Analysis-Volatile markets, Fed uncertainty add to U.S. dip buyers' risks
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[January 25, 2022] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed, Maiya Keidan and David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wild swings in stocks
are testing the resolve of investors employing one of Wall Street’s most
popular strategies: buying the dip.
The S&P 500 reversed a deep selloff on Monday to finish up 0.3%, after
the benchmark index crossed into correction territory, while the Nasdaq
flirted with a bear market before also finishing higher, suggesting that
dip buyers have not gone extinct despite big declines in stocks in the
first weeks of 2022.
But while dip buying has rewarded investors in the last two years as
stocks doubled from their March 2020 lows, bargain hunters now face
uncertainties over how aggressively the Federal Reserve will need to
tighten monetary policy this year, a potential war between Russia and
Ukraine, and disappointing corporate earnings.
Indeed, the few sizeable rallies in equity indexes this month appear to
have created good opportunities to unload stocks, as they were swiftly
followed by more declines. The Nasdaq, which traded more than 20% off
its high on Monday before turning up, has seen just two days when it
rallied 1% or more.
"There doesn't seem to be a lot of confidence in risk allocations given
the number of uncertainties that are out there," said Katie Nixon, chief
investment officer at Northern Trust Wealth Management.
Traders in the options markets seemed more intent on guarding against
further declines than betting on gains, while retail investors, who have
frequently led the charge in past episodes of dip buying, sold a net
$2.1 billion in stocks between Thursday and early Monday, according to
JPMorgan.
“I don't think anything the Fed is going to do is going to make the
markets happy,” said Louis Gargour, managing partner and chief
investment officer at London-based LNG Capital.
Stocks are off to a rough start in 2022, with the Nasdaq down about 14%
from its November closing high as prospects of faster tightening by the
Fed spurred a rally in Treasury yields that dealt a sharp blow to Wall
Street's growth names.
A correction is confirmed if an index closes 10% or more below its
record closing level, according to a widely used definition. A close of
20% below marks a bear market.
Despite Monday's ultimate higher finish, all the major indexes are
trading below their 200-day moving averages, a key technical level
watched by market participants.
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A man walks past the New York Stock Exchange on the corner of Wall
and Broad streets in New York City, New York, U.S., March 13, 2020.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
In the options markets, investors have remained on the sidelines or leaned
bearish, with the Cboe Volatility Index leaping to its highest level in more
than a year.
Overall trading in put options, typically used to place defensive or bearish
bets on stock and index prices, outnumbered trading in bullish call options by
1.1-to-1 on Monday – the most bearish that ratio has been since March 2020,
according to Trade Alert data.
"I am not seeing much along the line of 'quick end to the selloff,'" said Chris
Murphy, co-head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna International Group. "It
still looks pretty fearful."
Moez Kassam, chief investment officer at the market neutral Anson Investments
Master Funds, said many hedge funds had covered their bearish equities bets when
stocks sold off in December, depleting some of the fuel that had powered past
reversals.
Short interest as a percentage of float recently fell below 5% overall, its
lowest level in four years, even as the dollar amount of short interest has
increased, according to financial analytics firm S3 Partners.
Some investors, including Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist
Advisory Services, are taking heart from signs of extreme caution, such as the
heightened bearishness of individual investors and elevated demand for downside
protection, two indicators which in the past have signified market bottoms.
"The market's risk/reward has greatly improved," Lerner wrote, saying the market
"is likely within a few percent of finding support."
Some remain cautious. Phil Orlando, portfolio manager and chief equity market
strategist at Federated Hermes, would prefer to wait until the Federal Reserve's
Federal Open Market Committee closes its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday
before deciding his next move.
"I'm not looking to catch a falling knife ahead of this FOMC meeting," Orlando
said.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed, David Randall and Maiya Keidan; Additional
reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Leslie Adler)
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