Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Markets to fall further as econ fundamentals worse than 2007, says GMO's Grantham By Reuters
{Current column}54484People have watched
Introduction© Reuters. A pedestrian walks past a giant display showing a stock graph, in Shanghai, China August ...

By Lisa Pauline Mattackal
(Reuters) - Financial markets should brace for further pain, with global economic health at its most precarious level in years, due to stubborn inflation, hawkish central banks and geopolitical tensions, veteran investor Jeremy Grantham said late Wednesday.
"This is a more dangerous looking moment in global economics than even the madness of the housing bubble of 2007," Grantham, co-founder and chief strategist of asset manager GMO, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum (GMF).
Pockets of highly overvalued assets, which Grantham has termed "superbubbles," peaked earlier last year, he said.
Markets will now have to cope with valuations of "hyper-inflated" growth stocks collapsing, inflation and potential turmoil in the global housing markets, as rising interest rates put pressure on homeowners, he said.
"The deterioration in fundamentals on a global basis looks absolutely shocking."
World stocks have tumbled 20% since the start of the year, while the growth-heavy Nasdaq Composite has dropped 24%.
Economic and market turmoil will likely test global central banks' resolve to combat inflation through monetary policy tightening, Gratham said.
"(Central banks) will be spooked, they'll do what they can, maybe."
Based on its current trendline, Grantham thinks the S&P 500 could be trading around 3,000 points in a year from its current 3,979.87, but notes it could easily head "decently lower."
Inflationary pressures are likely to be persistent, Grantham said, owing to climate change-related economic disruptions, a shrinking global workforce and limited commodity resources.
That will put further pressure on equity returns, he noted.
"People forget to adjust the S&P for inflation ... your assets are worth 9% because of inflation in the last year."
"That makes a marginal bear market a fairly serious bear market," Grantham said.
(Join GMF, a chat room hosted on Refinitiv Messenger: https://refini.tv/33uoFoQ)
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
PacWest Bancorp weighing up options including possible sale: Bloomberg By
{Current column}-- is reportedly weighing up its strategic options including a possible a sale amid concerns about ...
Read moreRussia claims it killed hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers in rocket attack By Reuters
{Current column}(Reuters) - Russia's defence ministry said on Sunday it had killed more than 600 Ukrainian serviceme ...
Read moreTrade Republic Trading Is Safe? Company Abbreviation Trade Republic
{Current column}FTI's top 100 foreign exchange brokers can be selected by reference. If they are not within 100, ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Dollar struggles on weak data; Kiwi surges on RBNZ surprise By Reuters
- Ultimatemarket平台监管合规吗?Ultimatemarket平台有什么优势?
- Failed crypto exchange FTX has recovered over $5 billion, attorney says By Reuters
- South Africa's Eskom says police investigating alleged poisoning of CEO By Reuters
- SpaceX rocket explosion illustrates Elon Musk's 'successful failure' formula By Reuters
- Fed seen stopping rate hikes shy of 5% as inflation slows By Reuters
Latest articles
-
UK shop price inflation strikes new record high: BRC By Reuters
-
Dollar slips lower; Fed interest rate path, China's reopening in focus By
-
WHO urges travellers to wear masks as new COVID variant spreads By Reuters
-
FXSway Trading Is Safe? Company Abbreviation FXSway
-
Oil slips as U.S. debt caution offset supply concerns By Reuters
-
Oil falls as U.S. stockpiles rise, economic uncertainty renew demand concerns By Reuters