"When investors are in trouble, they sell what they can, not what they would like to."
The current issue of The Economist features an excellent article about the forced selling that has been the key feature of this bear market, caused by the violent trading days that have come in the wake of the deleveraging of many banks and hedge funds as they need to get their balance sheets in order.
Here are some excerpts:
... the speed of market movements suggests another factor has been even more important. When investors are in trouble, they sell what they can, not what they would like to. It looks as if they have been dumping a whole range of assets.
Emerging stockmarkets, for example, have lost more than half their value this year, while emerging-government bonds were yielding more than eight percentage points above Treasury bonds, at least until a rally on October 28th. Leveraged loans (debts to finance management buy-outs) are trading at just 70 cents on the dollar.
... Who is being forced to sell? One obvious answer is banks that have ended up owning far more risky assets than they would like. Barclays Capital put $970 million of leveraged loans up for sale in October; in the face of disappointing offers, it ended up selling just 30% of the lot. Other banks have been winding down their trading, a big source of revenue earlier this decade, in an attempt to reduce risk.
Another group of sellers is the hedge funds. After a disappointing performance this year, many are facing calls for redemptions from clients and are having to sell assets to raise cash. But their problems also stem from their use of leverage, or borrowed money.
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