March 24, 2020 | | | | Jeff Bergstrom Editor John Lothian News | |
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| | Lead Stories | | European traders press for looser rules to ease options trading; Industry body warns of 'severe dislocation' in derivatives if requirements do not change Philip Stafford - FT Market makers in Europe are urging regulators to bring forward new rules that could relax regulations on the capital banks must allocate to derivatives trades, amid concerns that current standards are intensifying the volatility caused by the coronavirus crisis. /on.ft.com/3dn5pw3 Volatility Ain't What It Used to Be Heath Tarbert - WSJ Derivatives markets have never been this volatile. Over the past week, a leading high-yield credit default swap index that is a barometer of insolvency risk repeatedly reached new highs. On March 16, Cboe Volatility Index futures, which react to stock market volatility, soared to historic levels. Commodity prices are behaving similarly, with oil futures plummeting 34% on March 9 only to jump by a record 24% some 10 days later. Goldâusually a bulwark against equity market volatilityâhas been falling in tandem with stocks. Other financial measures have shown similar volatility as markets seesaw. /on.wsj.com/39duBBW Markets Get Weirder With Stocks and Volatility Tumbling Together Luke Kawa - Bloomberg The stock market and volatility are in the midst of an unprecedented synchronized swoon. The S&P 500 Index has fallen more than 7% over the past two sessions while the Cboe Volatility Index, a measure of how much that benchmark gauge is expected to move over the next 30 days, tumbled by more than 10 points. Before this, there had never been a combination of a two-day equity drop of at least 5% and a VIX retreat of at least 5 points. /bloom.bg/2xiGDwu Coronavirus: OTC Derivatives Exposure Is Like One Big Margin Call Shuli Ren - Bloomberg The Federal Reserve ushered out a second wave of quantitative easing Monday. But the worst scramble for cash is happening in an opaque corner of the market, where Chairman Jerome Powell has little control. What we're witnessing is a system-wide margin call. With the coronavirus outbreak intensifying, asset managers are getting squeezed by a record outflow from bond funds and billions more from stock funds. Even bigger withdrawals are probably happening in the over-the-counter world, where trades are conducted out of public eye, through broker-dealers. When traders get margin calls, they resort to selling their most liquid assets, usually stocks and U.S. Treasuries. This only deepens the slide. /bloom.bg/2WMALWO Quants Are Liquidating Stock Exposures at Fastest Pace on Record Justina Lee - Bloomberg The record volatility unleashed by the coronavirus outbreak has spurred quant traders to throw in the towel at an unprecedented pace. The silver lining: they now have much less to sell. Systematic clients on Credit Suisse Group AG's prime-brokerage platform have slashed their equity positions by 45% this month compared with the end of last. After taking into account falling prices, the market-neutral funds, which take no directional bets on the benchmark, offloaded 15% of their bets in the five days through Thursday. That's a record deleveraging spree in a decade of data. /bloom.bg/2UdPTuT The Stock Market Tumbled Again Today. But This Indicator Might Be a Good Sign for the Future. Ben Levisohn - Barron's The stock market got hammered on Monday, and yet I feel a touch more optimistic than I have in a long time. That might sound strange considering that the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 582.05 points, or 3%, to 18,591.93. The blue-chip benchmark is now off 37% from its Feb. 12 all-time high, and closed at its lowest level since November 2016. Think of that. Three-and-a-half years of market gains gone, just like that. /bit.ly/3aeVfvm
| | | Technology | | Robinhood offers credits to some customers, says it fixed engineering issues after outages Kate Rooney - CNBC Robinhood is looking to rebuild trust with users by offering credits to some customers affected by recent trading outages. The start-up also said it has fixed engineering flaws that led to those glitches. The start-up saw multiple outages in March that caused traders to miss out on a historic market rally. "An apology alone won't rebuild your trust in us. Instead, we hope our actions will," Robinhood told some clients in an email Monday. /cnb.cx/2UCmsBy
| | | Strategy | | The Dow Is Surging on Hope for a Stimulus Bill Carleton English and Nicholas Jasinski - Barron's 10:30 a.m.: Stocks took off in morning trading on hopes that Congress will soon sign a $2 trillion economic stimulus bill, as well as in response to positive signs about Italy's fight against the coronavirus. Efforts to stop the spread of the disease are expected to have severe economic consequences, but Congress has so far failed to reach agreement on a spending package that might limit the damage, repeatedly disappointing investors. In the latest twist, CNBC reported early in the day that negotiators had reached an agreement that would allow the talks to move past a key stumbling block. /bit.ly/33FQrwK Why 'no one will regret buying stocks' at the lowest prices in years Shawn Langlois - MarketWatch Now that's a bounce. A well-timed bounce, for one longtime trader. After another gutting start to the week for the stock market, Jani Ziedins, the investor behind the Cracked Market blog, delivered an optimistic take of what ultimately lies ahead. "While prices could fall even further over the next few days and weeks, 12 months from now," he wrote on Monday, "no one will regret buying stocks at the lowest levels since 2016." /on.mktw.net/2vPeRY8 Too Many People Panicked at the Bottom of the Last Crisis. Here's How to Play the Market This Time Around. Steven M. Sears - Barron's For the third time in less than 20 years, we once again find ourselves confronting the unimaginable. Our current crisisâunlike the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, or the global financial crisis of 2008âis arguably more difficult to fathom because so few people understand virology. All that most people understand is that a coronavirus in Wuhan, China, has globalized and sickened huge swaths of the world. /bit.ly/2UzvsYk
| | | Events | | The state of global equity markets through the lens of FTSE GEIS FTSE Russell (WEBINAR) About this webinar A discussion exploring the current state of global equity markets through the lens of our flagship FTSE Global Equity Index Series (FTSE GEIS). Topics covered will include: ⢠Topical global market commentary and macroeconomic outlook ⢠A review of regional market size shifts and performance observed through the semi-annual global index review process, effective March 23rd, 2020 ⢠A closer look at China A Shares inclusion progress and impact Date: Wednesday, March 25, 2020 Time: 10:30 a.m. ET / 2:30 p.m. GMT /bit.ly/2Uxl7w3
| | | Miscellaneous | | Jeff Bezos, Larry Fink, and other top US execs dodged $1.9 billion in losses by selling their own stock as the coronavirus outbreak worsened Ben Winck - Markets Insider US executives spanning several sectors cashed out a total of $9.2 billion in company stock before markets bottomed on coronavirus fears, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. Corporate leaders avoided losses totaling $1.9 billion through sales between February 1 and March 19, according to The Journal's analysis. Much of the selling took place through pre-established trading schedules, which help executives skirt allegations of insider trading. /bit.ly/3asghXL
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