RefBan

Referral Banners

Yashi

Friday, April 11, 2014

Explanatory journalism

View this email in your browser

Something troubling is happening in the stock market. Not only are markets are down – the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 are down 3.1% and 2.6%, respectively, this week – but no one has come up with a convenient, compelling (and misleading) reason why. Never mind, says Matthew Klein, that US stocks are up 30% since the start of 2013. We need to know why they are down this week, as Barry Ritholz writes, because we crave meaning in a random world.

Perhaps it's all tech stocks' fault. They have, FT Alphaville's Dan McCrum drolly commented, "become a little bit more modestly priced". The Nasdaq is down 7% in the last month. Over the past two and a half months, Twitter, Facebook, Amazon, and Netflix are down 31%, 7%, 21%, and 16%, respectively.

Maybe biotech stocks are the culprit. They are down 4.5% in the last week, and 16.8% in the last month. But even analysts, people paid to draw conclusions from just about anything, aren't sure: "Biotech Stocks' Rout Perplexes Analysts", the WSJ said on Thursday. The article explains the problem: biotech specialists, who know a lot about specific companies, are bullish, while generalist investors, who think 36 times earnings is worrying, are bearish. But just a day earlier, on Wednesday, tech shares were 'leading' stocks higher, as "biotech stocks attracted buyers in search of bargains".

Maybe, says the WSJ's Paul Vigna, stocks are falling because they are becoming less correlated with one another. Maybe it's earnings season: JP Morgan disappointed people. Or maybe there's an "air pocket" in the market, which is technical-analyst speak for an 'area on a chart beneath a line that goes up'.

There's always the taper to blame. But Joe Weisenthal points out that stocks are up 3% since the Fed began its reduction in asset purchases. "This time," Weisenthal says, "it just seems to be: stocks are falling". Or as Eddy Elfeinbein said, "Stocks Are Down on Fears of Lower Share Prices". – Ben Walsh

On to today's links:

Wonks
Christina Romer: Financial crises may not necessarily lead to economic disaster - Bonnie Kavoussi

Emerging Markets
Central banker fights are the best fights - CNBC

Equals
85% of Washington nonprofits are run by men (who also get paid more than female directors) - National Journal

Long Reads
The seedy side of college sports: free TVs and $200 weekly payments - SB Nation

Beefs
Bill Gross isn't afraid to call out Mohamed El-Erian as long as Mohamed El-Erian can't respond - Jenn Ablan
And because no one writes headlines like Bess Levin: "Bill Gross Doesn't Understand Why El-Erian Won't Just Be A Man, Defend Himself, And Violate His NDA" - Dealbreaker

JP Morgan
Eventually everything – even JP Morgan's earnings – will disappoint you - Reuters

Takedowns
Only idiots fear hyperinflation (and therefore many people do) - Martin Wolf
Tom Friedman doesn't understand hockey, geopolitics - Deadspin

Mas Kapital
New capital requirements are "pretty good, but also disappointing given what is needed" - Mike Konczal

Niche Markets
Castrated male chickens are becoming obsolete - Modern Farmer

Politicking
OMB director Sylvia Mathews Burwell is Obama's pick to lead Health and Human Services - WaPo

Meta
"Most stuff worth writing has been written already. Just link to it" - Chris Dillow

Fascinating
Sell the commodities business and run it too: Blythe Masters' failed JP Morgan exit plan - Bloomberg

 

Click here to sign up for the email.

unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences 

 
Tweet
Share
Read Later

No comments:

Yashi

Chitika