Weekend Herald

Expect share volatility, says expert

- Liam Dann

Brace yourself for more big stockmarke­t falls as volatility spikes in the coming months, warns Pie Funds chief executive Mike Taylor.

Wall Street tumbled again yesterday morning with the Dow Jones Index off 400 points — or 1.68 per cent. The NZX is off nearly 1 per cent in the past two days.

The latest dip follows Wall Street’s correction in early February which, despite a strong recovery, still made for the worst month in nearly two years.

In times of volatility it was important for investors to step back and take a long-term view — and ensure they had their investment settings in line with their risk appetite.

“It’s all about the sleep at night test, if you wake up in the morning worried about what the Dow Jones has done you probably have too much exposure to the market,” he said. “If you are uncomforta­ble with risk in the market then you need to take a progressiv­e approach, which is to raise cash all the way along.

“However, if you are a very longterm investor — like people in KiwiSaver with 20 or 25-year horizons — you should always leave your money in a growth product and you just have to ride out these ups and downs.”

There were powerful opposing forces at work on US markets so despite big falls it was also still possible we could see the market test new highs, Taylor said.

“We haven’t had that type of volatility for a couple of years. They fell 10 or 11 per cent, it had a bounce back, but I’d be extremely surprised if in the next couple of weeks its doesn’t re-test those lows,” he said.

“If it doesn’t, then what it does tell us is that we are in a very strong market and it won’ be long before it [the S&P500] breaches 3000.

“There’s a lot of stimulus going through the US economy at the moment, Trump’s tax cuts have been passed and that’s adding fuel to the fire.”

While that was blowing out deficits it meant that in the shortterm corporate earnings could be very good, Taylor said.

But investor fears about rising interest rates were being played out on bond markets.

Every upwards move of yields for US Treasuries, every piece of strong inflation data and every indication from the US Fed that it is ready to hike rates seems to have a direct and negative impact on equity markets.

“Interest rates will go up, that is part of the cycle,” Taylor said.

“It is going to create pressure because we’ve gotten used to low rates but we’re not going back to an era of floating rates above 10 per cent that we saw in 2007.”

HTo watch Market Watch visit nzherald.co.nzbusiness

Wall Street tumbled again yesterday.

 ?? Picture / AP ??
Picture / AP

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