'There's a chance this won't be a horrible recession': Strategist

In This Article:

Crossmark Global Investments CIO Bob Doll sits down with Yahoo Finance Live to assess the market's stability after weeks of volatility, inflation, recession concerns, and economic indicators coming from the housing market.

Video Transcript

- Well, let's get more on that market action for you with our guest, Bob Doll, Crossmark Global Investments Chief Investment officer. Thank you for joining us. So as we mentioned, they're just days away from the end of the second quarter. What should we read into what we're seeing in the markets right now?

BOB DOLL: I think we're experiencing the aftereffects of an oversold condition. This is the third one we've seen this bear market. The first two lead to almost a 10% and more than 10% increase. This one is up 7 from the low, we're stalling a little today, digesting what we've experienced. But the fundamentals in the last week are-- you know, maybe inflation's peaking a bit. Maybe the economy is slowing and we're in this good news is bad news and bad news is good news for the stock market. I think we'll see more of the same.

- Hey, Bob, what are you looking at that suggests to you that inflation may be cooling or maybe we have seen a peak, when it comes to prices?

BOB DOLL: Well, obviously, the major indices or indicators have not shown us that. But I'm talking about the fall off last week in commodity prices. Copper is a key bellwether there. I think it will show that the second quarter was the peak in inflation. We may be solving some, not all, not even a majority, of the supply chain problems. And the boyle can come off there. The comparisons get easier from a year-over-year basis. So I think we'll see some decline to still unacceptable levels of inflation, but no longer the 8%, 9% that we've seen of late.

- And I want to ask you about a market-- I want to ask you about a market sentiment indicator that you mentioned in your notes there, the bull-bear ratio. What is that telling you? And how are you using it?

BOB DOLL: It tells us that there are a lot of scared people out there, a lot of bears, and not too many people who are excited about things. And that's usually when the sentiment measures get extreme in either direction. It pays to lean in the other direction. So it is among the reasons we think that this bear market rally is not yet over.

- Hey, Bob, getting back to what you were just saying a minute ago here, what's necessary to get back to the Fed's 2% inflation target? Do we need to see a recession? Do we need to see the labor market, maybe, weaken a bit in order to see the inflation drop that significantly?