BofA Warns Investors Risk Sleepwalking Into Selloff

S&P Futures

4,160.75

-30.75(-0.73%)

 

Dow Futures

34,013.00

-84.00(-0.25%)

 

Nasdaq Futures

12,673.00

-173.75(-1.35%)

 

Russell 2000 Futures

2,006.50

-1.40(-0.07%)

 

Crude Oil

75.84

-0.04(-0.05%)

 

Gold

1,910.80

-5.50(-0.29%)

 

Silver

23.59

-0.02(-0.11%)

 

EUR/USD

1.0933

+0.0021(+0.20%)

 

10-Yr Bond

3.3960

0.0000(0.00%)

 

Vix

18.43

+0.56(+3.13%)

 

GBP/USD

1.2259

+0.0030(+0.24%)

 

USD/JPY

128.4200

-0.1840(-0.14%)

 

BTC-USD

23,531.45

-293.68(-1.23%)

 

CMC Crypto 200

537.34

-7.98(-1.46%)

 

FTSE 100

7,839.25

+19.09(+0.24%)

 

Nikkei 225

27,509.46

+107.41(+0.39%)

 

(Bloomberg) — The US stock rally has already gone too far, and investors face brutal declines if economic growth crumbles in the second half of the year, Bank of America Corp. strategists say.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Merck Covid Drug Linked to New Virus Mutations, Study Says

Adani Crisis Deepens as Stock Rout Hits $108 Billion

Hong Kong to Give Away 500,000 Air Tickets to Revive Tourism

Adani’s $108 Billion Crisis Shakes Investors’ Faith in India

Adani’s $58 Billion Wealth Wipeout in Six Days Has Few Parallels

The “most painful trade” is always the “apocalypse postponed,” a team led by Michael Hartnett wrote in a note. The risk is that inflation flares up again over the next few months, and that the US economy faces a deeper recession in the second half of 2023 after staying resilient in the first six months of the year, they said.

Global equity funds had $44.7 billion of inflows in the past four weeks, according to the note, citing EPFR Global data. Stocks have rallied since the start of 2023 on signs of cooling inflation, optimism over China’s reopening and hopes that slower economies will force global central banks to pause hiking rates.

BofA’s Raedler Sees Drop in Europe Stocks on High Recession Risk

Hartnett recommends investors start selling the S&P 500 when it’s over 4,200 points — 0.5% higher from its most recent close. He expects the benchmark to hit its first-quarter highs before Feb. 14.

Several strategists share Hartnett’s view. Morgan Stanley’s Michael Wilson said investors flocking to the equity rally will be disappointed as they’re in direct defiance of the Federal Reserve. JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Marko Kolanovic said the economy is headed for a downturn at a time stocks are rallying, setting up for a “clash.”

Among other flows in the week through Feb. 1, European stocks saw inflows for a third week at $21 million, while investors poured $7.7 billion into emerging-market equities. US equities had $6.7 billion of positive flows, with financials and energy leading while investors fled health care and real estate. Bonds had inflows of $7.8 billion.

–With assistance from Sagarika Jaisinghani and Michael Msika.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

A Billionaire’s Son Battles a Turbulent WWE Over the Future of Pro Wrestling

A 3D Printer Isn’t Cool. You Know What’s Cool? A 3D-Printing Factory

Wall Street: We Want Lower Rates. The Fed: Not So Fast

How Stockpickers Finally Beat the Index Funds

Sean Penn’s Disaster-Relief Charity Ended Up a Money Mess

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

Advertisement

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.