The Tripwire on the Next “Black Monday”

By Brian Maher

This post The Tripwire on the Next “Black Monday” appeared first on Daily Reckoning.

“Black Monday” — Oct. 19, 1987 — the bloodiest one-day carnage in market history…

The Dow plunged 508 points that hell-mouth day — an unthinkable 22%.

A similar stock market event today would spell a 4,724-point cataclysm.

We liken that October day in 1987 to the ancient Battle of Cannae… when invincible Rome lost as many as 70,000 legionnaires to Hannibal’s armies — in a single day.

Or July 1, 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme, when nearly 20,000 British soldiers fell before the German guns… and never got up.

What could lead today’s market to its own Cannae, its own Somme… another Black Monday?

Today we set aside our renowned optimism… enter into the spirit of doom… and consider one possibility.

Harley Bassman is a world-class expert in derivatives — what Warren Buffett has termed “weapons of mass destruction.”

Bassman’s taken the current market and put it under his microscope.

He specifically wanted to answer:

The only question one cares about, identifying the tripwire that would tip our system into disequilibrium.

That is, what could turn a bad day on Wall Street into another Black Monday-level event?

And is there a specific point when the the dominoes could start going over?

Turns out there might be.

But before revealing that (black) magic number, let us identify the villain of this fellow’s tale, a possible trigger for the next event…

It’s a suspect we’ve also recently identified: record-low market volatility.

A typical portfolio might normally contain 60% stocks and 40% bonds.

Bonds are generally considered safer than stocks.

But market volatility has been so low lately, many stocks seem as low-risk as a three-month Treasury.

This despite a softening economy, rising interest rates, rising geopolitical tensions, etc.

Note the diverging paths between global economic uncertainty and market volatility in this chart:

This record-low volatility has led investment funds to overshift their holdings away from bonds… and toward stocks.

All is well as long as peace is abroad and rainbows appear in the skies over Wall Street.

But if volatility spikes, if a storm whips up, all those funds that fattened on stocks will drop them quick as a wink.

Then the selling could feed and feed and feed upon itself… until there’s nothing left to eat.

That’s what led to Black Monday in 1987.

It began as just another down day…

But once the market dropped below a critical threshold that October day, the computers caught a collective fever and unloaded everything in sight at the speed of electrons — hence the single-day 22% plummet.

As this Bassman fellow explains the dynamic:

Once a destabilizing event occurs… [it leads to] a feedback loop where asset selling begets more selling. This… exacerbated (but did not start) the 1987 crash.

Or as Jim Rickards describes:

In a bull market, the effect is to amplify the upside as indexers pile into hot stocks like Google and Apple. But a small sell-off can turn into a stampede as passive investors head for the exits …read more

Source:: Daily Reckoning feed

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