• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
February 16th - Iran and the United States are scheduled to hold their second round of indirect talks on February 17th in Geneva, Switzerland. Ahead of the talks, Iran stated that it seeks a nuclear agreement with the United States that would bring economic benefits to both sides. According to Irans Fars News Agency on February 15th, Hamid Gambari, Irans Deputy Foreign Minister in charge of economic affairs, said, "To ensure the sustainability of the agreement, it is crucial that the United States also benefits in areas where it can quickly obtain high economic returns." He indicated that the second round of indirect talks on the 17th will cover shared interests in areas such as oil and gas fields, joint mining operations, mining investment, and even aircraft procurement.The yield on Japans 40-year government bonds rose 7.0 basis points to 3.725%, while the yield on Japans 30-year government bonds rose 5.0 basis points to 3.485%.February 16th - Recently, due to a surge in global demand for GLM-5, concurrent access has exceeded the planned limits, leading to queuing, response delays, and lag, impacting the experience for some users. Although Zhipu (02513.HK) has repeatedly expanded its domestic chip cluster and released limited GLM Coding Plan packages, it has not been able to completely resolve the current supply shortage. Zhipu is now launching a "Computing Power Partner" recruitment program: 1. Chip Manufacturers: Zhipu is willing to open its core technology interfaces to jointly conduct underlying optimizations for GLM-5. 2. Computing Power Partners and Inference Service Providers: Jointly build a higher concurrency, lower latency inference network. 3. Other forms of computing power cooperation.Xiaomi Group (01810.HK): On February 16, the company repurchased 1.5 million Class B shares for HK$54.7 million.February 16th - The State Power Investment Corporation (SPIC) Party Committee issued its 2026 Spring Festival Address: 2025 marked the final year of the 14th Five-Year Plan. The Group achieved remarkable results in serving the overall national development strategy, actively expanding effective investment, with total installed capacity reaching 287 million kilowatts, an increase of 8.4%, assets approaching 2 trillion yuan, operating revenue exceeding 400 billion yuan, and total profit surpassing 50 billion yuan. Major projects progressed smoothly; the "Guohe-1" demonstration project was completed and put into operation, and the first prototype of the 300 MW F-class heavy-duty gas turbine passed preliminary reliability verification. Two major projects were selected as achievements of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technologys 2025 "Major National Projects Supporting the Construction of a Strong Nation." In 2026, the Group will deepen enterprise reform, accelerate strategic implementation, adhere to innovation-driven development, strengthen digital and intelligent empowerment, prevent and resolve risks, and strive to create a new situation for reform and development.

S&P 500 Set for ‘bear market’ – How Much Further Can US Stocks Fall?

Skylar Shaw

May 13, 2022 11:00

微信截图_20220419102402.png


Why are US stocks on the decline?

The US Federal Reserve (and other central banks across the globe) are increasing interest rates and shrinking their balance sheets, which is the fundamental cause of the stock market's massive slump.


The Fed is doing this because US inflation remains persistently high, hovering around 40-year highs!

The US consumer price index, which measures changes in prices paid by consumers for goods and services, increased by 8.3 percent last month compared to April 2021. The CPI increased by 8.5 percent in March compared to the same month last year (year-on-year).


The Fed is attempting to "destroy" part of the economy's demand in order to assist down consumer prices.


When interest rates rise, the economy loses money (for example, a borrower requires more money to pay greater interest on current loans). Money may have been spent on other products or services instead of increased interest payments).


= Companies make less money (due to less spending in the economy)


= Businesses may be obliged to cut their pricing in order to fulfill decreasing demand for their products and services.


= decreased inflation (consumer prices still rise, but no longer at such as steep pace)


Also, in order for a firm to exist, it may be necessary to cut expenses by paying lower wages to employees or even reducing the number of employees. This may result in individuals having less discretionary money or even fewer people with disposable income.


As a result, so-called "demand destruction" may help bring inflation back down.


However, lowering inflation is a difficult undertaking that might have disastrous repercussions.


The Federal Reserve believes it can reduce demand gradually enough to avoid a recession (a recession occurs when the economy contracts).


Markets, on the other hand, are getting more concerned about the potential of a recession, or at the very least, stagflation (when inflation remains high but the economy barely grows).


If the economy shrinks due to a recession, investors become less enthusiastic about US firms' capacity to earn profits in the short term.


As a result, investors sell these firms' stock, preferring to invest in something safer or put money away to help weather the coming slump.

Can the S&P 500 fall even lower?

According to experts at Bank of America, there have been:


The S&P 500 has averaged a decrease of 37.3 percent from its high in 19 bear markets during the previous 140 years, with the whole collapse taking 289 days.


According to S&P and Bloomberg statistics, the S&P 500 has seen 12 bear markets since World War 2 with an average decrease of 33.8 percent each bear market period ranging from a month (during the pandemic) to three years (May 1946–June 1949, following World War 2).


According to their calculations, the S&P 500 might fall below 3,000 by October.


The S&P 500 would tumble to levels not seen since June 2020 if this happened!


Perhaps it's OK to paraphrase Bon Jovi and remark (or sing) "we're halfway there," and (US stocks are) "living on a prayer" at this point.


The good news is that US equities tend to rebound quicker than the time it takes to observe the full extent of their decline.


Still, there might be a lot more suffering in store for stock markets not only in the United States, but throughout the globe, between now and then.