All assets are vulnerable, India too won’t escape: Marc Faber
The coronavirus is just the catalyst to a decline. The deeper reason for this decline is that by early February markets around the world were 1) overbought 2) expensive and 3) disregarded a global economy that had begun to slow down in 2019, says ...
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I have always pointed India is a special case, and that if crude oil prices go down and so forth, it will be beneficial for India.
It is a complete rout across the globe. Give us a sense how much of a correction shall we see in global markets when uncertainty remains the buzzword?
I think investors have to understand we are in the 11th year of a bull market, which started March 6, 2009. The markets, by any standards, even in India, are very expensive. Not all stocks; oil stocks are very depressed. But in general, the so-called blue chips or growth stocks are very expensive based on price-to-earnings ratio, especially, on a price-to-sales ratio. The market capitalisation of world’s stock markets as a percentage of the global economy are all very high. So this is not just a correction. The coronavirus is just the catalyst to a decline. The deeper reason for this decline is that by early February markets around the world were 1) overbought 2) expensive and 3) disregarded a global economy that had begun to slow down in 2019.
We have many indicators that show that many countries were in recession already in 2019, but investors driven by media -- such as CNBC and Bloomberg -- were still buying stocks, thinking they will always go up. This is not a picnic, this is something big. I would advise your investors not to panic, but to think rationally and wait for a rebound and sell on a rebound and reduce their positions. I am not saying sell everything, if someone has 100% of his wealth in stocks, I would reduce it to much less.
One side of the story is that equity markets have come down, but on the other side, because of this entire risk-off trade, crude is down and bond yields have come off. So for a market like India, do you think indirectly this is good news, because India’s macros are dependent on crude and cost of liquidity. Do you think once when the selling subsides, India will start outperforming very-very smartly?
No, not at all, Indian investors and the media in India. I have always pointed India is a special case, and that if crude oil prices go down and so forth, it will be beneficial for India. Yes, to some extent. But if Indian stocks, the blue chips I am talking about, are selling at 40-50 price-to-earnings ratios, I think the market has a significant downside risk, given that the coronavirus is destroying the entire conference industry, the entire travel industry, business travel, the hospitality industry. For a while, nobody is going to travel. So I am telling you India is as vulnerable, if not more, than other markets.
Freaky Friday! We have seen worse than this in Sensex history
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Domestic equity indices witnessed one of the worst crashes in a single day on Friday as coronavirus scare sent equity investors scurrying for cover amid a global risk aversion and equity meltdown. The virus has now invaded all six habitable continents. US markets saw their worst fall in overnight trade as local governments started preparing to contain the spread of the virus in the country. Indian indices followed suit, with Sensex tumbling over 1,100 points. If the market sustains at this level till close of trade, it will be its third largest pointwise fall ever.
Here we revisit some of the worst crashes in Sensex's history:
Domestic equity indices witnessed one of the worst crashes in a single day on Friday as coronavirus scare sent equity investors scurrying for cover amid a global risk aversion and equity meltdown. Th..
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Sensex recorded its worst fall in history on a closing basis riding on a slump in Chinese markets and spooked by rising crude oil prices. Shanghai shares slumped more than 8 per cent, leading to a worldwide rout on the ominous day. BSE's market-cap fell by about Rs 7 lakh crore in a single day.
Sensex recorded its worst fall in history on a closing basis riding on a slump in Chinese markets and spooked by rising crude oil prices. Shanghai shares slumped more than 8 per cent, leading to a wo..
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The BSE flagship saw a 1,408-point plunge amid high volatility as investors panicked following weak global cues amid fears of a US recession. During the session, it crashed to the day's low of 16,963, but later recovered to close at 17,605.
The BSE flagship saw a 1,408-point plunge amid high volatility as investors panicked following weak global cues amid fears of a US recession. During the session, it crashed to the day's low of 16,963..
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The recession triggered by the 2008 global financial crisis which brought down Sensex from a high of 21,000 to 8,000 level in a span of 10 months was the reason behind its third biggest fall ever. The 30-share pack fell nearly 11 per cent to close at 8,701. NSE barometer Nifty had crashed 13 per cent on that day.
The recession triggered by the 2008 global financial crisis which brought down Sensex from a high of 21,000 to 8,000 level in a span of 10 months was the reason behind its third biggest fall ever. Th..
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The fourth biggest crash for the index came in this day. Some of the announcements made in the Union Budget by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman did not go down well with investors and they rushed to withdraw money.
The fourth biggest crash for the index came in this day. Some of the announcements made in the Union Budget by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman did not go down well with investors and they rushed ..
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Weak global cues sent Sensex spiralling down 950-odd points. Unabated selling on Dalal Street took the index down below 15,000-level. The crash came exactly two weeks after a 900-point drop on March 3, 2008.
Weak global cues sent Sensex spiralling down 950-odd points. Unabated selling on Dalal Street took the index down below 15,000-level. The crash came exactly two weeks after a 900-point drop on March ..
Over the years that I have interacted with you -- it is almost 20 years now -- you always like to talk about one trade or one asset allocation or that one exciting theme as a megatrend. If you have to, let us say, trade or invest only once for the next three to five years, where would you put your money, long or short asset class, anything you can. It is open?
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Well, this is a very good question. This Christmas, I wrote a report for the next 10 years, I would invest in platinum. And it performed well for a while but now it has also been weak. I think for now, if you ask me, I would increase my cash allocations and wait. Patience is very important in the world of investment. I would be diversified across stocks, bonds, cash and real estate and precious metals, but for now, as of today, I would say all assets are vulnerable, all of them.