By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Confluence News - Breaking News, Latest News and VideosConfluence News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos
Notification Show More
Latest News
Watch out — those IRS tax forms could actually just be malware
Tech
Notable Bets: How a text led to a big bet on long shot Florida Atlantic
Sports
Broadband provider TalkTalk plots £200m sale of corporate arm | Business News
Business
Nearly 100,000 prepayment energy meters forcibly installed last year | Business News
U.K News
Look out, Nvidia: AMD’s new CPUs could kill graphics cards for good
Tech
Aa
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • LifeStyle
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
Reading: Five financial trends that 2022 killed
Share
Aa
Confluence News - Breaking News, Latest News and VideosConfluence News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos
  • ES Money
  • U.K News
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Insider
Search
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Life Style
  • Tech
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Confluence News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos > Blog > Economy > Five financial trends that 2022 killed
Economy

Five financial trends that 2022 killed

Last updated: 2023/03/03 at 2:00 AM
The Economist
Share
SHARE


Financial markets’ nastiest surprises often come when something that is taken for granted is suddenly called into question—whether it’s rising tulip-bulb prices, functioning banks or a lockdown-free existence. Investors had a tough time in 2022. But given how many trends changed direction over the course of the year, the real surprise is that it was not nastier. Here were the most important reversals.

Contents
End of cheap moneyDeath of the long bull marketEvaporating capitalValue beats growthCrypto implodes (again)

End of cheap money

Future financial historians, looking back at the 2010s, will marvel that people really thought interest rates would stay near zero forever. Even in 2021, respectable investment houses were publishing articles with titles such as: “The Zero: Why interest rates will stay low”. Borrowing costs had been falling for decades; the combination of the global financial crisis of 2007-09 and the covid-19 pandemic seemed to have permanently glued them to the floor.

In 2022, persistent high inflation dissolved the glue. America’s Federal Reserve embarked on its swiftest tightening cycle since the 1980s, raising the target range for its benchmark interest rate by more than four percentage points, to 4.25-4.5%. Other central banks followed in its wake. Markets expect rates to stop climbing in 2023, with peaks of between 4.5% and 5% in Britain and America, and 3% and 3.5% in the euro zone. But the odds of them collapsing back to nothing are slim. The Fed’s governors, for instance, think its rate will finish 2023 above 5%, before settling down to around 2.5% in the longer run. The era of free money is over.

Death of the long bull market

Bull markets don’t die of old age, goes the adage: they are murdered by central banks. And so it was in 2022, although the long bull run that ended had grown older than most. From the post-financial crisis depths of 2009 to its peak at the end of 2021, the s&p 500 index of leading American shares rose by 600%. Interruptions to the upwards march—such as the sudden drop at the outset of the pandemic—were dramatic but short-lived.

This year’s crash has proved lasting. The s&p 500 fell by a quarter to its lowest point this year, in mid-October, and remains down 20%. msci’s index of global shares has fallen by 20%. Nor are stocks the only asset class to have been bludgeoned. Share prices have fallen in part because interest rates have risen, raising the returns on bonds and making riskier assets less attractive by comparison. The same mechanism pushed down bond prices to align their yields with prevailing rates. Indices compiled by Bloomberg, a data provider, of global, American, European and emerging-market bonds have dropped by 16%, 12%, 18% and 15% respectively. Whether or not prices fall further, the “bull market in everything” has come to a close.

Evaporating capital

Capital was not just cheap in the last years of the bull market, it was seemingly everywhere. Central banks’ quantitative easing (qe) programmes, devised during the financial crisis to stabilise markets, went into overdrive during the pandemic. Together, the central banks of America, Britain, euro area and Japan pumped out more than $11trn of newly created money, using it to hoover up “safe” assets, such as government bonds, and depress their yields.

This pushed investors in search of returns into more speculative corners of the market. In turn, these assets boomed. In the decade to 2007, American firms issued $100bn of the riskiest high-yield (or “junk”) debt a year. In the 2010s they averaged $270bn. In 2021 they hit $486bn.

This year it has fallen by three-quarters. The Fed and the Bank of England have put their bond-buying programmes into reverse; the European Central Bank is preparing to do likewise. Liquidity is draining away, and not just from the risky end of the debt market. Initial-public offerings (ipos) smashed all records in 2021, raising $655bn globally. Now American ipos are set for their leanest year since 1990. The value of mergers and acquisitions has fallen, too, albeit less dramatically. Capital abundance has turned to capital scarcity.

Value beats growth

The bull run was a dispiriting time for “value” investors, who hunt for stocks that are cheap relative to their underlying earnings or assets. Low interest rates and qe-fuelled risk-taking put this cautious approach firmly out of fashion. Instead, “growth” stocks, promising explosive future profits at a high price compared with their (often non-existent) current earnings, stormed ahead. From March 2009 to the end of 2021, msci’s index of global growth stocks rocketed by a factor of 6.4, more than twice the increase of the equivalent value index.

This year, rising interest rates turned the tables. With rates at 1%, to have $100 in ten years’ time you must deposit $91 in a bank account today. With rates at 5%, you need only put away $61. The end of cheap money shortens investors’ horizons, forcing them to prefer immediate profits to those in the distant future. Growth stocks are out. Value is back in vogue.

Crypto implodes (again)

Those who think crypto is good for nothing but gambling and dubious activities could not hope for a better example than the fall of ftx. The crypto exchange was also supposedly the industry’s respectable face, run by Sam Bankman-Fried, a 30-year-old philanthropist and political donor. Yet in November the firm collapsed into bankruptcy with some $8bn of customer funds missing. American authorities now call it a “massive years-long fraud”. Mr Bankman-Fried has been arrested and faces criminal charges. If convicted, he could spend the rest of his life in jail.

ftx’s downfall marked the bursting of crypto’s most recent bubble. At its peak in 2021, the market value of all cryptocurrencies was almost $3trn, up from nearly $800bn at the start of the year. It has since fallen back to around $800bn. Like so much else, the affair’s roots lie in the era of cheap, abundant money and the anything-goes mentality it created. ■



Source link

You Might Also Like

After Credit Suisse’s demise, attention turns to Deutsche Bank

Policymakers face two nightmares: stubborn inflation and market chaos

Why markets can never be made truly safe

The battle for Europe’s economic soul

The Economist March 3, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Youtube Subscribe
Telegram Follow

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[mc4wp_form]
Popular News
Sports

The key statistics about Trump’s endorsement track record this year.

December 7, 2022
Man accused of attacking NYPD officers with machete wanted ‘to kill people and carry out jihad,’ prosecutors say CNN.com – RSS Channel – US
AI Bing is bringing chat-powered searches to Windows 11
Baylor women not ranked for 1st time since 2004 www.espn.com – TOP
COVID vaccine hesitancy leads to child health concerns in PNG
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image
Global Coronavirus Cases

Confirmed

0

Death

0

More Information:Covid-19 Statistics

Categories

  • ES Money
  • Insider
  • Science
  • Technology
  • LifeStyle

About US

We influence 20 million users and is the number one business and technology news network on the planet.
Quick Link
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • Life Style
  • Contact Us
Top Categories
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Top
  • Health
  • Entertainment

Subscribe US

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

© confluencenews. All Rights Reserved.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?