Markets have lain dormant since Wednesday’s coordinated central bank action, and traders are still befuddled as to why. On one hand, the move opens the door to cheaper money and should theoretically help stimulate the global economy. However, the move also underscores a bleak outlook – the global economy wouldn’t need aggressive resuscitation measures if it wasn’t in terrible shape. Also, as we mentioned on Wednesday, monetary cheapness doesn’t equal availability. Banks are still balking from lending, causing a liquidity trap which could potentially expose the global economy to danger up the road.

Market participants are struggling to decide whether they want to build back into risk correlated assets, or run for the hills. As a techno-fundamental strategist, I myself am torn with the markets rights now. Fundamentally, I remain extremely bearish, with the recent central bank actions only solidifying my view that the Eurozone contagion has spread well beyond the Eurozone, and that this is simply phase two of a global recession which originated in the United States back in 2008.