Advisors at the Wall Street bank are saying "don't chase this, don't buy the dip," Sieg told Haslinda Amin and Avril Hong at Bloomberg Television in an interview during his visit to Singapore on Thursday. "Let's try to be disciplined at a time that the world's moving very fast." He said it's not the time now to add to risky assets.
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Stocks are rallying Thursday from a deep plunge over recent days after President Donald Trump decided to
"The world now knows this tectonic shift is happening," said the New York-based executive, referring to ongoing tariff hikes in the U.S. and China. "What we can't know yet is the way this is going to flow through to economic activity, corporate earnings."
The relentless news flow has meant that the longest sleep "any of us have had" is three to four hours, said Sieg. With Trump "very focused" on U.S. manufacturing jobs and the global trading system being deeply intertwined, reconciling these in a way that everyone can navigate is what keeps him up at night, he added.
— With assistance from Naman Tandon.