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Ausbiz – War jitters short lived, eyes on post-correction upside

 

I joined Andrew Geoghegan on Ausbiz to discuss why geopolitical shocks often coincide with resilient equity markets. History shows that while wars and major conflicts can trigger sharp initial sell-offs, markets have often recovered quickly and, in some cases, delivered strong returns during those periods. During World War I, for example, U.S. equities initially fell by around 30 per cent before going on to generate average annual gains of close to 7 per cent between 1915 and 1918, including a particularly strong rebound in 1915. World War II also aligned with solid Dow Jones returns, depending on the start and end dates used. And according to data from LPL Financial on 22 major non-financial shocks since Pearl Harbor, markets have typically fallen by around 5 per cent before recovering fully within about six weeks.

Persistent inflation, higher long-end rates and a deteriorating U.S. debt profile remain important underlying factors for markets, with reduced Chinese Treasury buying and increased U.S. issuance likely requiring higher yields regardless of Federal Reserve policy.

After three strong years of equity gains, are markets entering a consolidation phase as elevated valuations and growing concerns around the AI bubble begin to test sentiment?

Tune into the full segment via Ausbiz here: War jitters short lived, eyes on post-correction upside.

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