Firstly a health warning - I seriously bored myself writing this post; I will try to think up something more interesting next time!
Although I'll be the first to admit the folly of predicting the future direction of markets; (as you know I am perpetually curious about what investors think).. Investors take some sort of view directly or indirectly.. where Fund of Funds are making the calls then there will be some rationale behind asset rotations.
'I do believe that money drives markets drives money. The power of herding shouldn't be underestimated - it is a key cause of asset bubbles.'
So we've had an interesting year to say the least - ups and downs but lots of ups - for any investor who saw that cheap was
cheap back last March then brave - they should have lots to be happy about. Now is the season of profit taking and throwing those risk assets into something less, err, risky.. nes pas?
So the first phase bull market looks all but extinguished within the space of 10 months (some sort of record) and we look set for a more frothy and protracted recovery through 2010-2011. What is useful is that the recent dip has cooled the market a little - especially EM markets and we've seen a slowing in the flight to risk.
Into Q4 we saw a move away from Equities towards Bonds as the chart below shows.. was this a cause for the pause in equity markets in Q1.. it would appear to be a precursor yes but the relationship is far more quantifiable.
Did a rotation from equities to bonds facilitate the change in market direction? That's nigh on impossible to say but certainly less liquidity means less trades.. less trades means less buys, fund managers like to keep busy - easier to sell some profits to reinvest than play a round of golf (momentum is such a fragile thing).
Q4 buy patterns drew investors to what I would call the 'neutral line' in risk aversion: I suspect the 'neutral' diversification of flows becomes across the asset classes is a reflection of our time and political reflection.. Obama continues to throw down sobering glimpses of the future and investors seem less willing to hold for a record bull run. The current asset mix would indicate that we will see both falls and rises (no fence sitting there then) but over time a steady single digit level of return.
In time of course the market sociology demands a move towards (greed) or away (fear) from risk. These are not necessarily innate inbuilt states but rather forces upon up, peer pressure through media and the fear of not having enough capital to invest for retirement; not enough performance to get that next bonus.. etc
It's all about information volatility and behaviour: much lies in the hands of investors, the media, the pundits and politicians who influence them.
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