The stock market sell-off could be just getting started

US stocks have fallen 23{3b930a6ca12a59604e1bbadfc55b7d1b7a0aa8613f1ab9377cace0d5afcb5fb9} since hitting a record high January 3. Yet they could have plenty more room to fall — particularly if the efforts to gain control of runaway prices send the economy into a downturn.
“The Fed may be willing to push the economy into a recession to actually get inflation under control,” Anthony Saglimbene, global market strategist at Ameriprise, told me.
“I think that was probably in the back of investors’ minds, but it’s front and center now. Stocks are going to have a hard time until they figure out where that end point is for the Fed,” he added.
Recessions have not been kind to investors. Bear markets during recessions have historically been longer and deeper than bear markets that weren’t associated with economic downturns, notes Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research. Since World War II, stocks have fallen 28{3b930a6ca12a59604e1bbadfc55b7d1b7a0aa8613f1ab9377cace0d5afcb5fb9} in bear markets without recessions — and 36{3b930a6ca12a59604e1bbadfc55b7d1b7a0aa8613f1ab9377cace0d5afcb5fb9} in those during recessions.
Even analysts who aren’t predicting quite that dramatic a decline believe stocks have room left to fall. Keith Lerner, chief market strategist for Truist Advisory Services, believes the S&P 500 will bottom out at around 3,400 — another 7.5{3b930a6ca12a59604e1bbadfc55b7d1b7a0aa8613f1ab9377cace0d5afcb5fb9} decline from Friday’s close.
“This would make an unbelievably brutal market feel that much worse,” said Lerner. “And, of course, markets could go beyond the average.”
A complicating factor: Central banks can’t rely on the tools they used in past recessions. Traditionally, the Fed and other central banks have cut rates and created money to buy up government debt to stimulate the economy. But even if inflation moderates in a recession, so many factors — commodity prices, fuel costs and supply chain problems — are beyond their control.
Lowering rates could make inflation worse, undoing whatever price moderation we might get from an economic downturn.
The good news, if you can call it that, is most economists who are predicting a recession expect a much shallower downturn than the collapse of the early ’80s. And stocks may have gotten so beaten up by the end of the year that any sign of moderating inflation or hints that the Fed may be easing up on rate hikes could juice the market again.
“One of the best things going for stocks right now is, given depressed sentiment, a little good news could go a long way,” said Truist’s Lerner, who notes bear markets tend to be far shorter than bull markets, and stocks usually bottom out several months before a recession ends. Another reason for optimism: In the year following a recession, the stock market returns 40{3b930a6ca12a59604e1bbadfc55b7d1b7a0aa8613f1ab9377cace0d5afcb5fb9} to investors on average.
China is buying loads of Russian oil
Despite the West’s efforts to punish the Kremlin for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, it has been unable to keep President Vladimir Putin from selling the country’s oil and gas. The taps have remained open and the money keeps flowing into Moscow for a variety of reasons — a lack of alternate supplies, surging prices and willing buyers in other parts of the world.
The result: Russia’s economy, although in a deep recession, has largely avoided the crisis many in the West had hoped for.
The Saudis had been China’s primary oil exporter for 19 straight months. But Russian crude has been heavily discounted as the country tries to find willing buyers, and China apparently couldn’t say no to bargain-basement prices at a time of historically high energy costs. India has also been ramping up its imports of Russian oil.
The European Union has announced that EU companies will be blocked from “insuring and financing the transport” of Russian oil to third-party countries after a transitional period of six months, my colleague Julia Horowitz reports. That could make it harder for Russia to find ships willing to load its crude.
It may not be so simple: The EU rule would probably raise crude prices even higher, which politically vulnerable Western politicians, including US President Joe Biden, aren’t so keen about.
Russia has also benefited from higher crude prices. If the insurance ban sends prices even higher, that could partially offset whatever pain the new rule could inflict.
Libyan oil struggles
Conflict in the country has led to some head-scratching and unreliable reports from the government about its oil production. Warring parties have used oil as leverage as they struggle for power, my colleague Nadeen Ebrahim reports. Rival governments have taken control of oil facilities and shut them several times.
That’s why the Libyan oil ministry said last week that production had shrunk to a near halt in June, to 100,000 barrels per day, down from 1.2 million bpd last year. This week, oil minister Mohamed Oun told CNN that some fields had come back online and production had climbed up to 800,000 barrels a day.
Still, that output remains less than last year and underscores how Libya’s oil sector is still in turmoil. No one is quite sure who’s in charge of the country’s crude supply.
“There are certain parties who seek to gain advantage by misrepresenting oil production figures,” said US ambassador to Libya, Richard Norland, calling last week’s oil ministry figures “inaccurate.”
“Actual production is significantly higher,” he said.
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