The Bank Of China Coughs, And Global Markets Shake With Volatility

 | Sep 02, 2015 02:09AM ET

Investors are jittery. Analysts are jittery. The Press is even jittery. By the looks of market volatility over the past few days, these three groups must have thought that the “Big One” had finally arrived, but, alas, the Bank of China jerked the global economic chain, resulting in a shockwave that was felt in most every market across the planet. This jerk was not the “Big One”. Markets absorbed the shock, recovered, and have moved on. Such is the level of fear that pervades the minds of the investor collective.

Should we be concerned? Yes, we need to understand that market participants are in fear that calamity will strike at any moment. Analysts estimate that there is an $11 trillion carry-trade over-hang just waiting to unwind and cause havoc in everyone’s portfolio. The question is not “If” but “When” it will happen. Market forces have been manipulated by central banks in every region such that a coiled spring of sorts exists that is tightening with each passing day that Zero-Interest Rate Policies (ZIRP) stay in effect. Stock markets have benefited, but equity values are inflated and need to deflate at some point.

When markets opened this past Monday, the S&P 500 Index took a nosedive at the bell. This fall, when combined with previous losses for the index, constituted a combined 10% fall from grace, the definition of a market correction. But, before the day was out, buyers rushed in to grab up supposed bargains, and here we are again, waiting for the highly anticipated correction to take place. What does the future hold for stocks? This week’s award for the “Best Chart” goes to the firm of Political Calculations: