the US stock market capitalization currently represents 61% of the global stock market capitalization, despite the fact that US GDP is only 23% of global GDP.
This chart shows the value of US equities held by foreign entities. It’s up to over $12 trillion:

Here’s a long-term chart of net international investment position as a percentage of GDP:

This chart shows the value of US equities held by foreign entities. It’s up to over $12 trillion:

Here’s a long-term chart of net international investment position as a percentage of GDP:

no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 05:07 pm (UTC)Today:
10 day MA didn't hold, 50 day MA didn't hold, 100 day MA didn't hold, 200 day moving average didn't hold, 10% correction level didn't hold. What's the next support level? 4000? Even in March 2020 crash support levels didn't break this easily and we had green days in between red days.
This thing is crashing through all support levels like hot knife on butter.
no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 05:24 pm (UTC)So far SPY is only 10% of the top, a mere correction. In Mar-20, it lost a third. That was a real crash. 10% corrections are not that rare. Who knows, it may grow into a real crash but it is not there just yet.
no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 06:09 pm (UTC)Russell 2000(Small-cap) уже.
Nasdaq - осталось упасть еще на 6%.
Шапка сегодня на маркет странице Reuters : Bears at the gate.
no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 06:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 07:07 pm (UTC)Совсем Другое Дело !
On 12 March, the U.S. Fed took almost unprecedented action to, in its words, "address highly unusual disruptions in Treasury financing markets associated with the coronavirus outbreak".[64] The Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced that it would offer $1.5 trillion in repurchase agreements in U.S. Treasury securities to smooth the functioning of the short-term market that banks use to lend to each other. The New York Fed further announced that it would buy $60 billion of Treasury bonds over the next month to keep the bond market functioning. The seizing up of markets was a critical step in the subprime mortgage crisis that led to the financial crisis of 2007–08 and the Fed appeared to want to act quickly.[65] On 15 March, as well as dropping interest rates, announced it would buy at least $500 billion in Treasures and at least $200 billion in government-backed mortgage securities over the next few months.[32] On 16 March, as the stock market plunged, bond prices jumped according to their historical inverse relationship.[66]
On 17 March, the Fed announced that they would use the Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF). The CPFF was first used in the 2007–08 financial crisis to buy about $350 billion of commercial paper (CP), thereby increasing the amount of cash in the CP market, used by business to pay bills and other short-term demands. CP most directly affects the mortgage and auto loan markets, as well as credit to small and medium-sized businesses. The U.S. Treasury Department authorized $10 billion to backstop any losses incurred by the Fed using the Treasury's Exchange Stabilization Fund. U.S. stock markets rallied on the news.[67][68]
On 19 March, the European Central Bank announced a 750 billion euro ($820 billion) bond-buying program, named the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme, to mitigate market turmoil. Unlike in previous ECB asset-purchases, Greek government bonds were included. Markets reacted positively, with the yield on Italian government bonds dropping to 1.542% from 2.5% the day before.[69][70]
In the week of 23 March, investors attracted by Fed guarantees of market liquidity and comparatively high bond yields rushed into the U.S. corporate debt market.[71][72] Investment-grade firms issued $73 billion in debt, about 21% more than the previous weekly record. Many U.S. firms sold debt in an attempt to build cash reserves in anticipation of future financial strain.[73]
Following passage of the U.S. Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, the Fed announced on 9 April that it would buy up to $2.3 trillion in debt from the U.S. market, including from so-called "fallen angels," companies that were downgraded from investment-grade to junk during the chaos of March.[79] The announcement sparked a rally in junk bond exchange-traded funds, as well as individual junk bonds.[80] The New York Times reported on 19 April that U.S. corporations had drawn more than $200 billion from existing credit lines during the COVID-19 crisis, far more than had been extended in the 2008 crisis.[81]
no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 07:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-01-24 09:39 pm (UTC)