Safety, Liquidity, Or Return. Why Cash Is An Important Hedge.

 | Aug 03, 2020 07:08AM ET

Over the past few months, we have been writing a series of articles highlighting our concerns of increasing market risk. Here is a sampling of some of our more recent posts on the issue.

  • Navigating A Tech Bubble (& Living To Tell About It)
  • Looking For A Sellable Rally To Reduce Risk
  • 15-Bullish Beliefs (Or Not) About The Market
  • This Is Nuts…Again. Reducing Risk

The common thread among these articles was to encourage our readers to evaluate the current market “risks” and take some relevant actions. To wit:

“There remains an ongoing bullish bias that continues to support the market near-term. Bull markets built on “momentum” are very hard to kill. Warning signs can last longer than logic would predict. The risk comes when investors begin to “discount” the warnings and assume they are wrong.

It is usually just about then the inevitable correction occurs. Such is the inherent risk of ignoring risk.

In reality, there is little to lose by paying attention to “risk.”

The current deviation between the stock market, the economy, corporate profits, and earnings suggests something isn’t quite right.

“While the rally off the March lows has been substantial, there is still a vast disconnect between the markets and the underlying economic fundamentals. Given the divergence was driven by unprecedented monetary policy, the eventual reversion could be climatic.”