Is The Correction Over?

 | Feb 09, 2014 12:13AM ET

As the equity markets rallied on Thursday and Friday, I saw a number of analysts and commentators starting to jump on the bulls' bandwagon as they asked the question, "Is the correction over?"

To truly answer that question, we have to first answer the question of why stock prices went down in the first place. There are two popular reasons advanced for the decline in 2014:

  • Emerging market meltdown fears, possibly driven by the effects of a Fed taper; or
  • A US growth slowdown.
Neither of those reasons make a lot of fundamental sense. I will write about what I believe to be the real reason for the decline and their implications later on in this post.
 
 
A repeat of the Asian Crisis?

In the past few weeks, selected EM currencies came under attack by speculators. As the decline in the Turkish Lira and other currencies went on, fears of an EM crisis similar to the Asian Crisis began to emerge. While there has been some stress in EM currencies and economies, Macro Man  asked, "If there is a crisis, where's the so-called 'body'?"

OUTSIDE SCREAMING "Murder! There's been a murder! Mr Holmes! Come quick!"

[Holmes stirs from the obituaries column in The Times, walks over to the fire where, after warming himself, secures the guard and places his Meerschaum pipe on its rest on the mantlepiece]

HOLMES "Watson, bring me my coat, it appears that there is a disturbance".

[Outside in the street, A crowd throngs around Holmes]

HOLMES "Please, can you all calm down. what is the trouble?"

CROWD "There s been a MURDER well more than one murder, its terrible! It's down the Eeyems. Mrs Turkey. She's DEAD! And Mr Rand, And the Hungarian lass and the Russki kid.

HOLMES "Come Watson, best we pay a visit, if for no reason other than to calm this over-excitable lot."

[Arriving on scene - The Eeyems is a higgledy hotchpotch of narrow streets once populated by the poor but the arrival of an aspirational young has seen pretences of gentrification, however the underlying squalor is never far away. Holmes and Watson are let in to a dingy hovel by an attendent constable where an old woman is propped gasping against a table.]

HOLMES "Ah Mrs Turkey, I see that you are breathing. A good sign of a lack of death. Watson, would you be so kind?

Dr WATSON "Her PMI is slightly weaker than the last reading but apart from a bit of bruising to the FX causing some rate shock she's not in too bad a way".

HOLMES "Hmm .. so not DEAD then Watson".

Dr WATSON "No sir. Not Dead."

HOLMES "Not a murder then. No."

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BYSTANDER "But, but she WILL die though and THEN it will be a murder"

HOLMES "It will only be murder when I say it is a murder. What makes you so sure that she will be murdered"

BYSTANDER "Well look at her, she's weak and feeble, hasn't been able to defend herself against the last attackers so she's just bound to be murdered"

...and so on. Was Mr. Market so excitable to freak out on the mere possibility of an EM currency crisis? These conditions were present during the equity market run-up and bulls have shrugged off these kinds of concerns before.


US growth slowdown?
What about fears of a US growth slowdown? The chart below of the Citigroup US Surprise Index (in orange) measures whether the latest macro-economic releases have beaten or missed Street expectations. A positive reading indicates that there were more beats than misses and a negative reading the opposite. While the pace of "beats" have been coming down, they remain positive. So relax.