Wait for these signals to buy coronavirus-battered stocks, says BNY Mellon strategist

President Donald Trump’s coronavirus press conference has not stemmed the global equity slide as world-wide infections climb. Meanwhile, one patient in California is of particular concern because officials don’t know where he got infected.

Some believe the next big fall in equities will come when we see a cluster of U.S. cases, which may partly explain why that popular past time of buying stocks on any dip seems less popular lately.

Citigroup strategists are advising against buying equities right now, on the view that if a Federal Reserve lifeline is coming, it may not happen right away.

Our call of the day comes from BNY Mellon’s chief strategist Alicia Levine, who has advice for those wanting to know when to buy beaten-down (and down) stocks. She said they first need a solid view on where this virus is headed. 

“If you think it is essentially a short-term problem, a hit to growth, but then it is over by the summer, then you’re fine going into the market. But if you think it is worse than that, then you have to play that out,” she told MarketWatch. 

“We do think by the summer, this will be a memory and that growth will recover,” she said, though she admitted risks to their baseline view are pretty real. She is watching out for signs of a dramatic daily drop in China infections, and pickups in usage of coal, electricity and road and rail in that country, alongside property sales. As well, she wants to see signs that the mortality rate is lower, which will mean fewer quarantines and containment shutting down activity.

For average investors, it is OK to wait for more information, but also “take some risk off the table if you’re sitting on gains,” and don’t go overboard on buying perceived safe-haven assets, Levine said.

This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.

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