Stock Market Outlook 2023: Risks Skewed to the Downside 

 | Dec 29, 2022 06:00AM ET

  • As we look forward to the new year, optimism about inflation peaking is all I can think of in terms of limiting the downside risks for stocks
  • Still, at least some of this peak-inflation narrative is already priced in 
  • We will need to see a strong economic recovery to help boost revenue and profit for corporates
  • As I sat to write this, I wondered whether to provide a balanced argument about whether I think 2023 will be a bullish or a bearish year for stocks. But then I thought to myself, “what would be the point of that?” 

    Perhaps much more relevant would be for me to present the many risks and — fewer — opportunities shaping up in the near-and mid-term horizons.

    Overall, I feel this macro background is not one you would associate with excessive risk-taking. The economic outlook is not going to change overnight, which means much of the issues we are facing right now could well be with us well into 2023. 

    And after a big rebound started in October, much of the positivity about the Fed pivoting to a less hawkish stance has now been priced in. So, I reckon that the risks are skewed to the Downside for stocks in 2023. 

    But that doesn’t mean that the markets will keep falling.