Is The Predicted Stock Markets Fall A Correction Or End Of Bull Run?

 | Feb 01, 2018 03:34AM ET

News that Goldman Sachs is advising investors that Wall Street is set for a sharp correction should come as little surprise following five years of almost uninterrupted growth in equity markets.

The investment bank’s prediction that a correction was a “high probability” is almost a no-brainer when you hear the comments of Peter Oppenheimer , chief global equity strategist at Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) which were reported this week in The Times. The S&P 500, which tracks the share prices of America’s 500 largest public companies, and the MSCI World Index, which tracks about 1,650 companies across the world, are in their longest periods without a correction of more than 5%.

“This does not mean that the market must have a correction,” Oppenheimer said. “It just suggests that one is overdue.”

Goldman’s comments are echoed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, saying Wall Street is very likely to suffer a short fall in the next few weeks.

Some might consider Goldman’s comments as prescient in view of this week’s selloff in government bonds equities on both sides of the Pacific, Others might wonder whether Goldman had already shorted the market, helping ensure its prediction became self-fulfilling. The selloff in equities was fronted by the international selloff in government bonds.