Either-Way Market

  

Transgender bathrooms.

The topics of finance and accounting are full of obscure and complicated terms. "Either-way market" is not one of them. It means a market could go either way...either up or down.

The term applies to a market that lacks clear directional signals. Observers aren’t sure if there are more buyers or more sellers. People just can't tell. That's it...either way: the David Bowie of financial markets.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Event Risk?6 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop what is event risk risk risk risque er yeah,

00:09

how'd that get in here all right moving on investing carries all kinds of risk

00:14

inflation risk is a biggie for those who like to buy safe government low-interest [100 dollar bill inflates]

00:19

low risk paper yes their investments always pay back but while they only get

00:23

like 2% kind of returns and in a world of 3% inflation well that's a big

00:28

problem well then there's market risk too [S&P 500 graph appears]

00:31

stock markets go up and down all the time so yes over time they go up but

00:36

well you might own stock in a great company that in a bad market gets taken

00:40

down like all the other boats in the ocean when a big quake hits and suddenly

00:45

it's a tsunami time and well everything drops but historically if you hold good [People in discussion at a meeting]

00:49

companies long enough well well their high quality bails you out of any

00:53

short-term losses you've suffered so if these are normal risks that happen all

00:58

the time they're things that just go on and on it's all part of the investing

01:02

world then what's an event risk which implies that something happened there

01:07

was a vent there was a finite period of time a finite situation that made bad

01:12

things happen with the overhang that events you know like a solar eclipse or [Solar eclipse appears]

01:17

or the election of a smart ethical congressman well those don't happen all

01:22

the time that's an event right it's a one-time thing well here's an event a

01:25

meteor hits the earth and all of a sudden while the most prized possessions [Meteor strikes earth]

01:30

are simple things like water and gas and land with wood and animals yeah that's

01:36

an event well the value of your Amazon and Netflix stock in that case well

01:40

those companies are probably not worth whole lot cuz internet is probably

01:44

dead or at least injured so when wizened old investors invest they typically [Old investors appear holding stock]

01:50

think about "once in a lifetime" events with event risk as being

01:56

a risk that they have to account for and yes thinking about that meteor hitting

02:01

the earth in fact is one of the things that professional portfolio manager

02:05

thinks about when building their fund and if you want to do something a little

02:08

more realistic than a meteor what about some crazy dictator and [Rocket appears in the sky]

02:12

Korea nuking us yeah not like one in a gazillion chance probably well more

02:17

recent event was the near-death experience of the US financial system in

02:21

the 2008/09 mortgage crisis where trust in banks and the banking system

02:25

almost led to the bankruptcy of Goldman Sachs Bank of America JP Morgan and a

02:29

bunch of other formerly perceived as bulletproof financial institutions yes

02:34

there was an event and a whole lot of risk and we almost died

02:37

financially anyway eventually the capital markets worked investors came to

02:42

trust the system again and they invested their money in the stock market with [Cash piles up]

02:45

staggering results in that the stock market went up some 400 percent in the

02:50

decade after the financial crisis so events are a real thing you have to

02:55

think about them until you don't [Man falling to the ground on a rocket]

Up Next

Finance: What is Technical Analysis?
12 Views

Technical analysts don't care how companies make their money or how they run their business; they're just interested in the numbers. The data. Yeah...

Finance: What is a Chartist?
26 Views

What is a Chartist? A chartist is a trader and/or analyst who relies on technical analysis and charts in order to make decisions for trading the ma...

Finance: What is Contrarian?
0 Views

What is Contrarian? `Contrarian,’ as the word implies, is an investment philosophy that goes counter to the prevailing trend, as the underlying r...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)