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Coronavirus worries and strife: Investors fear markets not out of woods despite big rally

Published 03/29/2020, 01:06 AM
Updated 03/29/2020, 03:30 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Wall St. Bull is seen standing on a nearly empty Broadway in the financial district, as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak continues, in New York

By Megan Davies and April Joyner

NEW YORK (Reuters) - After a brutal meltdown, some investors have been wading back into U.S. stocks. But others are wary of another leg down as the coronavirus spreads and its economic impact is difficult to predict.

High-profile investors from BlackRock Inc (N:BLK) to billionaire William Ackman have turned more bullish on equities in recent days, as unprecedented stimulus from the Federal Reserve, a $2.2 trillion stimulus bill signed Friday, and a call by President Donald Trump to get the United States back to work in weeks rather than months sparked the biggest weekly rally in the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1938.

But other investors, economists, and strategists are fearful of advising a jump back in, with no certainty about when the coronavirus outbreak will be under control.

"People are trying to time the bottom and that's indicative of an early bear market, when people have hope," said Richard Bernstein, chief executive officer of Richard Bernstein Advisors. "The beginning of a bull market starts with complete despair, when you've killed hope."

Bernstein said he was a "data hawk" and was looking for a combination of "improving fundamentals" - eyeing the basic health of the asset, rather than trading patterns - and "total disbelief," adding that in 2009 investors did not believe the bull market was real.

After a slump into bear market territory, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) surged over 20% from its recent low last week, which by one definition suggested a new bull market. That definition, however, should be treated with significant caution.

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BofA said on Friday that its Bull & Bear Indicator - a key market measure used to track positioning - had hit "maximum bearish," which could imply a rebound. However, that could have been borne out by the rally seen in the past week.

Ackman, whose Pershing Square (NYSE:SQ) LP fund gained a net 6.8% this month according to one investor, wrote to investors last week to say he had taken off credit market hedges and invested the money in new and existing stock holdings after turning "increasingly positive" on stock and credit markets.

Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN) said there was merit in being an early mover rather than waiting until a market bottom "has become apparent," while the BlackRock Investment Institute said the sell-off created value for long-term investors.

While some investors believe an earlier return to work would boost the U.S. economy, health experts say a haphazard patchwork of restrictions across states and a slow-to-mobilize White House could make the coronavirus impact worse. Cases in the United States soared past 135,000 on Sunday, the highest number in the world. [nL1N2BM046]

"Those advocating for less strict policy options have no real idea of the full social and economic costs of a large epidemic," said Steven Riley, professor of infectious disease dynamics at Imperial College London, Faculty of Medicine, School of Public Health, in an email to Reuters.

The possibility that the coronavirus outbreak fades, only to return once restrictions holding back economic activity are lifted, could cause "a severe financial crisis," said business consultancy Fathom Consulting.

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Edward Moya, senior market analyst at currency trading firm OANDA in New York, said the "longer we don't have people going to work, the greater the shock on the economy" - which could mean "U.S. markets open limit down at the start of next week." Limit down refers to the restrictions placed on how fast markets can fall.

U.S. stocks are expected to open down around 0.5%, according to financial spread betting company IG.

"We can expect more drama this week given that Friday’s bounce was so rapidly sold after the official close, and with more U.S. jobs data to come, plus a further rise in infection rates and death tolls, it looks to be another choppy week," said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG, in a statement on Sunday.

BEAR MARKET BOUNCE

Stocks have been highly volatile in the past few weeks, falling around 30% to notch a bear market then staging a stunning rally on hopes that the stimulus will help the economy.

Money managers rebalancing their portfolios to boost equity exposure into the end of the quarter may be supporting stocks.

A moderation in equity volatility could also help, as it is "an important precondition for investors to raise equity exposures," said analysts at Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn). The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) is down from its high earlier this month - although still pricing in some turbulence.

Still, on Friday, Wall Street stocks ended their massive three-day surge.

Shaun Osborne, chief FX strategist at Scotiabank, said in a research note on Thursday that there were a number of risks that could easily derail optimism, including how Western economies manage the virus and the re-emergence of cases in China. A more persistent slowdown that limits forward visibility on earnings further "will curb the ability for stocks to rebound," he said.

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Retail investors are particularly bearish, with a survey showing them the most pessimistic about the stock market since spring 2009.

Action in haven assets such as gold also points to continued skepticism. George Gero, managing director at RBC Wealth Management, said he received calls from clients wanting to add to their gold holdings last week through exchange-traded funds.

"Everywhere investors look, they see worry, problems and strife," Gero said.

Latest comments

Today, Trump mentioned in his press meeting, death toll in US could be 100,000. We have to walk long and winding road to overcome this virus and economic crisis.
If Trump says April 30, that means multiply it by 3. Now Trump and Fauci are saying 100,000 to 200,000 deaths along with MILLIONS of americans getting the COVID-19. THOSE ARE GUESSES! Now the sell off really begins on Monday...
In the last decade or two we have become use to V bottoms. This may no longer be the case in the absence of any visible economic clarity. The longer this last the more likely consumers will not return their "normal buying habits". I've been buying high dividend yields way off their highs . Thinking this is a rally in a bear market.
Usually the algos buy the first dip, especially after a classic 3 day buying thrust. The market is 6-8 mos ahead of the economy. We had an upspike at the end of Thursday on expectations of "more stimulus". Spike extremes usually get matched and exceeded. Let's see a bull stall outcome before we throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Quarter end window dressing could usher us into the spring. Perhaps cv19 is finally a wakeup call that medical and physical (everyone's body) infrastructure takes precedence. Americans have been neglecting both.
If the market is 6 most ahead! Then you sold in September? Right!!!
i know you TDS victims have been having wet dreams about the US collapsing, but the the new polls of trump's approval hit all time highs last week. oh CNN and sites like this didnt tell you about that? maybe you should have spent more time finding a good candidate who does not have dementia or is not a communist to run against trump.
The Fed os simply a parachute so we don’t hit the ground so hard, NOT a complete solution to continue a bull market.
Good way of putting it.
pmi numbers unemployment and these are the first weeks of many businesses not opening at all. GDP will be of epic proportions in the coming quarter.
There is no good news to buy on
We won’t have a dead cat bounce on futures or markets tomorrow
Never trade against the fed. If you trade against the fed, you loose. And bare in mind, that before covid19, we were not in a bear market. We were breaking all time high. So in my view, companies have enough meat to the bone to withstand 1 or 2 quarters of loss. Either that, of the all time high was just a joke.
 neither long or short. Just awaiting the right moment to get back in. Also. Not giving any advice to buy or sell. Just stating that trading against a fed who is prepaired to buy up stock, it not wise.
Good luck with that...
Fear trumps all.
Dow will sink big time this week...
ofcourse not...
The selling continues in 2 hrs stimulus isn’t gonna help stop a virus on medicine and we ain’t there yet congress approved the gold and markets still crashed Friday so futures look miserable even before they start later
Nope , mitagation , hydroxychloroquine , more PPE , more ventilators and a unified america. We will beat this ! Wont be easy
The money won't stop the pandemic or stop the drop in the economy and markets. The fall will only stop when the new cases of the virus start to fall steadily. Until then expect more red from the markets and a flailing economy, the new normal for now.
 common sense.
You're the Dude Chris! What do you think about Boeing?
same here... when the exponencial growth of the desease stops.. i am gonna start looking for stocks, now? no way, stock market have a lot more to fall to the value of a paralized company.
Of course this an extremely exaggerated panic delivered to us by the always wrong leftists. I can't any takers on the way out of the money downside options but same always wrong leftists post end of the world predictions day and night.  Always worse to pay 10-20 percent more than the next guy-but as hard as it is to believe that is often the always wrong leftist's strategy.
 Canada's PM Trudeau refuses to declare a Federal emergency in Canada because in his view, the infection rate and death rate is so small that it is not justified - and Canada's top Gov't doctor stated yesterday ''encouraging signs'' are already emerging that new cases of corona virus appear to be dropping.     In a Nation of 37.5 million we have 67 people dead from corona virus, and approx 1,700 dead from common flu.  Your argument is purely speculative and frankly, is rubbish.
 Good man!
we need to add that if this desease become common, we are talking about a reduction in expectation of life woldwide, it´s like every grandpa in the world playing rusian roulette with a revolver everytime they get sick.
Of course, this was a bull trap.. very clear.. dobt know why investors should get into it.I suggest wait until Dow gets to 15k.. you may still get intermediate bounces..Always better to get in at 10-20% higher once uptrend is confirmed, rather than losing another 30% on the downside..The virus will have nasty consequenes
15k*
 This will turn quickly at some point, I am in about 50% so far, waiting to see if we go lower
yeah, because goverment always can avoid the unavoidable.... that´s not a great argument to support your strategy, but actually is a good strategy, im doing something similar, i am expecting the next drop and the end of the exponential growth of the virus to start buying stocks.
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