The Omicron variant ‘could lead to more volatile days ahead,’ strategist says

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Anastasia Amoroso, iCapital Network Chief Investment Strategist, spoke with Yahoo Finance Live about the outlook for markets amid the new COVID Omicron variant and why biotech companies may benefit from the ongoing pandemic.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: Right now, though, we're going to have a discussion with a market participant about what we should be doing in this now tricky environment. Once again, Anastasia Amoroso is iCapital Network Chief Investment Strategist. Anastasia, it's always good to see you. Just, first of all, give us your first blush reaction to what we saw Friday, what we're seeing today, and how investors and how you're thinking about it.

ANASTASIA AMOROSO: Good to see you, Julie. I think the biggest question right now for investors is was that an overreaction that we saw on Friday. And I could say that I think it was an overreaction from the technical perspective, meaning it was a holiday week, it was the tail-end of it, it was thin trading volumes, it was low market debt. So I think whatever catalyst we had on Friday got exacerbated to the downside because of some of those technical pressures.

But what the jury's still out on is whether there were fundamental reasons for the markets to sell off. And the simple answer to that is we just don't know that. We're going to find out in the next few weeks, most likely, but we don't know if this virus is going to be-- if this variant is going to be more severe, if it's going to be more resistant to vaccines. So we don't know that. And as you guys just pointed out that, as we find out more and more, this could lead to more volatile days ahead.

And I just don't think we've hit the level of the S&P where I'm willing to say this is a screaming buying opportunity right now. We don't see that from the oversold technical levels, and also we have another potentially negative catalyst here, which is the Fed. If Omicron is not an issue but the Fed starts to react to higher inflation, we could have a hawkish Fed pivot. So I think the market, broadly, we need to maybe put a pause on the Santa rally expectations and look for pockets of opportunity, which I do see a few.

BRIAN CHEUNG: Anastasia, I guess-- first of all, tell us what those pockets are. That was a deep tease right there. You got to let us know what those pockets of opportunity are. But then, secondly, does the fact that markets sold off as viciously as they did on Friday, even despite some of the thin trading volume, as you pointed out, speak to the broad acknowledgment that valuations were high and maybe weren't factoring in these risks of other variants, which, by the way, we had known ahead of last week. How do you think those things factored [INAUDIBLE]?