Last week a widespread, three-day bounce in risk assets brought much needed relief to markets and investors around the globe. Although the rebound was softening a little into the weekend, the indiscriminate selling of anything and everything, that was such a feature of the previous week, had given way by Friday to a noticeably more orderly trading environment.
“There fortunately already existed a widespread understanding of the need for swift and sizeable action, as well as a playbook of the most effective tactics to put into play.”
The reason for this welcome pivot in sentiment and price action was a combination of ‘bazooka’ and ‘kitchen sink’ policies deployed by the world’s central banks. As most of the leadership teams at these institutions had been in place during the financial crisis of 2008, there fortunately already existed a widespread understanding of the need for swift and sizeable action, as well as a playbook of the most effective tactics to put into play.
Existing policies were ramped up in terms of size and scope and new interventions were revealed for the first time. Leading the charge was the Federal Reserve, which enacted multiple programs including the direct buying of corporate bonds and unlimited buying of US government bonds, should that be required. In Europe, the ECB modified the rules on its market purchases, removing limits on the proportion of a borrower’s debt they could buy as a means of targeting its responses to the areas of greatest need. The fire hose had well and truly been turned on and by the end of the week it was beginning to settle frayed nerves.