BofA: ‘The Era Of Higher Volatility Has Begun’

Despondent investor psychology and ostensible evidence of "peak inflation" aren't a bad setup for a bear market rally, but policymakers aren't likely to countenance it. "Central banks are the oncoming freight train," BofA's Michael Hartnett said, in his latest. The Fed and its peers "will tighten until credit and/or the consumer break," he added. Certainly, policymakers seem serious. They're talking the talk, but they're also walking the walk, as the clichéd old adage goes. New Zealand's "pat

Join institutional investors, analysts and strategists from the world's largest banks: Subscribe today for as little as $7/month

View subscription options

Or try one month for FREE with a trial plan

Already have an account? log in

Speak your mind

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

8 thoughts on “BofA: ‘The Era Of Higher Volatility Has Begun’

  1. Don’t just focus on listed stocks and bonds. Wait until our friends in private equity and credit are forced to mark their assets down closer to reality.

    For a few years every ETF vendor has been pushing “alternatives” of all kinds. Alone that might be no big deal, but the consultants to pensions and endowments have been singing the same melody. The amounts waiting to be marked down are not trivial.

    But the Fed models say that is no problem, so I am not worried.

  2. The soft landing is increasingly looking like magical thinking. When things turn they turn fast. It certainly feels like an inflection point. The moment of truth will be if the volatility translates into a bear market and has contagion into the real economy. When/if that happens you will see policy change again. That probably won’t be evident until later this year at the earliest. In the meantime, my guess is Bank of America is correct, we are going to see greater volatility in financial markets.

  3. What soft landing? Looks like the Fed is trying to see how nasty it can get … and as fast as possible.

    I think the thing I like the least about the world I’m currently dying in, is that it has completely lost its patience (and its collective mind). The Fed is in the woods for ten years and now it’s suddenly awoken like Rip Van Winkle and decided it has to fix everything in the next ten minutes … running around like the Mad Hatter, “I’m late, I’m late …

    And it’s not just the Fed. Half the world is trying to ignore climate change and the other half has decided we have to get rid of oil and evil cars and power plants, all by 2025. Seriously? Who are these people? None of these “emergency” moves will work, or as those who propose this stuff hope, none will provide any serious political benefit. All the late-to-the-party, we-gotta-change-now people just want to say they fixed all the big problems so they can go back to their cell phones and FB pages and be able to avoid actually thinking any more. As I keep telling my daughter, even though it makes her angry, I am so glad I’m old.

    I have a book on my shelves about the onset of the Industrial Revolution with the title, “Pandemonium.” That’s what happened then and will soon be happening again. I’m sorry for those who will be going through the coming big changes because Mars will not actually be available to the 8 billion who might want one of those nine-figure tickets. We are here and here we will be staying. Musk talks wistfully about Mars to keep up his reputation as a visionary but as recent events have shown, he is really only interested in himself and being President (Twitter, why else?).

    1. I truly enjoyed your rant Mr. Lucky. I remember when a bottle of Coke cost five cents and I was apprehensive about the future because I learned that Eisenhower would be leaving the presidency after his second term. But to the amazement of my parents, who had a house full of rug rats during the depression, it all worked out. We survived $2.49 bottles of Coke and the financialization of the economy. The kids can work their way through its feudalization or find a better path forward.

  4. Should think about what kind of a recession it’ll be. Hot job market and labor shortage suggests the people who usually suffer the most in recession might get off easier this time. Big asset owners (stocks, PE, RE) may have it worse, but even a pretty meaty decline from here would still be a decent 3 year return – unless you’re a Cathie Wood follower, overexposed to certain kinds of office RE, etc. The biggest hit might be to the “middle class”. Companies are enjoying very high operating margins, and will defend them by cost-cutting. Look for waves of middle manager axings.

  5. So, questions from a semi retired person trying to manage their nest egg— where does one monitor bond volatility and dollar index? How does one determine when private equity is forced to sell?

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints