Categories: BusinessNews

Stock Markets in Panic Mode

The stock markets have made a panicked start to 2016 with more than £34 billion wiped off the FTSE within an hour on the first day of trading in 2016.

There were similar falls across other major European and Asian indices as concerns over China’s slowdown hit again. Shanghai’s stock market had to be suspended earlier in the day having lost almost seven per cent of its value thanks to weak manufacturing data.Markets were also affected by the uncertainty being triggered by growing tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Today’s mayhem on the markets is just the start of the volatility, but investors should seek out the inevitable upside, affirms the boss of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organisations.

Nigel Green, deVere Group CEO and founder, said: “Volatility is likely to rip through financial markets in the first half of 2016. Today’s turbulence is only the beginning.

“There’s a cocktail of uncertainty, with the main ingredients including China’s economic woes, higher interest rates in the U.S., historically low oil prices, Britain’s referendum on exiting the EU, and increasing tensions in the Middle East.

“But despite this potent combination there are reasons for investors to be cheerful. For example, a lower oil price will not only boost household budgets, which is likely to increase disposable income, but the travel sector, amongst others, will reap the rewards.

“Another example would be that Japanese and European shares are likely to do well on the back of interest rate hikes in the U.S.”

He continues: “Indeed, volatility of the kind that 2016 will be shaped by should not necessarily be feared. Volatility can represent enormous opportunity.

“When markets fall, it is a chance for investors to start putting new money to work into the market at lower prices.

“Whilst it is almost impossible to forecast with accuracy what the stock market will do in the immediate future, it can be pretty predictable over the longer-term.

“As such, volatility can provide important buying opportunities; and on a broader note, it is best to simply feed money in over time in a measured way in order to take advantage of the beneficial long-term trend of stock markets.”

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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