Business Standard

Stock markets to fall further: Goldman

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Goldman Sachs Group strategist­s expect stocks to stage a powerful recovery from their worst sell-off since the 2008 financial crisis, but only after suffering more declines first.

Global equities will likely post a drop of between 20 per cent and 25 per cent from their peak before rebounding, the strategist­s said. The MSCI AllCountry World Index has so far slumped 18 per cent from its February record high through yesterday as fears about the damage from coronaviru­s and oil price war sent investors rushing out of risk assets.

“At this stage, we think the balance is still more in favour of this being an event-driven bear market, suggesting that the rebound in equity markets will be swift, but from a lower level,” Goldman strategist­s, including Peter Oppenheime­r and Sharon Bell, wrote in a note dated after the US market close on March 9.

While Monday’s market plunge was dramatic, the good news is that bear markets triggered by one-time shocks are milder and shorter than those caused by structural imbalances, such as financial bubbles, or economic reasons, such as higher interest rates, Goldman said.

An event-driven bear market that doesn’t result in a recession on average lasts nine months, compared with 42 months for one that is structural and 27 for the cyclical type, Goldman strategist­s said. Selloffs driven by shocks, such as wars or oil price swings, usually see a recovery to the starting point within 15 months in nominal terms, compared with 111 and 50 months for structural and cyclical bear markets respective­ly.

After rallying 24 per cent in 2019, the MSCI All- Country World Index is down 15 per cent in 2020.

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