| A new record, but not a good one | Analysts get controversial |

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Hi John, here's what you need to know for March 2nd in 3:12 minutes.

☕️ Finimized over a mochaccino at Riet Petite in Paramaribo, Suriname (28°C/82°F ⛅️)

Today's big stories

  1. US stocks experienced their fastest ever correction – a fall of more than 10% from their recent peak – late last week
  2. Some people thought cryptocurrencies acted as a safe haven in the midst of market turmoil. They were wrong – Read Now
  3. Investment bank analysts are upgrading their recommendations on certain stocks despite the recent sell-off
1/3

Speed Freak

Speed Freak

What’s Going On Here?

US stocks had their worst week since the 2008 financial crisis, and that earned them a new record late last week: the fastest “correction” in history.

What Does This Mean?

A market correction happens when stocks fall from their most recent peak by more than 10%. For the US stock market, that peak was when stocks hit a record high on February 19th, and that fall was the 12% it lost over the next six business days. All in all, it marked the fastest ever correction in the US stock market.

There’s nothing particularly special about 10% itself: it’s just a threshold used to show when investors have turned pessimistic about the market. The next threshold they look at is a drop of more than 20% from a recent peak. If, heaven forbid, that comes about, US stocks will enter what’s called a “bear market”. Grrr.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: Get out! Get out!
A bear market is different from a recession, which is when an economy shrinks for two consecutive quarters. Stocks can enter a bear market for any number of reasons, but one of the most common is the expectation of a recession. That makes sense: stock prices reflect what investors think companies are worth based on their future earnings potential, and recession-wary investors are more likely to expect future earnings to fall. And that, in turn, will probably hit current stock prices.

For markets: Feelin’ lucky, punk?
There was also another “yield curve inversion” last week too. In other words, yields on short-term government bonds are now higher than those on longer-term bonds. Given that an inverted yield curve has preceded all 9 recessions since 1950, investors often use it to predict the arrival of a recession within the next 24 months (tweet this). It’s been wrong on a couple of occasions, sure, but glass-half-full investors are getting harder and harder to come by these days…

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2/3 Premium Story

Reality Bit

With coronavirus fears giving stocks their worst week in a decade, some wondered whether investors might turn to cryptocurrencies like “digital gold” bitcoin for shelter from the storm. Turns out that couldn’t have been further from the truth…

Get the full story in the Finimize app

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🤓 Find your investing feet

There’s probably something in this whole investing thing: the US stock market has delivered a 128% return over the past 20 years. And that’s not even accounting for compounding – where your returns generate their own returns.

So clearly, the sooner you get started, the better. That’s what Finimize is all about, and we’re working with Klarna to spread that message even further: check out the fifth blog in our eight-part guide, created for Klarna’s Mindful Money initiative, and learn how to take your very first steps into investing.

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3/3

What A Nailbiter

What A Nailbiter

What’s Going On Here?

This is edge of the seat stuff: even as investors sold off stocks late last week, some investment bank analysts are advocating buying certain stocks.

What Does This Mean?

Long story short: KeyBanc’s analysts assigned buy ratings to Uber and Lyft, Jefferies’ to Dollar General, and one BMO analyst is now calling Disney his top pick. The real question is why they’re recommending investors buy anything during the worst weeks for stocks since the 2008 financial crisis.

It’s partly down to the nature of their jobs: investment bank analysts try to filter out the short-term market noise, instead focusing on the earnings potential of the companies they follow. And during a heavy market sell-off – when virtually all stocks are falling – some analysts might view a few of their stocks as bargains and upgrade them to a buy.

Why Should I Care?

For you personally: Whoa there.
Savvy investors should take analyst recommendations with a pinch of salt for a few reasons. One: those analysts are generally pretty reluctant to use sell ratings, as they risk damaging the relationship between the investment bank and the company itself. Two: investment banks want major investors to trade with them, and buy recommendations are more likely to encourage them to do just that. Three: ratings tend to be relative to the sector the analyst focuses on. So a buy rating on, say, Disney’s shares doesn’t necessarily mean the analyst thinks they’ll go up – just that they’ll perform better than those of other media companies.

The bigger picture: Jack of all trades.
Analysts tend to get a lot of attention for their stock ratings, but they actually add more value to their large investment firms' clients elsewhere. As experts on specific industries and the companies within them, they’re an invaluable source of information for their clients. They can even serve as middlemen between clients and company management, which enables the likes of BlackRock to ask the Disney boss, “Hey New Bob, are virus-nervous consumers streaming more Disney+?”

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💬 Quote of the day

“Compassion is the basis of all morality.”

– Arthur Schopenhauer (a German philosopher)
Tweet this
🤔 Q&A · RE:

“Why do government bond yields move inversely to bond prices?”

– Nirav in Bath, UK

“It’s all down to the math, Nirav. A bond’s yield is the amount of interest it pays each year as a percentage of its current price. If, for example, a bond sells at $100 and pays $5 a year in interest, its yield is 5%. If that bond’s price goes up to, say, $105, its yield would drop to 4.76% (5/105, since it’ll still pay $5 a year in interest). And vice versa: if the bond’s price falls to $95, its yield would go up to 5.26% (5/95).”

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🏋️‍♀️ Feel the earn with Klarna

If you’ve been following the eight-part guide we’ve created in partnership with Klarna, you’ll have learned how to borrow sensibly, deal with debt, and spruce up your credit score. Now for our favorite part: how to actually invest your cash.

It’s no secret we’re all about investing here at Finimize. It’s a great way to make some real gains in these low-interest times, and keep the value of your hard-earned money from being eroded by inflation. But even if you’ve been reading our newsletter for a while, it can be tricky to know where to start.

So naturally, the fifth blog in our eight-part guide – created for Klarna’s Mindful Money initiative – fills you in on exactly that.

Check out our blog

🌍 Finimize Community

💁‍♀️ Let’s. Make. Herstory.

In honor of the upcoming Women’s History Month in March, Finimizers all round the world will be hosting their own Female Financial Dialogue events within 72 hours of one another. Celebrate the occasion by joining us for an event near you, and get involved in the online conversation using the hashtag #FFDFinimized.

🇮🇪 Dublin: March 10th
🇦🇺 Perth: March 11th
🇺🇸 Dallas: March 11th
🇺🇸 Seattle: March 11th
🇦🇪 Dubai: March 11th
🇩🇪 Berlin: March 11th
🇨🇦 Toronto: March 12th
🇫🇷 Paris: March 12th
🇬🇧 London: March 12th
🇮🇳 Bengaluru: March 14th

📚 What we're reading

  • The brain metaphor you’re using is all wrong (The Guardian)
  • Animals don’t need to breathe any more, apparently (CNN)
  • Scientists just found the biggest explosion since the Big Bang (SciTechDaily)
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