Anxiety As Global Recession Looms
A global
recession is now almost inevitable this year, the Chief Executive Officer of
one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory and services
organizations, Nigel Green, has said
The warning
from Nigel Green, chief executive and founder of deVere Group, comes as global
stocks and government bond yields fell after oil prices plummeted by almost 30
per cent on Monday.
He notes:
“Oil’s sharpest one-day drop since the 1991 Gulf war has further fuelled the
sell-off in global stock markets that started a couple of weeks ago on fears
that coronavirus is going to severely damage economic growth.
“Every major
stock market is getting hammered as oil prices plunge due to a price war
following the breakdown of Saudi Arabia’s oil-cutting alliance with Russia over
the weekend.”
He
continues: “This is an issue that will not be resolved overnight and it can be
expected to have far-reaching consequences.
“It comes as
the world scrambles to deal with the market mayhem and economic fallout caused
by the relentless global spread of coronavirus.
“With the
combination of the implications of the oil stand-off and the outbreak, I now
believe that it’s almost inevitable that there will be a global recession this
year.”
Before
the oil price drop, last week Mr Green noted: “The outbreak has already sent
the stock market into bouts of volatility not seen since the 2008 financial
crisis, severely disrupted global supply chains, shuttered factories, grounded
flights, closed attractions and cancelled major events. Entire powerhouse
cities in Asia and Europe are nearly shut down. Multinational companies have
warned that coronavirus will severely hit profits. Workers are being evacuated
and forced to work from home and to avoid travelling.
“We
can see both supply and consumer demand are already being impacted in key
sectors, such as travel and tourism, hospitality, manufacturing and retail, and
it is going to extend to others.
“This
scenario is then likely to feed on itself: a lack of consumer confidence and
spending, lack of business investment, more job cuts, which means even less
spending and demand, which leads to further job cuts.”
The deVere
CEO affirms: “In times of increasing volatility, investors need to ensure that
they remain in the markets with their suitably diversified portfolios – not
only to safeguard their wealth, but to create and build it too.
“As ever,
there will be winners and losers and savvy investors and their financial
advisers will be eyeing the opportunities that fluctuations, panic-selling and
mis-pricing generate, allowing them to revise and add high quality equities to
their portfolios at lower prices.”
Mr Green
concludes: “The ultimate impact that the oil price war will have on an already
vulnerable world economy that’s struggling to cope with the spread of
coronavirus remains unknown.
“However,
the risk of a short but severe global recession in 2020 has now been heightened
dramatically.”
FROM http://citybusinessnews.com/anxiety-as-global-recession-looms
No comments