The Economist - USA (2022-01-29)

(Antfer) #1

60 TheEconomistJanuary29th 2022
Finance & economics


Financialmarkets

Forward in fear


A


s the stock-tradingscreens  turned
red,  one  trader  was  heard  to  quip  that
at least some things are falling in price. By
the  market  close  on  Wednesday,  January
26th,  the  cumulative  loss  on  the  s&p 500
index had moved towards 10% for this year,
barely four weeks in. The year­to­date de­
cline in the nasdaqComposite, a tech­hea­
vy index, is well into the double digits. The
message  from  the  Federal  Reserve,  which
concluded its scheduled policy meeting on
the  26th,  is  that  interest  rates  must  rise
soon to tackle high inflation. It has been a
rocky start to 2022 for investors. 
The  day­to­day  numbers  for  the  broad
indices do not do full justice to the jump­
iness  of  markets.  Much  of  the  drama  has
been beneath the surface, at the stock or in­
dustry level. Technology shares in particu­
lar have fared badly. The ftse100 index of
British stocks, which is light on technology
and heavy on oil and commodity firms, has
been more resilient than American indices
(see chart 1). Prices have swung wildly dur­
ing  each  trading  day.  On  Monday,  for  in­
stance,  trading  began  in  New  York  with  a
big sell­off, which then intensified. At one
point the nasdaqwas down by almost 5%.

Thenstockssuddenlyrallied.Thenasdaq
finishedthedayupby0.6%.OnTuesday
sharepricesfellagain.OnWednesdaythe
s&p 500 hadposteda handsomeincrease
beforeJeromePowell,theFed’schairman,
gavehispressconference.Bythetimehe
hadfinishedspeaking,it wasinthered.
Behindalltheminute­to­minutelurch­
esisa marketthatissomewhatforward­
looking.Andwhathasthemarketnowto

lookforwardto?Quitea lotoftrouble,it
wouldseem.Insixmonths’time,theeasy
moneythathassupportedstockpricesfor
solongwillbefirmlyonthewayout.The
economywillbeweaker.Corporateprofits
willbefeelingthesqueezefromdecelerat­
ingrevenuegrowthandfromrisingwage
costs.Thereare,inshort,morereasonsfor
alarmthanhope.Nowondermarketsare
sojittery.
StartwiththeFed,whichisneverfar
frominvestors’thoughts.Afterspending
muchof 2021 playingdownanyimmediate
needfortightermoney,theFedchangedits
tune quite abruptly. Itsounded a more
hawkishnoteatitsmonetary­policymeet­
ing in December. The minutes of that
meeting,publishedonJanuary5th,made
cleartoinvestorsthatrateswouldsoonbe
goingup.Thereasonsforthevoltefaceare
straightforward. Inflation is uncomfort­
ablyhigh.Itcannolongerbedismissedas
transitory.Andthelabourmarketisfast
runningoutofworkers.Speakingonthe
26th,MrPowell emphasisedtherisksto
pricestabilityanddidnotdismisstheidea
ofa rapidseriesofinterest­rateincreases.
A0.25%rateriseattheFed’snextmeeting
onMarch15th­16thseemsnailed­on.
Inresponsetothechangeintone,mar­
ketshavepricedinmorerapidpolicytight­
ening.Theriseinlong­termrealinterest
rateshasbeennotablysharp.Yieldsonten­
yearTreasury inflation­protectedsecuri­
ties(tips),whichwerearound­1%atthe
start of the year, are now approaching
­0.5%.Stockmarketshavehadtoadjustto
this. Higher long­term rates reduce the

The reasons behind the current bout of stockmarketturmoil

→Alsointhissection
61 Whatwarmeansforcommodities
62 Omicronv theeconomy
63 A revivalatDeutscheBank?
64 Theriseoffinancialinfluencers
65 Freeexchange:FromQEtoQT

Losing it
Stockmarket indices, January 3rd 2022=100

Source:Bloomberg *January4th2022=100

1

105

100

95

90

85

80

December 2021 January 2022

    13 20 27 3 10 17 2426

FTSE 100*

NASDAQ
Composite

S&P 00

— Buttonwood is away
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