The Most Dangerous Stock Market Ever? Either Way, Have A Plan

 | Mar 01, 2018 12:32AM ET

Today’s stock market may not be as dangerous as 2000’s dot-com euphoria or 2008’s asset balloon. Why not? Global central banks are likely to act quicker and with far more “shock-n-awe” to minimize bearish price depreciation than they did in the previous sell-offs.

Some argue that policy efforts would fail to reinvigorate yet another wealth effect because central banks are out of ammunition. I disagree. Indeed, I expect that monetary gamesmanship in the near future will result in an average 30-year fixed rate mortgage of 2% for the 2020s. Similarly, stocks will benefit immensely from borrowing cost manipulation.

Of course, nobody knows how the current bull-bear cycle will play itself out. Might the next stock bear destroy more portfolio wealth than the previous two did? If so, commentators will likely point a collective finger at extreme leverage, colossal overvaluation and multilayered computerization.

Consider the excessive leverage being employed to own equities in 2018. For one thing, margin debt is greater than at any previous moment in history. More importantly, even when accounting for inflation and subsequently comparing margin debt to the economy itself, leveraged speculation has surged to never-before-seen heights.