Analyst Moves: PDCO, AA
A few weeks into the New Year, investors seem to be in a carefree mood. The traditional measures of volatility remain at extremely low levels. After all, the European economic crisis has calmed, budget negotiations in Washington aren’t front page news at the moment, and earnings season is unfurling without much drama (except for Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) sobering near-term outlook).
How little volatility is there in the market? The Volatility Index (VIX), which uses options trading activity as a gauge of investor fear, is at its lowest level in two years.
#-ad_banner-#Though investors were a bit spooked in late December in the face of the budget crisis (which temporarily spiked the VIX), the long-term volatility trend has been gliding lower. Simply put, investors know the typical risks that can derail the market, and they are expecting little drama in coming months.
But what about the types of issues that investors can’t see coming? Nassim Taleb, an author focused on randomness, probability and uncertainty, calls these unforeseen events “Black Swans.” When one of these occurs, the market can take a fairly significant hit.
Here are four possible Black Swans that may roil the market in 2013.
1. Iran deepens its nuclear enrichment program and the U.S. responds |
![]() Iran will be voting for a new president this summer, as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s term expires in August. If his successor is a hand-picked choice of the Ayatollah Khamenei, then global strategists may well conclude that Iran will maintain or deepen its hard line stance. And looming military tensions between Iran and the West would trigger the possibility of a closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which is the only open sea passage from the Persian Gulf to the ocean. In such a scenario, oil prices would quickly spike much higher, dealing a major headwind to the global economy — and stock markets. |
2. The Federal Reserve shifts its footing |
![]() In addition to this tightening scenario, there is always the possibility that existing Fed policy starts to lose its effectiveness. The Fed’s various Quantitative Easing (QE) measures have generally helped the bond and stock markets, but the Fed’s balance sheet is now so stressed, that we simply don’t know how the market will respond to any interest rate hiccups as the effects of the various QE programs start to wane. |
3. Inaction on the deficit leads to further market-rattling debt downgrades |
![]() Even as the total amount of government spending has grown quickly in each of the past four years, the market has moved higher and higher. So investors have already concluded that the rising level of government debt simply has no bearing on the markets. Yet you can only stretch a rubber band so far, and as long as inaction reigns, the debt load swells higher, and the eventual moves to start paying down our debt will have a much more draconian effect on U.S. economic growth. It’s a notion that has been seemingly ignored until this point, but could be the “Black Swan of 2013.” |
4. China starts selling our bonds |
![]() Yet China’s new leadership has given clear signs of shifting its economy in the direction of domestic consumption. If they’re serious about stimulating domestic demand, then they would have less incentive to pursue a cheap currency policy. As we saw with Japan in past decades, a weak currency only makes sense in the context of an export-led economy. Chinese policy makers also worry about inflation, and one way to keep price pressures at bay is to let your currency strengthen (which weakens import prices). Lastly, China surely has an eye on the U.S. budget mess, and may eventually follow through on its threat to strongly decrease its ownership of U.S. bonds. Without China, Uncle Sam would be paying much higher interest rates. |
Action to Take –> By definition, the black swan that derails markets may be one that we can’t even perceive right now. These four mentioned above are simply the ones that we already grasp. A steadily rising market, with multi-year lows in various volatility gauges, underscores the need to maintain a defensive posture with your portfolios.
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