Weekly Market Update: Equity Momentum Continues

For a second week in a row it was green across the board for equities, as global stocks gained +2.4% in Sterling terms and +3.7% in local terms. European stocks were amongst the best performers for a second week, with Japanese equities performing equally well. Early in the week markets focused on the US returning to work, while there was some Sterling weakness on news negotiations between the UK and the EU have stalled. The rally ended later in the weeks as the US President announced he would end Hong Kong’s special status in travel and trade. Financials, Utilities and Industrials saw the greatest returns globally, with Telecoms, Energy and IT having a more muted, although positive, week. Yields were largely unchanged in the UK, US and Germany. Returns for UK Gilts were flat, while Corporates gained +0.8%. Sterling fell -0.3% vs the Euro but gained +1.4% vs the US Dollar. In US Dollar terms Gold fell -0.3% while Oil continued it recovery, up +5.8%.

View from the Desk

As violence erupted in the US over the death of George Floyd, the confluence of a deteriorating economy due to social distancing, high unemployment and civil unrest could justify some fresh market volatility in the days ahead, especially if US Army Troops are deployed on US soil. As nearly unparalleled economic malaise is thinly balanced against unprecedented liquidity, the question investors are faced with is: will this problem persist long enough to tip the scales in financial markets and/or affect the presidential election? While riots like this in L.A. in 1992 (the Rodney King beating by police officers) and in 2014 (the Trayvon Martin shooting by neighbourhood watch which sparked the Black Lives Matter movement), caused social distress and generated headlines, the ensuing economic and electoral impact was marginal. Markets tend to look to the past as a guide and thus, in market terms, we feel that unless the situation takes a significantly worse turn, the outcome most likely is one of minimal impact on a longer term basis. Instead, investors will probably spend the week focusing on May PMI data, to gauge the true size of the economic impact of the “Great Lockdown”, as well as unemployment figures from the US. As for the upcoming presidential election? The impact so close to an election is difficult to predict. Issues of identity are deeply divisive and influence votes on both sides. But it is worth noting that in both 1992 and 2014, what really fuelled the anger of the crowd and lead to widespread social disruption was the failure of the state to swiftly prosecute and convict the perpetrators. This time around, US Attorney General William Barr’s US Justice Department intervened unusually early in the investigation. Not without good cause. Interestingly enough, Mr. Barr was also the Attorney General in 1992.

David Baker, CIO

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