As Financial Markets Tense Up, Is A Major Sell-Off Probable?

 | Feb 23, 2017 06:19AM ET

The French philosopher Voltaire once wrote, “Uncertainty is an uncomfortable position. But certainty is an absurd one.” We are one month into the Trump Presidency, and, if anything is certain, it is that a great deal of uncertainty persists.

Financial markets are in a quandary as to next steps, tense, if you will. Voltaire understood that you can never know everything about anything, but, if you remain vigilant and continue to ask questions, the level of discomfort gradually dissipates, and you accept the situation.

There are benefits to uncertainty. It does keep us on our toes. We may never be able to predict indisputable outcomes, but the process is one that leads to discovery. In that vein, analysts are busy at work, poring through history books and searching for any correlations that will, hopefully, lead to fame and fortune. From the host of articles on today’s uncertain times, one can quickly discern that equity markets are straining to go higher without concrete actions from the Trump administration. Inevitably, the course of the discussion heads negative. Are we at a top? Is a major drawdown a real possibility?

h3 What are probability models telling us about the year ahead?/h3