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The China Syndrome

The China Syndrome

 

Back in July I posted an article regrding the potential problems in China and now it would seem a fairly good time for an update.....The question being is the China effect merely 'transient contagion' as some would have us believe? Should we buy the argument that the Chinese stock market is unrepresentative of the real state of the country's economy, that it is totally detached and the plaything of ill-informed, mischievous speculators? The answer is simply.….NO! 

"Manic Depressive" Market Needs "Wholesale Panic" Before It Bottoms

"Manic Depressive" Market Needs "Wholesale Panic" Before It Bottoms

"The market is manic depressive and it swings from seeing only the positives to seeing only the negatives," notes the world’s biggest distressed-debt investor, Howard Marks, but for now, as Bloomberg reports, the extremes (in risk pricing and sentiment) that usually signal opportunity (or capitulation) are not present. As Guggenheim's Scott Minerd warns, "wholesale panic" is what's needed before the market turns, and as RBS notes, "1,800 might come pretty quick."

Presenting The Central Banks' Munitions Arsenal (Or What's Left Of It)

Presenting The Central Banks' Munitions Arsenal (Or What's Left Of It)

While most of new rounds of US QEs (2008, 2010, 2012), and Japan QE (2013) managed to depress volatility and boost asset pricing, late-cycle European QE failed to domesticate markets for long. By Q2, markets were already toppish, and volatility able to erupt, in the face of Central Banks activism. In 2015, financial markets started rioting against monetary activism and market manipulation by global Central Banks.

 

 

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