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"It's A Series Of Rolling Mini-Bubbles"

"It's A Series Of Rolling Mini-Bubbles"

Authored by Kevin Muir via The Macro Tourist blog,

Think back to earlier this year. At the time, the market was convinced Trump was about to usher in a new wave of free market nirvana. Hedge fund managers piled into small cap equity long positions, confident the pro-growth policies would fuel a massive outperformance for the Russell 2000 index. Here is a chart I ran in my piece “The reality is something in between” which shows the extent of the small cap run:

SocGen: "This Is What Happens When The Algos All Head For The Exit At The Same Time"

SocGen: "This Is What Happens When The Algos All Head For The Exit At The Same Time"

After Goldman, JPM and even Dennis Gartman all opined on Friday's "tech wreck", in which the Nasdaq tumbled 2% as the Dow Jones hit new all time highs (the only previous time it has done that was in 1999 just as the tech bubble was ramping up), and when the Philly semiconductor index fell 4.2%, SocGen's Andrew Lapthorne could not resist, and in a note released on Monday morning, explains that what happened on Friday was merely an episode of "systematic momentum selling", or said otherwise, a teaser of what happens when the algos all "head for the door all at the sam

Tech-Wreck Continues - FANG Stocks Tumble Below Friday Flash-Crash Lows

Tech-Wreck Continues - FANG Stocks Tumble Below Friday Flash-Crash Lows

It's not over...

Felix Zulauf (via Barron's round table)

Do you have any specific investment picks for the second half?

 

I don’t. Investors should tighten risk-management strategies to their portfolios. I expect the FANG stocks and the Nasdaq to have a big selloff. They could easily fall 30% or 40%. But I don’t want to end my Roundtable career on a bearish note. [Zulauf announced at the January Roundtable that he is “retiring” from the panel after this year.]

 

"Tech Wreck" Goes Global Dragging Worldwide Markets Lower; Cable, USDJPY Slide

"Tech Wreck" Goes Global Dragging Worldwide Markets Lower; Cable, USDJPY Slide

First the bad news: following Friday's "tech wreck" European equity markets have opened lower, with the Stoxx 600 sliding 0.9% and back under the 50DMA for the first time since December, dragged by selloff in tech shares, mirroring Asian markets as Friday’s "FAAMG" volatility in U.S. markets spreads globally, battering shares from South Korea to the Netherlands.

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