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The perils of the 2020 rally

Every country has tried, based on its capability, to pump in liquidity and prop up their individual economies.

By Abhishek Basumallick  Apr 16, 2021 11:40:23 AM IST (Published)


We all will remember 2020 as the year of the Covid pandemic. When the first realisation hit our markets, lockdowns became a reality, markets fell off the cliff. The economies across the globe have remained weak. Every country has tried, based on its capability, to pump in liquidity and prop up their individual economies.
In the last year, the US Fed has nearly doubled its balance sheet to more than $7.7 trillion through around $3.4 trillion in bond purchases. That extraordinary intervention, along with near-zero interest rates, has a single-point agenda—to keep money flowing through the US banking system. As per data from IMF, countries have given stimulus between 2.5 percent to 10 percent of GDP.
This has resulted in an across-the-board asset price bubble. Nearly every asset class has been on the rise for the last year. Bitcoin, equity markets, oil, metals—you name it and they are up. The main reason is that there is a lot more money in the hands of people and it is flowing into various asset classes.