Transcript
A (0:05)
Markets reacted very sharply to news of the Iran ceasefire agreement last week, only to be met with news to start this week of a U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which is critical for global energy flows. So how are markets navigating this uncertainty and what can investors expect ahead? I'm Alison Nathan and this is Goldman Sachs Exchanges. My guest today is Dominic Wilson, Senior Markets Advisor in Goldman Sachs Research. Dom, welcome back to Exchanges.
B (0:34)
Thank you.
A (0:36)
So, Dom, we have had nothing short of a roller coaster of developments and headlines related to the war in Iran. And I have to say the most recent ones in terms of this blockade I just mentioned are not very encouraging about seeing a quick resolution to this conflict. But if you look at the markets and the S&P 500 in particular, it is pricing the just below where we were before the conflict even began. So let me just start by asking, does that surprise you at all? And is the market really underestimating the downside risk here?
B (1:09)
So the two parts of those questions I think are different from each other. So the first, is it a surprise? What I would say is that the thing that we've been reminding ourselves is that as you move through crises, as you move through these kinds of events, what you tend to see is the market worry a lot. And then the first stage of relief comes mostly from removing the weight that people put on the very bad tails that are out there. And so seeing a recovery period where there's a lot of things unresolved, I think that in itself is not unusual. If you think of COVID if you think of tariffs, the recovery periods often came before a lot of the worst things on the ground had happened. And I do think that is essentially what the market is doing, which is we can see that oil prices have stayed at high levels, we can see the oil flows are not yet moving, but the market has made a judgment. I think that when it looked at the distribution a few weeks ago, it could think of extraordinarily extended periods. It could think of very bad military situations. And what it's decided, rightly or wrongly, is that the track that we're on here with a negotiation ongoing, obviously nowhere near complete, is one that allows you to put a lot less weight on those very bad outcomes. And even if the medium term outlook isn't great, the fact that you can look through that weakness, even if we have temporarily weak activity, and even if that lasts for a while, is overwhelmed by the fact that your equities in particular can discount on a much longer period. I think obviously the critical issue Is are they right to make that judgment? And I would say, again, in terms of the evolution of the story, I think the direction is clearly right in my view, which is that relative to where we were a couple of weeks ago, where we had no idea whether the sides would even start talking to each other, and where the kind of military solutions that were being floated were certainly more severe than anything we've seen so far, I think we are in a better place. And I do think it makes sense that the market has put less weight on that downside tail. To the extent that I'm surprised, I'm less surprised by the recovery in the market itself. But when you say, is that risk being underestimated, that downside tail risk, I think it's got further away. It's the threshold to really shake people's confidence has risen, but there's real risk there. Right. So can we be confident that we're out of the woods on that, that some of those scenarios we worried about won't come back? And the answer is no, we can feel more confident probably than we were. And so that deep tail risk is the bit that worries me less. Where is the market here today? But what's the market vulnerability to moving back in that direction? And I think that tail, as we relax, starting to look a little bit underpriced.
