A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Apr 8, 2020

Brokerage App Signups Soar As Markets Remain Volatile

The lesson for individual investors from algorithmic trading may be that calling one's broker may no longer be speedy enough and that the ability to act on  quickly as events dictate will drive more of them to mobile finance apps. JL


John Detrixhe reports in Quartz:

Stocks have been on a rollercoaster in recent weeks as the spread of the new coronavirus disrupts the global economy. Trading volumes have been off the charts as governments shutter whole commercial sectors to stop the spread of Covid-19. Account openings for brokerage apps suggest some retail investors may be looking for bargains or (that) market volatility demonstrates the need to reduce risk for  money and set it aside.
Stocks have been on a rollercoaster in recent weeks as the spread of the new coronavirus disrupts the global economy. Account openings for brokerage apps suggest some retail investors may be looking for bargains.
In the UK, Freetrade says it has had record account openings almost every day, with 125% more of them on March 20 than the daily average of the previous few weeks. A spokesperson for San Francisco-based Charles Schwab said the brokerage is seeing “strong, above-average asset and account growth.” Square CEO Jack Dorsey said in a conference call that the company’s Cash App has had “strong engagement” for investing, while eToro’s CEO said in an email that first-time depositors have increased by 300% this year.Trading volumes have been off the charts as governments shutter whole commercial sectors to stop the spread of Covid-19. Many equity indexes are down 15% or more this year, even as officials plan to spend and lend more than $4 trillion to help workers and to preserve industries that have gone into hibernation to slow the coronavirus outbreak.
By some measures, equity markets are indeed “cheap” by historical standards. The cyclically adjusted price-earnings ratio (CAPE) of US stocks, pioneered by Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Shiller, has fallen to its lowest level since June 2013. Equity market gyrations, meanwhile, have gone through the roof: Several of the biggest one-day gains and losses on record took place this month, according to Bianco Research. Some traders may be looking to speculate on price swings.
But not every company bounces back after a plunge. The stock of multinational conglomerate General Electric still hasn’t fully regained the ground it lost during the financial crisis in 2008; it took the S&P 500 Index about six years to attain its previous high.
Likewise, timing the market is nearly impossible, according to Rob Williams, vice president of financial planning at Charles Schwab. “People shouldn’t try to predict market highs and lows to decide when to start investing,” he wrote in an email to Quartz. He added:
“The trajectory over the long term has been upward, and if you aren’t invested you’re going to miss that growth. That said, we suggest that investors of any age who need a portion of their money in less than five years not invest that money in stocks. If you have larger purchases or expenses coming up in the next five years or so, market volatility demonstrates the need to reduce risk for that money and set it aside.”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

There is so much unnecessary information on social media. Although Facebook moderators are fighting against fake news, it is very hard. So I prefer to stick to watching videos there and that's it.

CreepticN said...

I agree with you my friend. Actually I am using Facebook and other social medial really seldom and for educational purposes only. And like you I also only watch study videos. Recently due to the volume of materials, our tutor has started to ask us to use this youtube downloader online to grab his content to our PCs. I think it is very wise, it saves us bandwidth and a lot of money.

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