Market strategist explains why investors should still be ‘a bit on the cautious side’

In This Article:

Akshata Bailkeri, Bruderman Asset Management Equity Analyst, and Eric Freedman, U.S. Bank Asset Management CIO, join Yahoo Finance Live to talk about how the market is reacting to economic data, the Fed's interest rate hikes, international markets, and geopolitical impacts on commodities.

Video Transcript

[BELL RINGING]

- There's your closing bell on Wall Street, and a wonderful way to wrap up your week on a high note. Yes, a sight for sore eyes as all three closed in the green. And look at the NASDAQ, a monster Friday. Let's talk about it with our market panel on a Friday. Akshata Bailkeri, from Bruderman Asset Management Equity Analyst, nice to see you. And Eric Freedman, US Bank Asset Management CIO. Akshata, we'll start with you. What is it rallying on, in particular the NASDAQ? What do you attribute it to?

AKSHATA BAILKERI: I mean, part of this is a relief rally. You know, you're seeing some of the-- some of the names that come up are the consumer discretionary and technology. And some of these were very, very hard hit in the earlier drawdowns. And some of the higher quality names are seeing the rightly so uptick that they deserve on that front.

RACHELLE AKUFFO: So then, Eric, in terms of your investment style, where you're still seeing a lot of this volatility, we seem to be getting closer to a turning point. What should people be thinking?

ERIC FREEDMAN: We'd still be cautious. We think the turning point is really an open question at this juncture. We're probably between what we would call two repricings. Repricing one is the Federal Reserve-induced repricing. When the Fed says they're going to raise rates, every other asset class has to move down in price and up in yield. So we're really in the middle of that. There could be a turning point there, depending on what the Fed decides to do in terms of communications.

But the next repricing, again, the risk of a potential more downside, is if we start to see higher commodity costs as well as higher borrowing costs structurally trickle into the real economy and stay there for some time. So do think that we're in a deeply oversold condition that can last for a day or two, but we would still be a bit on the cautious side right now thinking that there's more potential downside ahead.

EMILY MCCORMICK: Akshata, how would you characterize the current economic backdrop? Because on one hand, we have a decade's high rates of inflation. Yet, on the other hand, we have a still solid labor market and still strong consumer balance sheets. So where are we right now?

AKSHATA BAILKERI: I mean, you know, I would agree that we're not really at the bottom of the sell-off. You know, the markets have been volatile, and we haven't seen that volatility throughout. So there's-- you know, it's suggested that we haven't reached the bottom yet. But in looking at, you know, overall economic conditions, are we at a risk for further major drawdown? I wouldn't say so.