"Despite the rebound of US stocks, risk awareness is essential"
25.03.27【豐富│財經起床號】黃詣庭談「儘管美股反彈,風險意識不可少」
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=hFkEKFi0myQ
Even though stock valuations remain historically pricey, and there’s a high probability we’ll witness the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite move lower over the short-term, the statistical returns data overwhelmingly favors all three indexes moving substantially higher over time.
A decisive move above 19,400 could open the path for a rally towards the 61.8 per cent Fibonacci level near the 20,000 psychological mark.
Conversely, sustained selling pressure may push the index lower, with potential support levels at 18,200 and 18,000. A breakdown below these could trigger a further decline towards 17,435 - the August 2024 low.
Consider waiting for a confirmed hold above 18,200 before entering long positions, with a stop-loss below 18,000.
Alternatively, be prepared for potential short positions if the index fails to reclaim 19,400, targeting a decline towards 17,435.
The market has gotten too upbeat after its early April Trump tariff rout.
I think there is a new risk premium on US assets as seen by foreign investors that did not exist before the 'Liberation Day,' maybe before the administration started.
The Treasury Department estimates we have about $30 trillion of US equity and bond holdings by foreign investors.
If, for example, a Canadian pension fund decides to cut allocation to US stocks and bonds by 2% each — 4% total — it's a small adjustment for the fund. But if all foreign investors do so, "$1.2 trillion would leave US assets".
The uncertainties spawned by the administration’s tariff policy, especially with multiple reversals, as well as nagging questions that the Fed’s independence may be undermined, have raised concerns in the foreign investor community that had been largely overweight US assets.
It is hard to put the genie back in the bottle once such concerns are raised. Consequently, foreign investors' allocations to US investments may reduce and shift to non-US assets, particularly when allocating new capital, while their currency hedge ratios on exposures to US assets may increase, both of which could continue to pressure US dollar.
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