Global Times

Markets are finally getting back to basics as blind faith gives way to facts on the ground

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Blind faith in US stocks may be giving way to the facts on the ground. A slump overnight slowed on Thursday, partly thanks to a tame US inflation report. Yet American equity valuations are high, trade tensions and interest rates are rising, and earnings season is under way. There’s plenty for investors to react to.

Six months of scarcely interrupte­d technology-led gains took the S&P 500 Index to an all-time closing high on September 20. That also marked the longest bull market on record by some measures. That changed in recent days, with the benchmark down 3.3 percent on October 10 and global markets following suit. By early Thursday afternoon in New York, the S&P 500 was down another 1 percent. The yield on 10-year Treasury bonds moved lower again, after peaking above 3.2 percent a few days ago.

That’s a fairly normal pattern for investors taking a breather – or a risk-off trade, as they like to call it. The Federal Reserve, led by Jerome Powell, is slowly but steadily increasing short-term interest rates. That reflects a decade of economic growth, a tight labor market with unemployme­nt below 4 percent, and somewhat strengthen­ing inflation, although the pace of consumer-price increases eased to 2.3 percent in the year to September, Thursday’s report showed.

US President Donald Trump told Fox News last week he thought the Fed was “going loco” and raising rates too quickly. However he also suggested to reporters that the market selloff, which he called a “correction,” was overdue. That may be closer to the mark.

Third-quarter earnings season is underway in the US, too, with 24 of the S&P 500 having reported as of Thursday, according to Refinitiv data. Economist Robert Shiller’s cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio stretched to 33 times in September, suggesting valuations at their richest since 2001. That means investors ought to be sensitive to any signs of a slowdown in strong corporate profit growth.

Then there are the clouds in the global picture, from the US-China trade spat to signs of problems – and investor skittishne­ss – surroundin­g certain emerging markets.

If stocks are priced for perfection, even the faintest shadows can become a reason to sell them.

The author is Richard Beales, a Reuters Breakingvi­ews columnist. The article was first published on Reuters Breakingvi­ews. bizopinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

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