USA: 2022 has arguably been the most turbulent year ever for investors, and for good reason: it saw trillions of dollars lost in global stocks, bond market meltdowns, whipsawing currency and commodity prices, and the collapse of some crypto empires.
Calculating the final figures is helpful but far from providing the complete picture.
Despite the fact that global equities are below $14 trillion and on track to have their second worst year ever, the volatility in that period has been strange due to nearly 300 interest rate hikes and three rallies of 10% or more Is.
The Ukraine conflict and hyperinflation have been key drivers as the world's economies recover from the pandemic, but China has been constrained.
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German and US Treasury bonds, which have historically served as safe haven investments during tough economic times, lost 16% and 24% of their value, respectively, in dollar terms.
DoubleLine Capital's "Bond King", Jeffrey Gundlach, claims that at times market conditions were so bad that it was almost impossible for his team to trade for several days.
They claimed that there was a buyer's strike. "And obviously, given that prices have recently started to decline."
As soon as it became clear that Covid would not shut down the world economy once again and the U.S. The Federal Reserve, the world's most powerful central bank, was serious about raising interest rates just as the drama began.
Ten-year Treasury yields fell to 1.8% from 1.5% in January, subtracting 5% from the MSCI World Stock Index.
The current yield is 3.68%, the stock is down 20%, and oil prices rose 80% before collapsing completely. This time last year, despite saying it was unlikely to move, the Fed has hiked by 400 bps and the European Central Bank has hiked by a record 250 bps.
A last-minute Bank of Japan surprise this week also helped the Japanese yen gain ground, with the DXY rising nearly 9% against major world currencies and the yen rising 12.5% against the JPY=.
Turkey's lira TRY= has lost another 28% of its value in emerging markets due to inflation and monetary policy issues, but its stock market has outperformed all others globally.
The hard-pressed Egyptian currency plunged more than 36% in value. As Ghana joined Sri Lanka in default, the cedi fell 60%. The Russian ruble, which is supported by Moscow's capital controls, is still the second best performing currency in the world despite falling significantly from its June high. initially destroyed after the invasion of Ukraine
Robert Elster, chief investment officer at Close Brothers Asset Management, acknowledged that he "really can't tell you what will happen next year." Like many others, he cited the beating that the British pound and bond markets took when Liz Truss's short-lived administration embarked on a spending spree.
Such large-scale fluctuations in the yield on the ten-year gilt are unusual in developed markets; GB10YT=RR rose over 100 bps and the pound fell 9% in a matter of days.
If you sell it wrong, don't be surprised if it goes down like a cup of cold sickle, warns CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson.
The tech titans are set to lose $3.6 trillion as a result of the rate hike. While Alphabet's Google GOOGL.O and Amazon AMZN.O are down 40% and 50% respectively, and Facebook META.O and Tesla TSLA.O have both lost more than 60% of their value.
dMICN00000PUS has rallied of late as it signals that the days of a zero-covid policy are numbered; However, they are still down 25%, and emerging market 'hard currency' government debt will take a hit for the first time ever.
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Natural gas surged more than 50% The fact that TRNLTTFMc1 is the best in that group is largely attributed to the conflict in Ukraine, which at one point drove prices up as much as 140%.
Brent has lost all 80% of gains it gained in the first quarter, along with wheat and corn, due to growing concerns about an impending recession and the West's decision to stop buying Russian oil.
Chaos has increased on the cryptocurrency market. Bitcoin's cocktail of cheap money and leveraged bets will be lost by the year 2022.
Major cryptocurrencies have lost 60% of their value as a result of the collapse of Sam Bankman-FTX Fried's empire, Celsius, and so-called "stablecoins" TeraUSD and Luna, and the overall crypto market has shrunk to $1.4 trillion.
According to Stephen Gerlach, chief economist at EFG Bank and former deputy governor of the central bank of Ireland, "what happened in global markets this year has been painful."
But it wouldn't have been as devastating if central banks hadn't grossly underestimated the rise in inflation and had to raise interest rates.