The official mile-marker for bear market territory is a 20% drop from the most recent high, and we surpassed that point across multiple indexes on a few occasions this summer. That is until our recent Q3 relief rally took place a couple weeks ago through last Thursday. At their lowest, indexes like the S&P 500 were down 23%, and the Nasdaq a whole 32% by mid-June. And by the end of last Thursday, those losses were cut in half to 12% and 15% respectively, naturally leading us to wonder if the worst was behind us—a classic bear market trap scenario. Such traps happen when an asset (like stock or other securities) that was losing value suddenly reverses course and begins to gain value or when an asset that looks to lose value keeps gaining. Such traps can lure in bearish investors who've bet against the asset causing them losses. Gambling on the downside - Why we rebounded: The market rallied in late July for a few reasons: inflation, rates, and hope. It’s not that rising rates or high inflation is good for the markets, it’s that by July, we reached an inflection point where investors started to anticipate inflation’s peak, leading to an injection of hopium into the markets.
- But we’re not out of the woods: Although that estimation might’ve been correct according to our last CPI report, the future is unknown, and it will still take inflation a good while to reach acceptable levels even if it does decline. Current reports also seem to place the next rate hike at an unknown for now, with most unsure if it’ll be another 75 basis points (0.75%) or a drop back to 50. “While higher interest rates, slower growth, and softer labor market conditions will bring down inflation, they will also bring some pain to households and businesses,” Fed chair Jerome Powell said last Friday.
- Big bets going against the trend: According to multiple reports, it seems hedge funds have upped the ante on their bets with net short positions on the S&P 500 of $107B. It’s not gambling if you’re a professional, right?
What’s the verdict? The market rally has certainly been stifled over the last few weeks, and the next move is anyone’s guess. All eyes are also on the labor market to see how it shapes up thanks to tighter financial conditions. We now find ourselves in an intermediary period while waiting for both the next inflation report coming out on September 13th and the next FOMC meeting that happens between September 20-21st. Take this related lesson on this topic and earn Dibs 🟡 while you're at it:
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