Business

With more liquidity comes more instability on Wall St

GameStop episode shines uncomfortable light on online trading platforms, speculative investment funds involved in financial melee

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 04 Apr 2021 11:00AM

With more liquidity comes more instability on Wall St
The churn in the US stock market is sparking talk of increased financial regulation. – Pixabay pic, April 4, 2021

NEW YORK – The collapse of the Archegos fund is only the most recent example of how extreme liquidity can make financial markets more volatile and sometimes lead to bizarre outcomes.

Another dramatic instance came in late January, when shares of GameStop suddenly skyrocketed following a buying frenzy coordinated by retail investors eager to defend the video-game retailer from funds betting against the company.

GameStop shares have since retreated, but the episode shone an uncomfortable light on online trading platforms and speculative investment funds involved in the financial melee. 

In the case of Archegos, leading banks appear poised for hefty losses following billions of dollars in sudden stock liquidations by a fund with a large market exposure backed by very little cash.

And, there has been a wave of special purpose acquisition companies entering public markets through transactions with fewer rules than traditional stock offerings.

All of these cases show how a flood of liquidity in the wake of accommodative monetary policy is changing Wall Street.

“Stocks have risen extremely quickly from their lows last March, but there is still plenty of liquidity out there,” said Gregori Volokhine of Meeschaert Financial Services.

The United States Federal Reserve has been aggressive in pumping funds into the financial system. Also, both President Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump signed sweeping fiscal packages that primed households and businesses with funds.

“I just don’t know that we’ve seen this much money hit the system this fast between what we’ve seen in stimulus cheques and now what we’re going to see with infrastructure,” said TD Ameritrade market strategist J.J. Kinahan, alluding to Biden’s just-introduced US$2 trillion (RM8.28 trillion) infrastructure plan.

Some of the volatility is also the result of investors trying to navigate shifts in the market as the economy rebounds with more people vaccinated and technology shares that prospered during lockdowns lose some of their lustre.

“Enterprising investors know they need to find other vehicles besides software, social networks and e-commerce stocks,” said Volokhine.

“They’re looking for ways to make more money.”

Kinahan said implosions like Archegos can happen when funds are “looking to differentiate their returns, which is harder do in a bull market”.

New regulation?

The churn in the market is sparking talk of more financial regulation. In the wake of GameStop, lawmakers have grilled online trading platform Robinhood over its moves to temporarily restrict trading amid the frenzy. 

Robinhood, which itself plans to go public, has also been questioned about its relationships with hedge funds that do business with it.

The Archegos debacle has focused the debate on swaps, derivative transactions that can allow big, high-risk bets with small upfront payments. 

The opacity of the swaps market makes it a prime candidate for new rules by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), said Volokhine.

“SEC could move quickly to force banks to disclose more about swaps.

“Right now, there isn’t much transparency.” – AFP, April 4, 2021

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