Why did global markets crash on Monday and should we panic?

Any number of suspects could be blamed for Monday’s market beatdown, ranging from worries about the economy and seemingly slow-footed response from the Federal Reserve to the unwind of a popular global currency trade and concerns over corporate earnings.

Those all played a part in some shape or form, and each helped tell a story of a shifting investing landscape that likely has not fully played out.

“This is very much a regime shift that is affecting sentiment in a big way,” said Robert Teeter, chief investment strategist at Silvercrest Asset Management.

“The market got a little bit ahead of itself in that run-up that it’s had. Now we’re correcting back to where we were in April and May, and it’s been a violent correction because it’s been a very big wake-up call.”

That call came in the form of a sell-off that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average lose more than 1,000 Monday and put the S&P 500 down 3 per cent, resulting in the worst days for both indexes since September 2022.

Treasury yields tumbled as bond traders bet on both a slowing economy and a Fed that would be forced into lowering rates soon.

Concerns over the state of the economy began on Thursday when disappointing data on manufacturing and lay-offs fuelled concern over the economy.

Those were exacerbated Friday when the Labor Department reported lower-than-expected job creation numbers and a rising unemployment rate in July that triggered a reliable recession signal known as the “Sahm Rule.”

Soon, traders began pricing in aggressive Fed rate cuts after expecting the central bank to do little the rest of the year.

Indeed, policymakers were not far from investors’ minds, as sentiment grew that the Fed is waiting too long to ease short-term benchmark borrowing rates, which currently sit at 23-year highs.

Market pricing Monday implied a near certainty that the Fed would cut by half a percentage point at its September meeting and follow that with reductions in November and December that cumulatively would total 1.25 percentage points.

‘A perfect storm’ sinks markets

“It’s just a perfect storm of slowing growth, crowded positioning and risk-off sentiment that’s all coming to a head at the same time,” said John Belton, portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds.

“The market’s really going to follow the data now, and you’re going to have easing monetary policy as a backdrop.”

Along with economic and monetary policy concerns, the market had to contend with the unwinding of a popular trade that entailed borrowing cheap currencies such as the Japanese yen and buying higher-yielding currencies — the “carry trade” that has helped propel global markets with liquidity.

An unexpected rate hike last week from the Bank of Japan as well as currency intervention there have sparked fears that the carry trade is over. The yen rallied sharply Monday, and Japanese stocks had their worst day since Black Monday in October 1987.

Corporate earnings also have come under question.

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