Good Articles to Share

1987 Stock Crash, Can It Happen in 2017?

Tan KW
Publish date: Mon, 17 Jul 2017, 11:05 PM
Tan KW
0 458,276
Good.

By Mark Kolakowski | July 17, 2017 — 6:00 AM EDT

 

The bull market in stocks faces a major threat from the end of low interest rates as the U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks worldwide unwind their balance sheets and withdraw massive injections of liquidity, according to Barron's. One scenario is that actions by the Federal Reserve will push the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury Note to 3% and the S&P 500 Index (SPX) will peak at around 2600, a precarious level at those bond yields. That could spur a stock decline along the lines of Black Monday 1987, though less severe, according to the analysis of Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group LLC, as reported by Barron's.

Black Monday Revisited

On Black Monday, October 19, 1987, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) plummeted 22.6% in a single day, marking the beginning of a global stock market decline and panic selling, with most of the major exchanges dropping significantly by the end of the month. No single news event spurred the drop. It took a year and a day, until October 20, 1988, for the S&P 500 to return to its opening value on Black Monday. While a number of protective mechanisms since 1987 have been built into the market to prevent panic selling, such as trading curbs and circuit breakers, many investors say the market remains vulnerable.

To be sure, many investors argue that the broader stock market still has room for sizable gains even if technology stocks, once the leaders, begin to lose momentum. The Fed remains supportive, and earnings and the economy are growing, albeit at a slower pace. (See also: "Tech Breakdown Won't Kill the Broader Market."

Parallels to Today

Nonetheless, several factors that led to the 1987 crash are familiar today. These include: high stock valuations, a slowing economy, rising inflation, investor overconfidence, and automated program trading that facilitated a sudden avalanche of sell orders when indicators turned negative. One difference between 1987 and today is that the U.S. dollar was strong then, depressing corporate earnings from exports. (For more, see also:What caused Black Monday, the stock market crash of 1987.) 

'Closer to the Exit'

Paulsen argues that the Fed should quickly raise interest rates and shrink its balance sheet before it hurts the broader economy, according to Barron's. He also worries that the falling dollar threatens to feed inflation just as the Fed is increasing borrowing costs through its rate hikes, all of which will put pressure on stocks, he told Barron's in its July 8 "Up and Down Wall Street" column.

Ray Dalio, founder of hedge fund management firm Bridgewater Associates LP, also believes that the era of near-zero interest rates manufactured by central banks is coming to end, per comments that he posted on social networking site LinkedIn, as quoted by Barron's. While central banks including The Fed will attempt to unwind their balance sheets in a deliberate fashion that keeps inflation and growth within acceptable bounds, Dalio suggests that they inevitably will have a miscalculation that produces a recession. As for the markets, he recognizes that central banks' massive infusions of liquidity have propped up the prices of financial assets, and suggests that he has moved "closer to the exit," but does not indicate what would be a clear sell signal in his opinion, Barron's reports. (For more, see also: "Bill Gross: QE is "Financial Methadone.")

Weakening Market Underpinnings

Other equity market underpinnings are starting to weaken. PIMCO Chief Investment Officer Dan Ivascyn says the growing political crisis over the Trump administration's Russia ties is dimming chances that the White House can speed up the economy through major tax reform and deregulation, according to Bloomberg.

Meanwhile, Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), does not rule out the possibility of another financial crisis in her lifetime and says that policy makers should be prepared. "Typically the crisis never comes from where we expect it," she told CNBC. Lagarde was responding, in part, to earlier remarks by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, who does not expect to see a similar crisis again in her own lifetime.

 http://www.investopedia.com/news/1987-stock-crash-can-it-happen-2017/ 

Discussions
1 person likes this. Showing 14 of 14 comments

jaynetan

so , can happen?
if that is the case, everyday someone dying, our turn then?
where to hide?

2017-07-18 08:30

aikinlai

Keep ur bullet....if crash happen. U can buy a lot of good US counter..keep it n be millionaire in the next recovery

2017-07-18 12:47

gohkimhock

Not that it won't happen, but chances are very slim in 2017. Healthy pullback yes.

2017-07-18 13:54

wotvr

The decade had the longest recession for the world so I doubt there's a big crash, especially since everyone kinda expects it.

2017-07-18 13:58

Andry007

US economy just recovering since Obama era and trump start to push it higher, unless there is world war 3

2017-07-18 14:09

ks55

Black Monday was nowhere compared with 2008/09 crisis where Wall Street crisis became High Street crisis.
Black Monday confined to Wall Street.

In Malaysia, market already crashed on Friday prior to Black Monday, when Karpal Singh and Lim Kit Siang was arrested on Thursday night under Ops Lallang.

Real test for Malaysian market was in 1997/98.
Real test for US market was 2008/09.
Both were measurable to similar magnitude when you did not know if you would be laid off, or which bank would not open for business the next day......

2017-07-18 14:10

bonus2016

the night before storm always in peace, DJI almost 22000pts, anyone think that Trump able to bring it to another level of history high? go and check not 10years history, just check hundred years history of DJI, u will know what i mean. 10 years circle period for sure eventually will happen, my question just 2017 / 2018? u need world war 3 to make it happen, hahaha, dont think me last time was 1941. Ppl make it happen, u know what i mean? 1st round, second round, 3rd round...........All the best, now i only holding one stock on hand, happy trading

2017-07-18 14:26

latlut

Dow up too fast and at very high level d. not sure bout crash but chances of correction is high.

2017-07-18 14:58

dusti

If author thinks like this, must take extreme care when driving, riding , take taxi, MRT, or just walking.good luck.

2017-07-18 16:33

Unicorn

I think like this. If everyone thinks market gonna crash, it won't crash. If everyone thinks market won't crash, it will crash. I feel more relieved when I read everywhere CRASH CRASH CRASH now...
I very scared when everyone says making money in stock market is too easy..

2017-07-18 17:59

tah16600

I think d market is not going to crash cos the participation from retail players r very low ,only abt 20% . Moreover still got plenty of penny stocks around. And also still got abundance of stocks undervalue. If the DowJone will to crash ,there might affect KLSE a bit only

2017-07-19 10:55

godhand

its going to crash. but the gap between the top and the bottom will close up as more mitigation plan has been implemented

2017-07-19 10:56

alvinchiam

anyway.. soon or later will crash must standby..u know..? ha ha... lets see who bad luck...?

2017-07-19 11:14

Post a Comment