A Red Sweep
Throughout modern times, financial institutions had almost an exclusive quasi-monopoly on the investment industry. Leading investment banks were giving the impression that they owned solely the ultimate truth about financial markets. The 2008 crisis and its dramatic consequences showed that bankers were as clueless and powerless as rudderless ships in a tempest. The big public understood that relying exclusively on Wall Street tycoons for getting righteous investment advice is a hazard. Over the past decade, retail investors decided to bypass the traditional avenues of investing and opted for alternative infrastructures. The current unprecedented pandemic accelerated the process triggered by the previous crisis. A silent revolution is taking place in the way people relate to financial markets.
The democratization of investing comes in many shapes, shades and forms. From cryptocurrencies to equity crowdfunding, many services proposed traditionally by investment banks are repealed and replaced by alternative cost effective solutions. The ”Gamestop” story revealed the real stake of this silent revolution. The dialectic between individual inventors and Wall Street bankers is nothing else than amoder projection of Marx’s class struggle. There are two avenues to solve hegelian dialectics. One the one hand we have free markets whereas price is the ultimate solution. On the other hand we have socialism whereas equitable distribution of resources solves the equation. The silent revolution in investing comes with a paradigm shift. The class struggle is not solved by reallocating the means of production, but by competing for prices in financial markets.
The resultant democratization of investing will not remain unsanctioned. While retail investors are under the impression to have the upperhand, traditional financial institutions will not concede their turf under any circumstances. So, what could we expect in the foreseeable future?
The answer is that one should expect more regulation. The myriads of Fintechs that erupted over the past decade had the benefit of light scrutiny from market watchdogs. Therefore, Fintechs were able to erode banks’ market share. Will not be long until we see regulators stepping in the Fintechs’ den and asking uncomfortable questions.
The most important kind of freedom is to be what you really are. You trade in your reality for a role. You trade in your sense for an act. You give up your ability to feel, and in exchange, put on a mask. There can't be any large-scale revolution until there's a personal revolution, on an individual level. It's got to happen inside first. Jim Morrison, American artist
The third wave of the new coronavirus pandemic is not anymore just a simple fear but became reality. Several European countries are currently overwhelmed by the resurgence of the sanitary crisis, thereby undermining the perspectives for a strong recovery in 2021.
Market volatility had a significant rebound, while the stock market stopped its progression and entered negative territory. If the second quarter does not bring any sign of economic growth, there are serious reasons to anticipate a prolonged market bear.
The excess of liquidity injected into financial markets does in certain cases more harm than good. When the printing machine throws money to everybody, irrational decisions are made. Hindenburg research, a reputed shorter, published an acid report concerning Ormat.
Ormat Technologies Inc. is an American Israeli company based in Nevada that
supplies alternative and renewable geothermal energy technology. According
to Hidenburg, Ormat is involved in “widespread and systematic acts of
international corruption”. These controversial activities took place
mainly in emerging countries like Guatemala and Kenya where Ormat had
vested business interests. Ormat’s share price plummeted by more than 40 %
over the past week and this could be only the beginning of the turmoil for
the Nevada based company.
Since the beging of the pandemic, corn futures prices listed on CBOT
increased by almost 50%. Corn is the biggest agricultural commodity in the
United States , being one of the most common products in people’s daily
diet. Such a price increase triggers fear about a foreseeable inflationary
process. Oil pieces also had a solid positive drift over the recent months.
Such signals suffice to let us think whether the printed monies through
quantitative easing will end up in the real economy.
Over the past week, Bitcoin oscillated above and below 48,000 USD and managed to climb up to 51,000 USD. Seemingly 50,000 is a psychological level for Bitcoin and the market needs in the near future to consolidate this position. Many are those that would like to see the leading cryptocurrency at higher prices, but given the past experience such development would be detrimental. Price is not an issue for Bitcoin. Consistency is the real challenge.
In a volatile context the Dow Jones ended the week above 31,000, thereby remaining in the same ranges as in the previous week. There are reasons to believe that a market contraction could unfold over the next few weeks. Bitcoin floated around the 48,000 mark and there are chances to observe a rebound over the next week back above the 50,000 USD level.
Crude Brent reached 70 USD and is following its positive trend started
towards the end of 2020. The increase in oil prices with no clear sign of
economic recovery could signal a foreseeable bull in commodity prices.
General Disclaimer
The information and data published in this research were prepared by the market research department of Darqube Ltd. Publications and reports of our research department are provided for information purposes only. Market data and figures are indicative and Darqube Ltd does not trade any financial instrument or offer investment recommendations and decision of any type. The information and analysis contained in this report has been prepared from sources that our research department believes to be objective, transparent and robust.
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A Red Sweep
Spooky Sell Signal
Gold Shines at New Highs
The ECB Cuts Again
Slowing Disinflation
Golden-Week Rush
China’s Massive Package
The Fed’s Big Rate Cut
The ECB Cuts Again
Banks Turn Bearish On China
Million-Dollar Gold Bar
Bonds Are Back
Black Monday
Diverging Rate Decisions
Still Strong
Smaller Is Better
The Name Is Bond, Green Bond
Landslide Victory
AI-Frenzy Takes a Break
Bye Apple, Hello Nvidia
The Fed Stays Put
An Indian Rollercoaster
The Name’s Bond, Convertible Bond
Nvidia Does It Again
A Small Relief
From Boom To Bust
Higher For Longer
Still Magnificent
Halve And Havoc
Stubborn Inflation
Choc Shock
An End Of An Era
Britain Bounces Back
China's Goal
Bye iCar, Hello iAI
Nvidia Beats Expectations
Germany Overtakes Japan
Riding The Dragon
China’s Falling Behind
India Outshines Hong Kong
Aging Dragon
US Inflation’s Accelerating
Tesla Lost Its Crown
2023 Market Wrap-Up
The Last Samurai
Fed Teases 2024 Rate Cuts
Bond Market's License to Thrill
Cyber Week Bonanza
OpenAI's Leadership Shuffle Drama
Inflation’s Cooling In The US And UK
Back Into Deflation
Triple Hold On Rate Hikes
The US Economy Is Still Flexing Its Muscles
Inflation’s Refusing To Come Down
Investors Are Bracing For A Dip
An End In Sight
Rate Hike Recess
End Of An Era
China's #1 Ambitions Are Fading
Americans’ Piggy Banks Are Running Low
Trying To Break The (Wage-Price) Spiral
China: A Nation In Deflation
Uncle Sam Gets Downgraded
Twin Hikes
Stagnating Dragon
A Tale Of Three Inflation Stories
Silver Is Shining Bright
UK Inflation: Defying Gravity
The Fed Calls A Timeout
A One-Two Punch
Shrinking Dragon
Keep Calm And Carry On
The AI-ffect Of The AI Mania
SLOOS: Crunch Time Looms
Last Republic
LVMH Pops The Bubbly
India Takes The Population Throne
The End Is Nigh
OPEC Drops the Pump
Why Gold Is Glittering
Can't Stop Won't Stop
To Hike Or Not To Hike
China’s An Underachiever
Cash Is King
What Energy Crisis?
The Name’s Bond, Japanese Bond
The AI War Has Begun
Hikes Everywhere
What Recession?
Shrinking Population
Grab Your Box And Leave
A Gloomy Prediction
It's Darkest Before The Dawn
Elon Fires Himself…
Triple Whammy
No More Zero-Covid?
Eight Billion And Counting
Another One Bites The Dust
No Santa Pause
Big Tech, Big Disappointment
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