The second quarter in the American stock market has been one volatile mess. We're going to focus only on the stock market, but we need to remind everybody that volatility struck in many asset classes.
Look what happened the first half of this year: a full bear market price fall of more than 20% in traditional stock market indices, prices falling 30% or more in some other indices, and by 70% and 80% in some disrupter stocks that had fierce price appreciation during the pandemic lockdown period and have fallen apart since.
In addition, nontraditional investments had massive corrections – like those that make the headlines every day in cryptocurrencies. And the bond markets' gyrations have reached four and five standard deviations in volatility. The Treasury bond market gets the headlines all the time, but the municipal bond market, corporate bond market, and mortgages also suffered shocks. The first two quarters of 2022 saw sequential, broad multi-asset class shocks. To add to that picture, housing is now rolling over. The housing story is deteriorating, so we could really conclude that this has been a broadly correctional period covering all kinds of asset classes. At the same time, we have seen shocks in the international arena and adjustments in foreign exchange ratios and currencies. And we had commodity price shocks in all kinds of things, oil being the massive headline.
What does all this mean for the stock market going forward? We've always said that, in the end, stock prices in the United States are dependent on the aggregate earnings of the companies that compose the indices, along with the growth rate and expected outlook for those earnings. There’s lots of volatility around the price; but at the end of the day, it's how much a company can make in profit on a continuing basis that determines the stock price of that company. Lots of factors can adjust it, like stock buybacks or other transactions such as mergers and acquisitions or financing policy using or not using debt; but finally, it's the earnings per share of a company that is the primary driver of the value of its shares.
We don't see a massive deterioration in earnings. We do see a contraction in economic activities, which may slow earnings growth rates. We do see a shrinking U.S. GDP in both quarters so far this year. In the old days, that would meet the technical definition of a recession: two down quarters in GDP. That definition has been replaced with a different definition of a recession, which we won't get for another year, until the National Bureau of Economic Research looks backward a year or two and says, oh, we had a recession. By that time, what difference will it make?