A Glimpse Into The Abyss?

 | Jan 14, 2016 06:44AM ET

The stabilisation seen in markets yesterday has aggressively dissipated after US markets failed to hold early gains overnight. A lot of recent data has emphasised that the bottom has not quite fallen out of the global economy, but a negative feedback loop of self-perpetuating fear seems to have gripped global markets. China’s poor communication of FX policy and concomitant selloff in its equities appear to have lit a fire of negativity beneath global market sentiment. The threat of a dramatic devaluation by the Chinese government to ease its deflationary and debt-related pressures hangs heavy on markets like a Sword of Damocles. Despite China’s successful efforts this week to regain control over the offshore renminbi, the possibility of a major one-off devaluation in the currency is probably far higher than a black swan tail risk event. The fact that it is reportedly even being discussed by People’s Bank of China (PBoC) advisors likely assigns it a probability as high as 20%.

In such a situation, it is relatively futile to push back against markets and point to the fact that fundamentals are doing OK. Markets are not rational, and when they are in the throes of the powerful forces of greed and fear, seemingly sensible arguments are redundant.

That’s not to say that those calling for a 75% correction in the S&P 500 should be taken as a base case. Nonetheless, we are seeing a wide range of asset classes (the ASX and the AUD/USD for example) sitting on the edge of a precipice for a major break downward. But exhortations to “sell everything” are not necessarily wise investment decisions. Although caution does seem a prudent course of action. Trimming back position size, increasing cash holdings, tightening stop losses, putting some money into gold, hedging portfolio positions through put options or index shorts are all valid actions in the event that markets continue this slide.