Asian markets open on Tuesday still reeling from a wild session on Monday that saw Japan’s second-biggest stock crash ever spill over into world markets, helping to unleash a wave of volatility usually associated with major crises.
The curious thing is though, there’s no smoking gun that explains the scale of the selloff, either in Japan or globally. At least not a singular or obvious one.
Yes, the yen carry and other leveraged trades were probably overcooked, the Bank of Japan was maybe too hawkish and is now headed for a policy error, ditto the Fed by not cutting rates last week, and the AI-inflated Big Tech bubble on Wall Street was well overdue a reversal.
But is that enough to warrant a 12% plunge in Japanese stocks – a fall only exceeded by the 15% slump on Oct. 20, 1987 after Black Monday – or the surge to 65.0 on the U.S. VIX volatility index, a level only ever topped in the market meltdowns of 2008 and 2020?
Perhaps.