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The biggest market moments of 2021

This has felt like a long year in financial markets, studded with events that offered insight in to the rapidly changing nature of trading and investment. From across the Financial Times’ markets team, here is our pick of the standout moments of 2021.

GameStop: revenge of the nerds

In January, US stock markets were transfixed by the outsized trading volumes and surging share prices of unremarkable established companies such as consoles retailer GameStop and cinema chain AMC.

What began as a discussion on untapped value at GameStop on the Reddit website months earlier morphed into a crowdsourced effort to squeeze out the short position held by a hedge fund, Melvin Capital. The momentum, fuelled by social media memes, flooded through the retail market. Some brokers were forced to curb trading. Robinhood, a popular broker for day traders, required a cash injection from shareholders to withstand the demands placed on it by its clearing house.

Reddit posts by Keith Gill, better known as Roaring Kitty, kicked off the GameStop saga © AP

Politicians wanted answers to what happened and invited those at the centre of the storm to Washington to explain. They included Robinhood’s Vlad Tenev, Ken Griffin of market maker Citadel Securities and Keith Gill, better known as Roaring Kitty, whose posts on Reddit under the alias DeepFuckingValue kicked off the saga. (He began his testimony by explaining he was “not a cat”.) 

Brokers, hedge funds and regulators received a crash course in the power of retail investors on a mission. The incident may lead to market reforms. US regulators are looking at the practice of payment for order flow, in which brokers sell their customers’ orders to market makers, and the two-day period allowed for settling shares may be halved. Philip Stafford

‘That’ seven-year Treasury auction

Auctions of seven-year US government debt generally spark interest only among specialists. But on February 25 2021, one such typically humdrum event proved unsettling across financial markets, as the weakest demand on record hit prices across the whole spectrum of Treasury bonds. The five-, seven- and 10-year notes all fell sharply in price. Researchers at the Federal Reserve called it a “flash event”.

The flare-up reflects one of the most pressing investor concerns of the year: inflation. At the time, fund managers were starting to realise that consumer price rises were back with a vengeance — a perennial threat to the bond market, which pays out fixed returns. But it also illustrates that the world’s most important market is not as structurally robust as investors might hope.

In an echo of March 2020, the blow-up happened because liquidity — the ability of sellers easily to find buyers, and vice versa — evaporated. It was an extreme example of a long-running issue: since the financial crisis the traditional providers of liquidity, a group of 24 Wall Street banks, have pulled back because of higher costs associated with post-2008 capital requirements. Those banks, in their reduced role, as well as the hedge funds and high-frequency traders that have stepped into their place, have tended to withdraw in moments of market volatility.

Reforms have been proposed but not enacted, suggesting the risk of dramatic swings in price when the Fed tightens monetary policy in 2022. Kate Duguid

Line chart of The average error yield in the US government securities liquidity index  showing Liquidity conditions in the Treasury market are worsening

Archegos fails to keep it in the family

The idea of a so-called “family office” managing the wealth of successful entrepreneurs for the benefit of offspring and charitable causes sounds rather quaint. In March 2021, however, several hard-nosed banks received a brutal reminder that some of these investment houses — together worth some $6tn — take risks that would make the most serrated hedge fund manager wince, when Bill Hwang’s Archegos Capital Management imploded in spectacular style.

Hwang, a former protégé of fabled hedge fund group Tiger Management, had built up a vast pile of leverage with a clutch of banks to supercharge bets on a small number of stocks. Banks had seemingly been happy to help despite Hwang’s having been barred from US markets in 2013 over allegations of an insider-trading scheme.

Bill Hwang
Bill Hwang’s Archegos Capital Management imploded in spectacular style © Financial Times

When one of his more recent bets, on ViacomCBS, turned sour, that set off a chain of events that left banks including Credit Suisse and Nomura with billions of dollars in losses. The Swiss bank’s internal report in to the saga makes for brutal reading.

Luckily, damage was limited to the banks rather than leaking across financial markets, but the episode sparked a rethink among banks over how to treat these clients and how much leverage to extend. Katie Martin

Crypto crashes (and crushes)

Bitcoin prices were uncharacteristically calm in the first quarter of the year, rising to a series of new record highs that culminated at just below $62,000. But the smooth ride came to a halt in May when China’s crackdown on the cryptocurrency and its production, or “mining”, sparked the first serious crash of 2021.

The price of bitcoin collapsed as much as 30 per cent on May 19, hitting a low of $30,000 in chaotic trading conditions following a warning from Chinese authorities of tighter curbs ahead. A public acceptance by Tesla chief and crypto cheerleader Elon Musk of the industry’s environmental impact added to the declines.

The sell-off wiped out billions of dollars worth of positions placed by retail investors and highlighted a series of structural weaknesses in the digital coin market, as some of the largest trading venues suffered glitches during the price collapse.

Still, you can’t keep a crypto coin down, it seems. Prices resumed their upward trajectory in late September when investors started to price in the launch of futures-based bitcoin exchange traded funds in the US. The launch of these contracts subsequently pushed bitcoin to a new all-time high in early November.

In early December prices stumbled hard again, this time due to a wobble in traditional markets. That demonstrated the links between Wall Street and cryptocurrencies, due to the growing sway of large investors in digital markets. Eva Szalay

China educates investors

China’s education sector was one of the darlings of Wall Street. Companies such as New Oriental and TAL Education had come to be worth billions of dollars after highly publicised US stock market flotations. So when Beijing effectively outlawed swaths of the country’s for-profit education industry in July 2021, the short-term market impact was brutal. One group, Gaotu Techedu, now has a market valuation of under $650m, compared to over $12bn at the end of 2020.

Beijing’s measures came as part of a wider effort to make education more affordable as part of president Xi Jinping’s drive for common prosperity. But that raises questions over whether juicy growth prospects across corporate China are countered by the capacity of the government to overhaul entire business models overnight.

Volatility arising from the education sector was soon overshadowed by another set of government reforms related to common prosperity — a crackdown on leverage across the real estate sector.

Evergrande, the world’s most indebted developer, has since the summer been engulfed by a liquidity crisis that eventually resulted in a default in early December.

Still, China continued to draw in foreign money throughout the year. Global holdings of Chinese stocks and bonds rose $120bn in the first nine months of this year from the end of 2020. Thomas Hale

NatGas snaps 

Natural gas supplanted crude oil as the world’s most important commodity in October as prices surged to unprecedented levels and the world scrambled for scarce supplies.

The crunch was particularly acute in Europe, which has become increasingly reliant on imports. Futures linked to TTF, the region’s wholesale gas price, hit a record €137 per megawatt hour in early October, rising more than 75 per cent. In Asia, spot liquefied natural gas prices briefly passed the equivalent of more than $320 a barrel of oil in October. (At the time, Brent crude was trading at $80).

A number of factors contributed, including rising demand as pandemic restrictions eased, supply disruptions in the LNG market and weather-induced shortfalls in renewable energy. In Europe, this was aggravated by lower export volumes from Gazprom, Russia’s state-backed monopoly pipeline supplier. That situation remains on a knife edge.

European gas storage is now only 66 per cent full — a level it would normally reach in January.

With delays to the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany, analysts say the European gas market is only a cold snap or supply disruption away from another price spike. Neil Hume

Tesla rules everything around me

Little divides opinion more in finance than shares in Tesla, the electric carmaker run by Elon Musk, which in October 2021 finally broke into the ranks of the five most valuable American companies, with a market capitalisation of over $1tn. 

In October alone, Tesla added $446bn of stock market value, equal to more than two McDonald’s. But even that understates the broader impact of what is akin to a “Tesla-financial complex”. 

In October alone, Elon Musk’s Tesla added $446bn of stock market value, equal to more than two McDonald’s © REUTERS

Unprecedented option trading volumes — especially call options that let investors bet the stock will rise — have been an important driver of Tesla’s growing financial heft. In the autumn of 2021, the nominal trading volume of Tesla options exploded to $241bn a day, as much as all other S&P 500 options combined. Amateur investors are keen punters here.

All this has become a headache for the broader stockpicking industry, where relative performance is often dependent on whether investors hold Tesla shares. In October, growth-focused US mutual funds suffered their worst underperformance in at least two decades, largely because most have a minimal exposure.

But investors bet against Tesla at their peril. Many hedge funds finally threw in the towel on the strategy this year. Short positions in Tesla — measured as a percentage of the company’s freely traded shares, had by mid-November fallen to about 3 per cent, down from almost 20 per cent at the start of 2020, according to S3 Partners. Robin Wigglesworth

Andrew Bailey vs the bond market

Investors headed in to the Bank of England’s November policy decision confident the UK was headed for its first rise in interest rates since coronavirus struck. Governor Andrew Bailey had stoked market expectations of a rate increase — saying the central bank would “have to act” to curb inflation — and declined to push back as markets became convinced the BoE was primed for lift-off.

So when the central bank held rates at the historic low of 0.1 per cent, the reaction was violent. Short-term UK government debt, which had weakened ahead of the meeting, staged its biggest one-day rally since the market turmoil in the early stages of the pandemic. The pound tumbled 1.5 per cent.

The moves echoed far beyond UK borders. The rush to bet on higher UK borrowing costs had been mirrored in other big economies around the world as investors reasoned that the BoE was in the vanguard of a global shift.

Hedge funds that had jumped in to the trade were burnt as short-dated yields around the world jolted lower, including on the US Treasuries. The spectacle of the BoE yanking around the world’s biggest bond market provoked head scratching from investors unaccustomed to smaller central banks calling the shots in global bond markets. As one befuddled US fund manager put it: “Dude, you don’t matter that much. Why are you driving our market?” Tommy Stubbington

Turkey suffers yet another currency crisis

Recep Tayyip Erdogan was once a source of strength for the Turkish lira. In his first five years in power from 2003, the currency rallied from TL1.6 per US dollar to near parity at TL1.2.

Those days are gone. The president’s visceral and increasingly vocal distaste for high interest rates has sent the lira sliding. In February it was trading about TL7 to the dollar. It has since fallen beyond TL17.

The lira’s big moment in 2021 came on November 18 when the central bank, in spite of soaring inflation, cut its policy rate for the third time since September, seemingly at Erdogan’s behest. Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of International Finance, called that “a taunt to the markets”. 

The lira’s problems are not only Erdogan’s doing. A strengthening dollar and weak growth in developing economies have been bad for other emerging market currencies, too. Brooks warns of a repeat of 2018, when “idiosyncratic” problems in Turkey and Argentina morphed into a broad EM sell-off.

For Turkey, a return to policy orthodoxy could change everything. Brooks puts the lira’s fair value at TL9.5 per dollar. Jonathan Wheatley

Line chart of Turkish lira per US dollar, inverted scale showing The Erdogan effect

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