“Neither a borrower nor a lender be/ For loan oft loses both itself and friend” (Hamlet, Polonius, Act I Scene III).
Going back to normality after the Great Lockdown might not be as much a question of consumer habits, as one might think. Whereas human behaviour is hard to predict as an independent variable, it is much easier to “encourage” a particular direction course of action. “Influence”, a book by Robert Cialini detailing effective sales techniques, affected a generation of sales people and consumers and is proof that behaviour can be “nudged”. Marketing departments, opinion journalism, sales techniques exist on the basis of that belief. Thus if one sees in the news that everyone is cowering at home afraid of a second Coronavirus wave, then they too would follow that behaviour. If, conversely, they see a lot of pictures of people happily eating in restaurants, then consumption might return to normal faster than anticipated. Thus we don’t see behavioural patterns as such a big problem, since governments and companies can always influence them.
To understand the breadth and length of this crisis, we must consider the most important mechanism to stop a recession from becoming a depression: The transmission mechanism of policy from the state to businesses. The determinant factor for the course of the global economy will be how much banks will be able to lend out. Currently banks are facing severe constraints after the 2008 crisis. The can only lend out what money the government gives, plus some of their own, but the latter only to the creditworthy. When government money is not enough, borrowers will ask banks for more. How much and who is considered creditworthy, is not just a technical matter but a political one, often shaped by the narrative around the banking sector.
Why we don’t particularly like banks
There are two ineluctable truths about credit:
One, it’s the lifeblood of the economy. If capitalism is about efficiently allocating resources, credit is the delivery mechanism. Credit is primarily about allocating money from where it’s not that useful (for example savings accounts) to where it is (say starting a business) and banks are one of the two prime operators of that mechanism, the other being the corporate bond market. Banks are more crucial for smaller companies whereas the bond market is a cheaper and much less invasive source of funding which is more applicable to larger companies and funding M&A activity.
Two, as much as we need credit, we never really like the creditor. History is inundated with debt forgiveness cycles, whether it was by law or by straight out persecution of the owners of capital. In fact, it started with the world’s first bankers, the Knights Templar. To protect the travellers going from Europe to visit Jerusalem, after 1118 AD the Templars set up stations throughout the whole route from England to Palestine. A traveller could deposit their money in one station, say the Paris Temple, get a slip of paper (the invention of paper money), and pick up an equivalent amount at another point later on in the line, minus whatever fees. This made the Order very rich and influential, especially after it started lending that money out. In the 14th century, French King Philip the Fair who owed a fortune to the Knights Templar, convinced Pope Boniface to declare “The Poor Fellow Soldiers of Christ and The Temple of Solomon” devil worshipers and wiped them out on Friday 13th 1307 (which is why we still consider Friday 13 “unlucky”), for no other reason that they had amassed too much wealth and thus power during two centuries of banking. The paradigm remained. In the following centuries, Jewish communities (who were allowed to lend money as opposed to Christians who then viewed usury as a mortal sin) were equally persecuted when debts mounted. That Shakespeare hated lenders is self-evident, not just by Polonius’s signature phrase above, but by a whole play, “The Merchant of Venice”, which, considering Shylock’s fate (forced to bequeath his property and convert) , is probably the world’s first #occupywallstreet statement. The Medici, medieval Italian bankers, who put all their wealth to the service and glory of Florence were almost persecuted by the monk Savonarola. That particular incident ended up with Savonarola at the stake, but the tug of war between creditors and lenders continued for centuries.
After the 20th century, credit is a pendulum of banking restrictions. When a financial crisis occurs, the narrative can go one of two ways: “banks are strangling us”, or “banks will save us”. Usually that happens in alternating order. The previous crisis was about the former. This crisis will probably be about the latter.
How banking works
In banking, deposits are used, and often leveraged, for loans. i.e. £100 of deposits frequently become £90 on loans (loan-to deposit-ratio) and also £30-£40 in other forms of investment. The problem is that loans are more long term in nature than deposits, so if there is a bank run (depositors all going for their money at the same time) a bank could not in theory serve them all, as a lot of money has been lent out and borrowers have no obligation to return it. Which is why we created central banks, as lenders of the last resort for commercial banks.
After the crash of 1930, when bank runs happened on a daily basis, US Congress voted for the “Glass-Steagall act”, which severely restricted the ability of banks to lend money. Fiscal policy, Franklin Roosevelt’s “New Deal” rescued the economy, but by itself it could not sustain an economic boom, so just before WWII the US economy was back in the doldrums. After WWII, global reconstruction needs fuelled a boom in manufacturing. A new monetary system, the Bretton Woods stable currency system (all currencies were tied to the dollar and the dollar to gold- the so called “Gold Standard”) ensured stability. The boom lasted for about 25 years until Vietnam and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society ran the economy into the ground. Richard Nixon tried to revive it by ditching the Gold Standard and printing money, which only brought him inflation.
It was not again until the mid 80’s when a mixture of liberal policies and the gradual loosening of “Glass Steagall” across the world, finally brought economic growth back from the dead. This time, not on the merits of organic growth, as western manufacturing was past its peak, but on the basis of credit. Banks were allowed to lend out more and more, and in essence became the prime wealth creators. When Bill Clinton wanted “every American to own their house”, “Glass-Steagall” was fully abolished. Unchecked, and with the Government’s wishes to fight the recession that occurred after the Enron and Worldcom scandals, banks over lent, leading to the 2008 crisis.
After that, it was time to restrict their ability to lend out again, with a set of rules known as “Volcker Rules”, which were really “Glass-Steagal II”. Lending standards tightened and bank proprietary trading desks were handcuffed. Without the ability of banks to fuel a boom, the recovery for the last twelve years was haphazard, just like in the 70’s and the late 30’s.
What now
The IMF predicted that the global economy will shrink 3% this year, the worst economic retrenchment since the 1930’s, with risks on the downside, which makes this the “good scenario”. A lot of smaller companies are in desperate need of cash, but government stimulus is often not enough, or the applicants are not really creditworthy. The real way to prevent mass bankruptcies, which could convert the recession into a crisis of faith and thus a depression, is to loosen those credit standards and allow banks to lend out more, much more, taking risks the state can’t. But how does one go about it? To lift the heavy chains of Basel III and other regulatory restrictions put in place after 2008 to justify bailouts, one must have public opinion with them. Reversing the picture of the greedy banker who brought the world to their knees in 2008 is not an easy narrative to break. Which is why we have been following many articles suggesting that “it’s now time for banks to pay back their debts from 2008”. How will this happen? Perversely by deregulating them once more. This is the “Ace in the hole” for global policy makers: another round of bank deregulation. It will be a problem for governments in 2026 or 2027 what they do with the next crisis that will, most probably, develop. Crises after all, are about fixing problems today and worrying about consequences tomorrow.
What to look out for
Thus, to see positive economic turning points, investors must be on the lookout not just for virus or consumption related narratives, but for narratives that prepare the growth for a change in banking regulation. How long will that take? The economic data will have to continue to be poor, and unemployment levels will have to rise manifestly before a “demand for banks to step up” becomes more pronounced. If that does happen before the economy takes a critical turn for the worst, then we would become more confident about a V-shaped recovery now, and start thinking about what we should do with credit by 2026.
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Over the past few months, ‘trade-wars’ have moved from obscure historic reference into everyday jargon, casually dropped by consumers on sentiment surveys. The US, suffering from chronic trade deficits and increasing imbalances in its co-dependent relationship with China, has set its sights on trying to disrupt this process, a policy that has had an impact […]
How long can Italy withstand the chains of the Euro?
A populist Eurosceptic government, paired with a budget deficit target below 2% and membership of a monetary union is putting a lot of pressure on the Italian economy. The inflated currency strength due to strong countries like Germany sharing the Euro and the inability to use independent monetary policy has cornered Italy into a tough […]
How do you guarantee debt using debt, and so make that debt cheaper?
It sounds like a story from the heady days leading up to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, and something that will end in disaster. Rating agencies assigning the highest possible rating to an auto maker’s debt which is ‘guaranteed’ on clients paying for leases of its cars (which is essentially debt), with repayment on the […]
Weekly Market Update: BoE keeps rates on hold
Read our full Market Update Week 6 Market Update It was a mixed week for equities, with US stocks ending the week up +1.3%, despite President Trump ruling out a meeting with President Xi before March 1 to strike a trade deal and put trade concerns to rest. It was also a positive week for UK […]
Theresa May’s 157 Brexits – and beyond
The Economist magazine has characterised Brexit “The mother of all messes”. To exit a trade agreement so comprehensive that over the past half century has come to encompass virtually all aspects of the British economy is, by and large, unprecedented. To do so in less than three years, in the midst of political turmoil, is […]
Mazars Quarterly Investment Outlook: 2019 Outlook
Read our full Mazars Quarterly Investment Outlook- Q1 2019 Outlook 2019 Sometimes it appears that the world is getting louder. The Norwegian Sociologist, John Galtung said that if a newspaper came out once every 50 years, it would not report half a century of celebrity gossip and political scandals but rather momentous global changes such […]
Monthly Market Update – December 2018
Read our full Monthly Market Update December 2018 November data indicated that the global economy continues to slow, despite a pick up in the services sector, as trade conditions deteriorate. Risk asset divergence, a theme of the previous quarter, seems to have abated, as US risk asset underperformance closed part of the gap with Europe and […]
Will Donald Trump be happier with the 2019 Fed?
Having regularly declared that he will only hire the best people, Donald Trump has been rather vocal in decrying the actions the Federal Reserve has taken since Jay Powell, his choice for Fed Chair, took office. Mind you he has decried many of his appointees at one point or another, with his Attorney General Jeff […]
Italy’s Greek Moment?
The European commission confirmed that it would be starting the excessive deficit procedure for Italy. Under Eurozone rules, no country is allowed a deficit higher than 3% of its GDP, but the Italian budget proposal challenged the EU directly by assuming significantly higher growth rates. According to Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis “The Commission confirms […]
Weekly Market Update: Global stocks continue their rebound while Oil prices drop further and Brexit uncertainty heightens
Read our full Market Update Week 46 Market Update Global stocks continued their rebound this week, with both Global and European equities up +0.3%. Emerging Market equities led the pack, returning +2.5% as the slide in oil prices gave a boost to emerging market currencies. UK Stocks were hit by further Brexit volatility, hardest hit stocks […]
Brexit Update: What now?
New Update! Monday 19 November 2018 After Friday’s dramatic cabinet session, which saw a third Brexit Secretary, Dominic Raab and Work & Pensions Secretary Esther McVeigh resign, there are several possible options on the table: 1) The deal might still go through parliament. Although divisions in the conservative party are high and it is unlikely that other […]
US Midterm Elections: What is the outlook for markets?
The US goes to the polls today for midterm elections. Every seat of the lower chamber (the House) is up for election (as it is every two years!), while a third of the upper chamber (the Senate) will also be voted on (Senators are elected every six years). For comparison to the UK Parliament, the […]
Angela’s long goodbye and what it means for investors
When Angela Dorothea Merkel became president of her party, the CDU, in 2000, her sights were set on the highest echelons of leadership in Germany. In 2005, she followed Helmut Kohl, her mentor, and Gerhard Schroder by becoming the third post-war leader of a united Germany. Furthermore, she was the the first who grew up […]
Weekly Market Update: Global stocks down for the week, capital flows to US bonds, UK budget contingent on Brexit
Read our full Market Upate Week 43 Market Update Global stocks continued to slide this week, with US stocks leading indices lower, the S&P 500 falling -2.2% in Sterling terms. The NASDAQ lost -3% due to disappointing results from Tech companies and a drop in the Consumer Discretionary sector following a disappointing sales outlook from […]
Mazars Quarterly Investment Outlook: Whatever Happened to the Global Synchronised Cycle?
Read our full Mazars Quarterly Investment Outlook – Q4 2018 Global Divergence In an early 2010 report Morgan Stanley warned that the biggest consequence of the 2008 global financial crisis could be isolationism and the reversal of a 50 year old trend which saw increasingly open borders, open trade and freedom of movement. As each […]
Mazars Wealth Management Investment Newsletter October 2018
Read our full MWM Newsletter October 2018 The global economy continued to grow in the third quarter of 2018 despite a backdrop of concerns over the continued imposition of trade tariffs primarily by the United States. It is apparent that any optimism a compromise between the US and its trading partners (China in particular) can […]
Monthly Market Update – October 2018
Read our full Monthly Market Update October 2018 September data continued to indicate global economic and risk asset divergence, consistent with a mature economic cycle, with USD assets rising as a result of Mr. Trump’s policies. The global economy is also diverging, with the US on a faster expansion path, while Europe and EM are […]
Weekly Market Update: Stocks sell off globally on rising bond yields
Read our full Market Update Week 41 Market Update Global indices suffered significant falls last week, down -4.1% in local terms and -4.5% in Sterling terms. US equities led the weak performance, experiencing their biggest losses in 8 months on Wednesday. Technology stocks were particularly affected as market participants reacted badly to rising bond yields. […]
Weekly Market Update: Fed hikes rates as oil hits year highs
Read our Full Market Update Week 39 Market Update US stocks dropped -0.2% in Sterling terms last week, as the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 0.25%, with investors concerned about the elimination of the word “accommodative” from the Fed’s policy statement. UK stocks were up +0.3% and UK 10 Year Gilts were up +2.0 […]
Monthly Market Update: EM’s Dollar Turmoil
Read our full Blueprint Sept 2018 August data continued to indicate global economic and risk asset divergence, consistent with a mature economic cycle, with USD assets rising as a result of Mr. Trump’s policies. The global economy is also diverging, with the US on a faster expansion path, while Europe and EM are slowing down. […]
Weekly Market Update: Bank of England and ECB keep rates unchanged
Read our full Market Update Week 37 Market Update Equities rose across the board last week, both in local and Sterling terms. UK stocks gained +0.4% with US and Global stocks up +0.1% and +0.3% in GBP terms. Other areas fared even better, as European and Japanese equities rose +0.8% and +0.6% respectively. However, Emerging […]
How British retailers “gamed” themselves into a corner
When my daughter was first born she had trouble sleeping and hated her cradle. So I used to hold her by to the kitchen fan (new parents take note, this works!) for about 10’, until she was fast asleep. It worked magic every time. Until it didn’t. A few weeks later she didn’t like it […]
The Fall of the High Street
Established in Glasgow in 1849 under the name of Arthur and Fraser, House of Fraser (HoF) is a household name across the UK. The British department store group has 56 stores and 2 outlets across the United Kingdom and Ireland. However, despite its long history, strong brand, and rich heritage, HoF has become the latest […]
Fork in the Road for Tesla
There has been a lot of coverage of Elon Musk’s musings as to whether he will take Tesla private again, having publically listed the company in 2010. Having shares listed in a company is supposed to bring benefits of increasing the ease of raising capital, while the greater liquidity and heightened corporate governance needed to […]
Why look beyond the US for equity returns?
The US stock market has made some impressive gains year-to-date. In January the S&P 500 reached a record high of 2872.87, with the exchange falling just 10 points short of this figure two weeks ago. Apple also recently made headlines worldwide when it became the first US company to be valued at a staggering $1tn. […]
European Risks Primer: Richlandia and Poorlandia
The article was originally published in the Money Observer on the 20th July 2018 The potential breakup of the Euro has been a permanently armed grenade under the bed of the global economy for almost two decades. The recent Italian elections driving yields up and the Euro down reminded allocators that European risks have never […]
Unconventional monetary policy increased house prices. Will its withdrawal spark a sell-off?
In March the Bank of England released a working paper titled ‘The distributional impact of monetary policy easing in the UK between 2008 and 2014’. For context, quantitative easing and ultra-low interest rates have been blamed by many commentators for a rise in inequality which has fermented populism in recent years. However the paper found […]
Mazars Quarterly Investment Outlook: Mind The Liquidity
Read our full Mazars Quarterly Investment Outlook-Mind the liquidity A cautionary tale There’s an old story about a man who was marooned on a deserted island. Searching for food and water, he instead found a cave hiding a chest of pirate treasure. No water in sight though. He spent his last few days, next to […]
Monthly Market Update: Markets unable to break out
Read our full Monthly Blueprint July 2018 Month In Review On the face of it, June has not been an exciting month for risk assets. Developed market stocks ended the month roughly in the same place as they started it, while long bond yields were little changed. However, beginning and end figures mask not only […]
Weekly Market Update: BoE’s Chief Economist dissents to put 2018 rate hike on table
Read our full Market Update Week 25 Market Update Global stocks turned negative last week following two weeks of positive performance. Emerging Market equities were the worst hit, falling -2.0% in Sterling terms, as rising trade war fears also weighed on global equities, which were down -0.7%. Japan was also badly hit due to its […]
The difference between a skirmish and a (trade) war
Why geopolitics now matter more In the past few years, investors and economies have grown somewhat insensitive to geopolitical surprises. Brexit, for example, did not cause the massive initial shock to either the economy or the stock markets that many analysts had predicted. Neither did Mr. Trump, whose election has sent stocks soaring by more […]
How much of the FTSE’s strength is due to currency effects?
Currencies have historically been extremely volatile, and predicting FX movements is recognised as a very difficult and risky strategy. Exchange rates move on several, often unpredictable, macro-economic factors, including differences in interest rates or inflation, geopolitics or due to government intervention such as capital controls. Many funds have exposure to currency risk from investing in […]
Combustible Commodities, Bruised Banks: Why Brexit isn’t the only headwind for UK equities
Whisper it very quietly, lest we jinx it: UK equities have been on a strong run recently. When was the last time you could say that? Certainly not since Brexit, which has been blamed for the poor performance versus global peers. However looking at the 4 quarters leading up to and including the Brexit vote, […]
Following recent elections, could Italy give the Euro the boot?
Last year Europe was the darling of equity investors, as strong growth and improving sentiment throughout the Eurozone meant that it was only behind Emerging Markets in Sterling terms, which had a stellar year in spite of concerns about Trump, over the course of 2017. However, like Emerging Markets, Europe has had a relatively poor […]
Trading Trump
This week I was asked to write 180 words on whether President Trump was a ‘welcome disruptor or market menace’ and how his policies can be factored into investment decisions. Despite becoming tired of the circus surrounding the 45th President of the United States, the question poses an interesting debate. Donald the Disruptor Innovative disruption […]
Mazars Wealth Management Quarterly Investment Outlook Q2 2018: The new “new normal”
Read our full MWM Quarterly Investment Outlook Q2 2018 The first quarter of 2018 saw a return of market volatility and a reversal of gains from the end of 2017. Despite a strong January, global equities finished the quarter down 2.1% in local currency terms, but 4.7% for UK investors as the Pound continue to […]
Macro of the Week – UK GDP sees marginal improvement
The NIESR GDP growth estimate for the 3 months to March was revised up to 0.2% from 0.1% in February, having been revised down from 0.3%. However the figure is still a reduction from the 0.4% growth seen in Q4 2017. Quarterly growth of 0.2% equates to just 0.8% annual growth. According to Amit Kara, […]
Gender pay and the changing face of the workforce
The gender pay gap is a hot topic in offices across the country as the April deadline for companies to report their pay gap has recently passed. The gender pay gap helps to highlight major demographic changes, in terms of the age and gender, affecting the UK’s labour force. The gender pay gap In an […]
Macro of the Week – John Williams takes over NY Fed
In a move that was expected, John Williams will move from the San Francisco Fed president post to take the same position at the New York Fed. He takes over from William Dudley, who late last year announced he would be leaving by mid-2018. The role comes with vice-chairpersonship of the FOMC – the Fed’s […]
Macro of the Week – US confidence indicators soaring
The recent tumult in equity markets arrived despite robust macroeconomic data in the US, for example the latest earnings season saw 73% of companies beating expectations for earnings. Recent data for consumers and businesses appears to support this view. The NFIB Small Business Optimism index for February rose to 107.6 from 106.9 – the highest […]
Weekly Market Overview – Trade war concerns weigh on markets
Both US equities and the US Dollar fell last week when multinational companies such as Boeing were hit as Donald Trump sought to impose new tariffs on China, pressing China to cut its trade surplus with the US by $10bn. As a result, there is an increased likelihood of a trade war between the worlds […]
Are higher interest rates a necessary evil?
“An economist is an expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn’t happen today.” Laurence J. Peter When I was studying economics at university (not that long ago) I was taught under ‘neo-classical’ thinking, which had come to pre-eminence in response to the period of ‘stagflation’ in the 1970s. Under stagflation […]
Macro of the Week – US nonfarm payrolls strong
In a reversal of the recent trend where good data is bad news for stocks, and bad data is good news, US equities rallied on Friday after the latest nonfarm payrolls report. The report showed the highest job creation […]
Tariffs: What could Trump do?
Donald Trump roiled markets on Friday by announcing on Twitter: He has since confirmed that he plans to impose tariffs of 25% on steel imports and 10% on aluminium. The move has been widely met with criticism, not just from Democrats but from many members of the Republican Party, including the House Speaker Paul Ryan. […]
Xi Jinping’s Infinite Rule
Things have been looking up for China recently, as market sentiment towards the world’s second largest economy has finally started to take a positive turn. Since 2015, when the country’s stock market sold-off sharply and the Shanghai Composite Index crashed 45% in under two months, investors have understandably been wary of China. Redemptions in Chinese […]
Macro of the Week – US Q4 GDP revised down
US economic growth slowed slightly more than originally expected in Q4. On Wednesday the Commerce Department released revised quarter-on-quarter growth at an annualised rate of 2.5%, down from 2.6%, although this was in line with economists’ estimates. This compares to an annualised growth rate of 3.2% in Q3. The growth in consumer spending (3.8%, the […]
Weekly Market Overview – Markets fear Taylorisation of Fed and trade wars
Markets continued their recent rocky period, with two separate events causing unease for investors. The first was Jay Powell’s first congressional testimony on Tuesday where he hinted at a faster pace of interest rate rises and stated a preference for rules based interest rate decisions. For example the Taylor Rule proscribes an interest rate for […]
Macro of the Week – UK GDP slowing
The UK economy grew more slowly than previously estimated in Q4 2017, increasing by 0.4% quarter-on-quarter according to the second estimate by the ONS. This figure was a 0.1% downgrade from the original estimate. The downward revision was due to slower […]
Black Swans are not so Black (or rare)
A “Black Swan” is a very popular notion in modern stock market commentary, yet the phrase originates from a time before the public listing of stocks. In 16th century London, people used an old Latin quote : “a rare bird in the lands and very much like a black swan“, based on the presumption that […]
Bargain Basement Britain
Over the last month global equity markets have sold off; since the 15th of January the MSCI AC World Index has fallen -4.12%, the S&P 500 -4.22% and the Japanese Nikkei -6.0%. The UK market similarly has tumbled with the FTSE 100 plummeting -6.36% over the last 4 weeks1. With stocks cheaper compared to a […]
Macroeconomic View – French unemployment down
French ILO unemployment dropped unexpectedly from 9.6% to 8.9%. It was further proof of the strength in the French, and subsequently, the European economy. European equities lost 1.5% briefly after the US inflation report was released, with figures higher than expected. The market recovered, but the move is indicative of the factors that affect traders. […]
Macro of the Week – US rate hike still on the cards
The recent sell-off in markets and spike in volatility has so far been met by a wall of silence from the new Fed Chair Jay Powell. On the day of being sworn in, Powell faced a drop of 1,175 […]
Macroeconomic View – German exports accelerating
German exports were weak for the month, up only 0.3%, but are still accelerating year-on-year. Chinese exports were stable, but imports picked up significantly, offsetting last month’s weak data. UK The Markit Services PMI dropped slightly to 53 from 54.2. The Halifax House Price Index year-on-year for the 3 months to January fell from 2.7% […]
Market Comment – Risk on – Redux
After an unusually quiet two-year period, investors were once again reminded that volatility is part and parcel of the investment process. Global stocks suffered their worst week since 2016 and the sixth worst overall week since the recovery began in 2009. More importantly, bond prices also fell, as did other traditionally safer assets such as […]
Monthly Market Outlook: February 2018
Read our Monthly Market Update Global equity markets were positive again, registering a 5.3% performance in January, benefiting from the positive sentiment and the passing of the US tax reform at the end of 2017. The macroeconomic environment was less supportive, however, as some key indicators suggested that global economic momentum was slowing down in […]
Macro of the Week – US wages accelerate
US hiring picked up in January and wages rose at the fastest pace since the GFC. Hourly earnings increased 0.3%, resulting in an unexpected year-on-year increase of 2.9%, up from 2.7% in December (which was also revised up from 2.5%). This was on the back of a nonfarm payrolls increase of 200k, which was upwardly […]
Macroeconomic View – Market Correction
UK Consumer confidence rose in January from -13 to -9, above expectations for the figure to remain flat. Nationwide housing prices year-on-year for January increased to 3.2% from 2.6%, the highest reading since March last year. The BOE’s concern surrounding borrowing was confirmed as consumer credit figures climbed to £1.52bn in December from £1.5bn the […]
Markets sell-off at fastest pace since 2011
By David Baker, Chief Investment Officer After a strong start of the year for equity markets, global stocks shed almost 5% of their value on Friday and Monday. US equities are now 6.2% below their highs, turning negative for the year, as are global equities (-6.5% from their highs). The S&P 500 is now trading […]
Equity Storm in a (Bond) Teacup
Last week marked a 3.5% pullback for global equity markets, the first since 2016. The move comes after a very good month, January, during which equities rose to fresh highs, gaining 5.2%, prompted by exuberance related to the US tax reform. However, the arrival of February marked fresh concerns for investors. First and foremost, economists […]
Macro of the Week – US GDP disappoints
Provisional readings for US Q4 2017 GDP growth came in at 2.6%, slightly below the 3% figure expected by the market. This is an annualised figure and therefore growth for the quarter was actually only 0.1% behind expectations. Strong imports were the main reason for the surprise to the downside, subtracting 1.1% from the growth. […]
Macroeconomic View – Weak US Dollar
Dollar weakness persisted last week as ambiguous messaging from the US Government confused investors. Headline capital goods orders (blue) were robust, however the core capital goods component (red), the less cyclical of the two, has continued to weaken since September. UK Average earnings increased from 2.3% to 2.4% year-on-year for the 3 months to November, […]
Market Comment – Macro headwinds
Last year was very positive, both in terms of stock market and macroeconomic volatility (the volatility of macroeconomic releases). In recent weeks, however, we have noticed a deterioration in macroeconomic releases, especially in the US. Lower inventories and higher imports took a toll on GDP. More detailed data on capital expenditure also shows weakness in […]
Weekly Market Overview – US Dollar slide sees negative equity returns for UK investors
Global equities were mostly positive in local terms last week, however a fall in the US Dollar, combined with Sterling appreciating, meant that returns for UK investors were generally negative. Weak US Dollar performance was largely due to a statement at Davos by US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin being interpreted as suggesting that the US […]
Macro of the Week – German coalition considerations
German elections in November were met with cautious optimism by markets, with Angela Merkel’s CDU party gaining the most seats and seemingly in position to lead a coalition, so maintaining the status-quo in German politics. However negotiations have proven more difficult. The SDP, which claimed the second most seats, initially planned to be the main […]
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