Financial markets – A wind of panic blew on Wall Street

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After the sharp fall of the Nasdaq, investors are wondering if the market will stick to a correction or if we are approaching a prolonged depression.

The spectacular fall in Netflix shares (-21.79% on Friday) sent shivers down the spine and began to worry small carriers.

AFP

Since its last record in mid-November, the Nasdaq index, with its strong technological dominance, has dropped more than 15%, which anchors it clearly in the correction zone, with its worst month since October 2008, in the midst of a financial crisis. The broader S&P 500 index, which is more representative of the American market as a whole, has lost 8.3% since its last peak at the start of the year.

Netflix stock drop

The spectacular fall in Netflix shares (-21.79% on Friday), yet one of the darlings of Wall Street having reached almost 700 dollars in November to fall around 400 dollars, sent shivers down the spine and began to worry small holders and their retirement savings plan (401k) invested in the stock market.

“Your 401(k) is probably 40% lower than it was three months ago. I’m 65 and I don’t have time to get over it. Thank you Joe Biden”, complained a user. “People are losing a lot on their 401(k). The wallet decides the election so expect the Democrats to be completely defeated,” added another.

President Joe Biden, already at a low in popularity because of the economy, faces a tough midterm legislative election in the fall. It is the prospect of a rise in interest rates by the American Central Bank (Fed), to curb inflation at its highest in a generation, which is shaking Wall Street.

Rates, held at or near zero since the start of the pandemic, are expected to rise by regarding a percentage point this year. Many also think that the Fed has missed the turn in inflation and that it might operate a more severe tightening.

“We are still far from the bear market”

But the question is how much of a correction can turn into a “bear market” or “bear market”, i.e. an extended decline, as opposed to a “bull market” or “ bull market”, on the contrary optimistic. “It is true that the market acts without rhyme or reason, except for the Nasdaq”, recognized Peter Cardillo, analyst for Spartan Capital, evoking the wind of panic. But he thinks the season of mostly positive corporate results will change the dynamic.

For Gregori Volokhine, portfolio manager at Meeschaert Financial Services, “we are still far from the + bear market + but if we start to anticipate a slowdown in the economy with the rise in rates, then we will continue to sell what might make us go from a simple correction to a + bear market +”. The US economy is still expected to grow vigorously in 2022 recovering from the impact of the pandemic, but forecasters have already trimmed their projections.

Could a stalling stock market still affect growth? “It might slow the recovery but not throw us into recession,” assures AFP Sam Stovall of CFRA. “We have just cut our GDP growth forecast from 4.6% in 2022 to 4.2% but that has more to do with the duration of inflation and with expectations that the Fed will raise rates every quarter. this year,” adds the expert. For others, the correction, if not too prolonged, is a healthy step in a sometimes overvalued market.

“Wall Street is an opportunist”

A key indicator of stock valuation, the P/E ratio, which compares a stock’s price to the company’s earnings per share, currently sits at 21.2 for S&P 500 companies. that one pays more than 21 times the amount of the earnings per share of the company to be a shareholder.

According to calculations by Sam Stovall, historical statistics show that this ratio might drop to 19.7 at best in a 10-year rate environment between 1.75% and 2.25%. “This corresponds to a 15% drop in the S&P 500, so we are in the middle of a correction,” says the expert. “And history tells us that we might go down double, to -30%” if the famous ratio drops to 16.2, its historical average in a similar rate environment.

But the story brings another comfort: “Wall Street is an opportunist,” says Sam Stovall. “After a correction, investors come back in force and on average, it does not take more than 4 months to return to equilibrium,” he adds.

(AFP)

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