Investors that have been holding on for dear life, held on a bit tighter Monday as the S&P 500 slipped into a bear market, off 20 percent from the highs, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled more than 600 points, now below 22,000. The declines ahead of the Christmas holiday come after weeks of extreme stock market volatility and amid a renewed attack on the Federal Reserve by President Trump.

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Whether you have a 401(k) or plain vanilla retirement account, these can be trying times riddled with uncertainty, but it is not the first time the markets have swooned, and it won’t be the last.

A series of financial advisers weigh in on what is causing the volatility and how to make sense of the moves when viewing your portfolio.

What’s causing the volatility?

Is it just passing or cyclical market volatility, a market correction in response to overvalued equities, overreaction to geopolitical turmoil or the Fed’s plans to raise rates again – or is it likely the start of a more prolonged bear market or even recession?

Michael Canet, the owner of Prostatis Financial Advisors Group, Baltimore, says it’s due to a little bit of all of those things taken together, plus a fading of the euphoria that boosted markets in the wake of the Tax Cuts and Job Acts of 2017, and fears of a trade war with China.

“We are nine and a half years into a bull market – that’s almost unheard of,” Canet says. “We know looking back through the history of tax cuts, all major cuts have been followed within 12 to 18 months by a market correction; the geopolitical aspects of a trade war with China; and rising interest rates constricting easy, cheap money. It all points to at least a correction if not a bear market. It’s time to think defensively and have a strategy in place so that you can avoid another 2008 market crash.”

Rosy or stormy outlook?

Some financial advisers like to project a rosy outlook for obvious reasons, but the best ones balance confidence in their long-term investment philosophy with a clear-eyed assessment of potential risks and pitfalls.

Brent Ford, a registered investment adviser at Benefit Resource Partners of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, says that the market through the later part of 2018 has been mixed, but the economy on the whole remains strong, and until that changes significantly, there is reason for optimism.

“Often we hear when we look at the chatter that this is the end of the best years in the market, the climate has shifted, and we are moving to a number of years of limited or negative returns,” Ford says. “However, the data just doesn’t support that conclusion.”

The recent sell-off is being driven by many factors, Ford believes: technology, rising interest rates and the global trade war.

Tech Trouble

“The tech sector stayed relatively healthy in some of the volatility that took place at the beginning part of 2018, that flash crash in February and March,” Ford says. “It is reasonable to see that some of the corrections in that sector of the market were due and we did see that happen starting at the front end of September.”

Since the tech sector is so heavily market weighted both in the S&P 500 (21.4 percent, which is the largest single weight to any sector in that index) and in the Dow (17.9 percent, second only to the industrials sector), when we have normal corrections they can make significant waves when you are exclusively buying the indexes.

“The waves can be even more significant if you are following the companies that are garnering the most popularity such as Amazon, Google and Facebook,” Ford says.

Federal Reserve

The second factor is the Federal Reserve hiking interest rates for the fourth time in 2018. The program of artificially suppressing interest rates to spur economic growth for the U.S. economy has ended and the Federal Reserve now has the complicated task of deciding when and how they are going to increase interest rates without pushing the economy back into recession in 2019.

The Fed’s path of interest rate hikes in 2018 has irked President Trump who has publically blasted policymakers numerous times, even going as far as to reportedly consider axing Fed Chair Jerome Powell, as first reported by Bloomberg.

“This policy is not only unpopular with Wall Street, it does have an effect on consumers,” Ford says. “We have not seen the severe effects of interest rate policy hit yet, but the Fed knows we are on a very high-stakes teeter-totter – if they increase too soon, the market could correct, but if we don’t at all, inflation will rear its ugly head.”

Another effect that interest rates have on the economy is the downward pressure on bond prices. Interest rates and bond prices have a negative correlation, so when interest rates increase, bond prices decrease.

“This can be problematic in an equity market that is experiencing some increased volatility and there is no safe haven for a conservative investor to go,” Ford says. “Interest rates may become the most important economic policy going forward.”

Geopolitics

Geopolitical factors have broad implications, namely the tariffs leading to a trade war affecting the U.S. economy.

“While the U.S. was in the best position to weather the storm of anyone else globally it was a matter of time before we started to see the ripples domestically,” Ford says. “As prices increase and demand decreases, it hurts company profits and sales, thus lowering share costs. Small businesses end up hurting the worst when tariffs are instituted. This trickle down of geopolitical noise on the market is having an effect.”

With large-cap stocks doing poorly due to the tech sector selling off, the small-cap markets doing poorly due to geopolitical influence, and the bond market contracting due to increasing interest rates, the end of the year will be messy and potentially the start of next year will be too.

However, Ford believes that as these areas start to improve (Trump getting China to back down on the trade war, the Fed slowing interest rate increases and the healthy holiday buying season being a bonus for tech) strong economic data will lead to an optimistic market outlook for 2019.

A strong portfolio is built on diversifying across asset classes to make sure that it achieves balance, Ford notes.

“2018 has been a nice heat check for the market and a wake-up call to a lot of investors to pay attention to how much balance they have in their portfolio,” he says. “Future earnings may depend on a number of different sectors working together rather than just a bullish S&P 500.”

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