Bear market: ‘Don’t be fooled’ by short rallies, strategist says

In This Article:

Interactive Brokers Chief Strategist Steve Sosnick joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss Netflix earnings, market volatility, bear market rallies, monetary policy, and the outlook for the Fed.

Video Transcript

- Welcome back to Yahoo Finance Live, everyone. As the Fed embarks on a series of rate hikes to slow decades high inflation, the dollar has strengthened, prompting an earnings season of foreign exchange related impairments. But is a modest decline in the US dollar enough to sustain a bear market bounce for equity markets?

Let's break this down further here. For more, we bring in Interactive Brokers chief strategist Steve Sosnick. When we think about all of this-- and first, great to see you in person here with us on set, Steve.

STEVE SOSNICK: Absolutely. Thanks, Brad.

- When we think about the recent US dollar activity and specifically the Fed tightening path that we're on right now, what would you say of the broader kind of socially acceptable volatility that you've seen within the broader calculus here?

STEVE SOSNICK: I'm glad you I'm glad you used that term. I've been trying to get that into popular conversation, me and my friend Steve Sears. What we saw yesterday was socially acceptable volatility.

Volatility, we all freak out, and rightfully so when you see a 2%, 3% down day. Oh, you know, what's wrong? Yesterday, we saw basically a 2 and 1/2% to 3% up day and, oh wow, what a great day. So that's still volatility.

As someone who's traded options for most of his working career, volatility works in both directions. It's a mathematical calculation. You go up, you go down by a certain percentage.

But when we go up, psychologically, it feels so much better. Let's be honest about it. So that's why I like to call that socially acceptable volatility.

The other term, which is not as polite, is it was a bear market rally. We're still in a bear market. We still are seeing the Fed as a headwind.

And so to that extent, that becomes problematic. And so we really have to see if this was a one or two day wonder. I mean, we had two out of three very good days so far. Let's see what happens going forward.

- One of the other buzzwords surrounding, you know, besides dead cat bounce or bear market rally or whatever we want to call it, is capitulation, right, which is something investors look for before we can see a more substantial rally. And there seems to be some debate over whether capitulation has happened. We got the Bank of America fund managers survey yesterday that seemed to show that bearish sentiments at very elevated levels. Then you get Sanford Bernstein coming out today saying capitulation hasn't happened yet. How do we know when it's happened?