93rd
percentile of historical data, they said. That stands in contrast to
institutional investors which have been net-sellers.
(This story corrects to remove reference to sports and corrects analyst comments
in paragraphs 7 and 8.)
(Reporting by John McCrank; Additional reporting by Danilo Masoni; Editing by
Megan Davies and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|