From: http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2020/01/buy-dip-american-tradition-since-1987.html
Via: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/buy-dip-american-tradition-1987
Sunday, January 19, 2020
Buy The Dip; An American Tradition Since 1987
[Here is the classic Video 'Buy The F****** Dip']
Buy the dip has been an American tradition since 1987. The first truly modern global financial crisis unfolded in the autumn of that year. October 19, 1987, has become the day known infamously as “Black Monday. It set forth a chain reaction of market distress that sent global stock exchanges plummeting in a matter of hours. In the United States, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) dropped 22.6 percent in a single trading session. This loss remains the largest one-day stock market decline in history and marks the sharpest market downturn in the United States since the Great Depression.
The
important significance of this event lies in the fact Black Monday
underscored the concept of “globalization,” which was still quite new at the
time. The event
demonstrated the extent to which financial markets worldwide had become
intertwined and technologically interconnected. This led to
several noteworthy reforms, including exchanges developing provisions to pause
trading temporarily in the event of rapid market sell-offs. More importantly,
it forever altered the Federal Reserve’s response on how to use “liquidity” as
a tool to stem financial crises.
Leading up to this event the stock markets raced upward during the first half
of 1987 gaining a whopping 44 percent in just seven months. This, of course,
created concerns of an asset bubble, however, few
market traders expected the market could unravel so viciously. Prior to
US markets opening for trading on Monday morning, stock markets in and around
Asia began plunging. In response investors rapidly began to liquidate
positions, and the number of sell orders vastly outnumbered willing buyers near
previous prices, creating a cascade in stock markets.
Thomas
Thrall, a senior professional at the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago,
who was then a trader at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange
later
said, “It felt really scary, people started to understand the
interconnectedness of markets around the globe.”
Without a doubt, several new developments in the market enlarged and
exacerbated the losses on Black Monday. Things like international investors
becoming more active in US markets and new products from US investment firms,
known as “portfolio insurance” had become very popular. These included the use
of options and derivatives. A number of structural flaws also fueled the
losses. At the time of the crisis, stock, options, and futures markets used
different timelines for the clearing and settlements of trades, creating the
potential for negative trading account balances and forced liquidations.
That is when, Alan Greenspan, then Federal
Reserve chairman, came forward on October 20, 1987, with a statement that would
shape traders' actions for decades. Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said,
“The Federal Reserve, consistent with its responsibilities as the Nation's
central bank, affirmed today its readiness to serve as a source of liquidity to support the economic and financial
system” Prior to this markets were seen as a much riskier venture. The great
legacy from the events taking place in 1987 is rooted in the actions and swift
response of the Fed, that the central bank would backstop markets. This premise
has grown over time.
After Black Monday, regulators overhauled trade-clearing protocols and
developed new rules. One of the most important is known as circuit breakers which allow exchanges to halt
trading temporarily in instances of exceptionally large price declines.
Under these rules, the New York Stock Exchange will temporarily halt trading
when the S&P 500 stock index declines 7 percent, 13 percent, and 20
percent. This is done in order to provide investors' time to make better
informed decisions during periods of high market volatility and reduce the
chance of panic. Risk managers also re-calibrated the way they valued options.
Unlike previous financial crises, the Black Monday decline was not associated with a deposit run or any other
problem in the banking sector. Still, it was very important
because the Fed’s response set a precedent that has over time when
coupled with other events massively increased the moral hazard associated with
intervention in free markets. Following the rout stock markets quickly
recovered a majority of their Black Monday losses. In just two trading
sessions, the DJIA gained back 57 percent, of the Black Monday downturn.
Because of the Fed action in less than two years, the US stock markets
surpassed their pre-crash highs and was not followed by an economic recession.
And now for the grand point of this post, we should not underestimate
how the Fed’s response to Black Monday ushered in
a new era of investor confidence in the central bank’s ability to control
market downturns. The actions by Fed Chairman Greenspan
galvanized the mantras "buy the dip" and "don't fight the
Fed" and powered them to the top of trading lexicons. It
has also been a key factor in allowing the stock market to morph into a much
larger symbol of the economy than it merits. This is reflected in how, over the
decades, growth in the financial sector has soared dwarfing that in the real
economy.
To all
those market aficionados that forget markets can fall and for decades fail to
regain their luster I point to the Japanese
markets and their fierce meltdown in 1990. The chart to the right would look
far more depressing had the market trends over the last decade coupled with
buying from the central Bank if Japan not bolstered its performance. We
should also remember many market high-flyers simply vanish into a deep hole and
that during the 1930s the Fed was unable to bring the economy out of its funk.
Another often overlooked issue is how changes
in tax laws over the years have moved more wealth into stocks. These
include the often forgotten and seldom mentioned changes many made by the Bush administration following the
dotcom bust and 9-11. These factors and money constantly funneled into
markets by pension funds and such coupled with soaring central bank liquidity
has levitated markets to record high, after record high, despite stagnant
fundamentals. It seems the "fear of missing out" and exuberance has
caused many investors to become blind to the idea that years of profits can
vanish in a blink of the eye.
This should force us to question the utter madness displayed in the widening
disconnect between current valuations and underlying fundamentals. [Maybe
not. –FNC] It could be argued that because of these actions QE has
amplified speculation as investors seeking yield now feel almost invulnerable
to future losses. We can cast away all the terms and warnings about "moral
hazards" and "slippery slopes," however that does not guarantee
they will not return to haunt us. Historically our hubris and arrogance has
shined as a beacon illuminating the fact that every time those in high
finance declare it is different this time they have been proven
wrong.