The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 03, 2025
Today: April 03, 2025

Stock markets may face correction, says Goldman Sachs

A street sign for Wall Street is seen in the financial district in New York
February 21, 2025
Nell Mackenzie - Reuters

By Nell Mackenzie

LONDON (Reuters) - Wall Street stocks could be facing a correction because of ructions in the options market, Goldman Sachs specialist Scott Rubner said in a Thursday note seen by Reuters on Friday.

Roughly $2.7 trillion of U.S. stock market derivatives are due to expire on Friday, which if not exercised, will put pressure on stock markets and stoke volatility, the note said.

WHY IT'S IMPORTANT

S&P 500 and European stock markets hit a record highs on Tuesday but have since declined amid Trump's latest tariff warning on pharmaceuticals, semiconductor chips and wood, which among other threats, has exacerbated fears of a broad trade war and unnerved investors.

Stock buying might be slowing for other reasons, as well. Retail traders in the U.S. are trading less because they'll have to pay their annual taxes, and average flows from retirement funds into mutual and exchange-traded funds typically taper in March, Rubner said.

BY THE NUMBERS

About $2.7 trillion of equity options, or derivatives that allow a trader to bet that a stock will reach a certain price, expire Friday, said the Goldman note.

These derivatives include wagers on the S&P 500, as well as U.S. exchange-traded funds and single stocks.

Banks and intermediaries that help put on these bets have over $9 billion of hedges against these trades. These positions have acted as a dampener on volatility, says the Goldman note, "supporting weakness and muting rallies."

KEY QUOTE

If investors do not return to renew their options bets, then intermediaries also have to unwind their hedges, explains Dan Izzo, founder of the hedge fund BLKBRD Asset Management and a former bank trader.

"That translates as a large momentary pressure. The larger risk is if there's no one willing to buy that impact, we could see it trigger a larger sell off," said Izzo.

(Reporting By Nell Mackenzie, Editing by Amanda Cooper and Philippa Fletcher)

Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

What to know about the Trump tariffs upending global trade and markets

What to know about the Trump tariffs upending global trade and markets
Business|Economy|Political|US

Trumpโ€™s tariff push is a race against time, and potential voter backlash

Trumpโ€™s tariff push is a race against time, and potential voter backlash
Business|Political|Science|Technology|US

US energy department invites AI data center development at Los Alamos and other federal lands

US energy department invites AI data center development at Los Alamos and other federal lands
Business|Economy|Finance|Food|US

Import tax on coffee pressures US roasters already facing high prices

Import tax on coffee pressures US roasters already facing high prices

Economy

Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|Travel|US

Fitch downgrades Southwest Airlines outlook to negative

Fitch downgrades Southwest Airlines outlook to negative
Business|Economy|Finance|US

Capital One's $35 billion deal for Discover clears US DOJ hurdle, NYT reports

Capital One's $35 billion deal for Discover clears US DOJ hurdle, NYT reports
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

Fed's Cook says, amid high uncertainty, time for Fed to watch data

Fed's Cook says, amid high uncertainty, time for Fed to watch data
Business|Economy|Europe|Political|World

UK pins hopes on US trade talks after Trump tariff blitz

UK pins hopes on US trade talks after Trump tariff blitz

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In