

This year has been a difficult one for many investment markets, including the ASX share market.
Whatâs the best time to buy during this volatility? If we had a crystal ball, thatâd make it obvious where the bottom of the decline is.
Some readers may have heard of the phrase about trying to catch a falling knife. Something that has fallen by 50% from $1 to 50 cents could easily fall another 20% to 40 cents. Just because something has fallen heavily doesnât mean it canât keep falling.
One investment expert has shared a couple of tips on how to identify when we could have reached the bottom.
Are we there yet?
Lisa Shalett is the chief investment officer of wealth management at Morgan Stanley.
She believes that we are ânot quiteâ at the bottom. Morgan Stanleyâs global investment committee believes this latest bounce is âtemporary, driven by technical factors, and that the bear-market bottom is still to come”.
Shalett pointed out that the decline in valuations weâre seeing is because of central banks increasing interest rates, rather than an economic crisis. This matters, in her opinion, because monetary policy was able to be used as an antidote to prior bear markets like the COVID-19 crash and the GFC.
This type of bear market tends to be âmore prolongedâ.
What could help drive a recovery for the (ASX) share market?
There were âat least twoâ necessary conditions for reaching the bottom.
Shalett explained:
First, inflation needs to reach a viable peak. We may reach that soon. Although uncertainty remains, we see solid indications of both softer demand and more supply, suggesting that inflation is poised to decelerate in the months ahead.
Importantly, while peak inflation, and in turn, peak policy rates, may be sufficient to bring the bond market to a bottom, that likely wonât be the case for stocks.
Stocks may need to fall farther, based on a sober assessment of year-ahead corporate earnings potential.
In other words, overly optimistic stock investors and Wall Street analysts must realistically factor in the potential depth and breadth of an economic slowdown and the consequent hit to employment and consumer demand. That forecast reset has just begun, yet the 2023Ââ2024 earnings picture is still far from clear.
Where are the opportunities?
Shalett said that investors should âremain patientâ and avoid chasing index-level bear market rallies.
She suggested that businesses in healthcare, financials, energy, industrials and defensive, which have above-average dividend yields, could be promising.
However, investors might be missing out on opportunities by waiting too long, as the Motley Foolâs Bruce Jackson pointed out. He also warned about the folly of trying to predict when news stories (macro factors) are going to impact the share market, and thinking that can inform people about when to âjump in and out of the marketâ.
Jackson wrote:
Would your macro âanalysisâ have told you to jump back into stocks on October 1st, in advance of the big rally for that month?
And would your analysis now tell you to stay in, get in, get out or something in between?
Iâd suggest itâs a futile exercise at best, and likely a sub-optimal investing strategy.
If you invest in the stock market, you should make it a lifelong endeavour, not something you jump into and out of depending on your mood, the marketâs mood, or the macro environment.
In other words, if an investor sees an opportunity with an ASX share, it may be worth jumping on it. That bargain may not always be there. Plus, time in the market beats timing the market.
For me, a name like Wesfarmers Ltd (ASX: WES) could be something to like, with its diversified business operations, good dividend yield, investing in new areas for growth (lithium and healthcare) and its 25% decline this year.
The post Morgan Stanley tips how to pick the market bottom, but should you wait to buy ASX shares? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Wondering where you should invest $1,000 right now?
When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for over ten years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.* Scott just revealed what he believes could be the “five best ASX stocks” for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at near dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they could be great buys right now
See The 5 Stocks
*Returns as of September 1 2022
(function() {
function setButtonColorDefaults(param, property, defaultValue) {
if( !param || !param.includes(‘#’)) {
var button = document.getElementsByClassName(“pitch-snippet”)[0].getElementsByClassName(“pitch-button”)[0];
button.style[property] = defaultValue;
}
}
setButtonColorDefaults(“#0095C8”, ‘background’, ‘#5FA85D’);
setButtonColorDefaults(“#0095C8”, ‘border-color’, ‘#43A24A’);
setButtonColorDefaults(“#fff”, ‘color’, ‘#fff’);
})()
More reading
- Experts name 2 ASX 200 dividend shares to buy next week
- Should you buy the dip in the Wesfarmers share price?
- Up 6% in October, is this factor why the Wesfarmers share price performed?
- Amazon stock just tanked. Could this be a canary in the coal mine for ASX 200 retail shares?
- Why I think the Wesfarmers share price is a buy after this week’s AGM
Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Wesfarmers Limited. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
from The Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/EQUadTr
Leave a Reply