Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A jolt felt in calm stocks

Losses come as investors worry about politics

- MARLEY JAY

NEW YORK – It’s been a remarkably calm year for the stock market. Did an alarm just go off?

Stocks have risen to records this year, buoyed by steady growth in the U.S. economy, improvemen­t in formerly struggling internatio­nal economies and a resurgence in corporate earnings. As of Wednesday, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index was up almost 10% this year. That’s about equal to its typical full-year gain and better than many experts had predicted.

But in August the market hit a speed bump: Stocks took two weeks of losses as investors worried about rising tensions between the United States and North Korea, terrorist attacks in Spain, mounting challenges to the Trump agenda of tax cuts and infrastruc­ture spending, and poor results from some big-name U.S. retailers.

To say the least, it was a lot to digest.

In historic terms, the market’s losses over those two weeks weren’t huge. The S&P 500 fell a bit more than 2% as industrial and energy companies slumped, and the small-cap Russell 2000 dropped 6%. It was the worst period for the market this year, and the Chicago Board Options Exchange’s volatility index, a measuremen­t of how much volatility investors expect to see, reached its highest level in months.

“If we see further spikes in volatility, that will not surprise us,” said Joe Davis, chief global economist for Vanguard. “The headline or the catalyst may, but the ultimate result won’t.”

While stocks later recovered some of their losses, geopolitic­al tensions and the effects of Hurricane Harvey continued to weigh on the market after that. And the turbulence comes right before the worst month of the year for stocks: on average, the S&P 500 falls 0.5% in September.

The bull market is eight years old, and Wall Street has been debating how much longer it can last. There’s little reason to expect another drop in corporate earnings or a recession, and analysts are fond of pointing out that bull markets don’t simply die of old age. Still, nothing lasts forever, and Davis says he thinks investors should get into a more defensive position now instead of waiting for the exact right moment to pull back from stocks.

“I think the next year or two is going to be a more challengin­g environmen­t for investors than any time in the last eight or nine years,” he said.

Davis is preaching caution because stock prices are at such high levels. With bond yields and interest rates low and corporate earnings rising, stocks are not only higher than ever, their price-to-earnings ratios are abnormally high. Davis encourages investors to look away from U.S. stocks and put some of their money into other types of assets.

He has a more positive view of stocks in non-U.S. markets, which in general are less expensive than U.S. equities. He also feels investors should diversify by adding government bonds and other low-risk assets to their portfolio and avoid reaching for high-yielding assets.

These days, stocks and bonds practicall­y move in opposite directions: When one is up, the other is down. That makes bonds a good way to diversify.

“One of the reason yields are so low is the diversific­ation value of bonds today is probably the highest it’s been in 25 years,” he said. “There is considerab­ly more risk in the equity market than in the bond market.”

Like many market watchers, Davis thinks it’s inevitable that this calm period is going to end. Whether that happens next week, when many traders return from summer vacation, or later on, Davis suggests investors prepare now, because historical­ly investors make worse decisions if they wait for the market to weaken to take action.

 ?? RICHARD DREW / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Specialist Ronnie Howard works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Stocks were jolted over the last few weeks of August by rising tensions between the U.S. and North Korea and continuing trouble for the agenda of President Donald...
RICHARD DREW / ASSOCIATED PRESS Specialist Ronnie Howard works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Stocks were jolted over the last few weeks of August by rising tensions between the U.S. and North Korea and continuing trouble for the agenda of President Donald...

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