As shares of Wall Street titans Lehman Brothers, Bank of America and AIG plummeted, the Dow tumbled over 500 points Monday while the S&P suffered its worst decline since 9/11.
The decline was certainly dramatic and painful for those long, but it was not as bad as the "Black Monday" many market participants expected heading into the session. Still, a 1987-like crash cannot be ruled out and investors should take steps such as buying puts to protect themselves against such a "fat-tail event," says Nouriel Roubini, economic professor at NYU's Stern School and chairman of RGE Monitor.
Roubini says Monday's decline could have been worse if not for a series of "new dams" created this weekend and Monday, including:
The Fed's expansion of its lending facilities for financial firms.
Raised expectations for a Fed rate cut at Tuesday's previously scheduled policy meeting.
The Bank of America deal to acquire Merrill Lynch, discussed in detail here.
The $70 billion "liquidity fund" created by a consortium of banks.
Discussion of a separate fund to aid AIG, whose shares fell 61% Monday.
But noting has changed Roubini's baseline forecast for another 20% drop in the stock market. The economist, who has been eerily prescient in predicting the ongoing crisis, recommends
- investors avoid risky assets, including commodities as fears of a global slowdown take hold.
On Monday, gold benefited from a "flight to safety" trade in the wake of Lehman's bankruptcy,
but oil fell to its lowest level since mid-February ( asr: oil is on global economic slow down)
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