Weekly Market Update: Stocks rally and Sterling higher ahead of Brexit vote

Read our full Market Update Week 2

Market Update

Stock markets rebounded having moved into oversold territory on a technical basis and early US earnings figures beating expectations. Meanwhile a strong US December jobs report showed that wages for production and nonsupervisory workers increased by 3.3% year-on-year and consumer prices grew at just 1.9%. Inflation has moderated across the board with oil prices down significantly in the last quarter of 2018. US stocks rallied and closed up +1.5% in Sterling terms. Emerging Market and Japanese stocks led the pack, returning 2.7% and 2.9% respectively. EU and UK equites both returned +1.2%. Sterling was up over +1.0% vs the US Dollar as cabinet members said that Brexit will have to be delayed if Theresa May’s deal fails in Parliament, and votes were taken signalling Parliament will move to prevent a “Hard Brexit”. UK 10Y yields closed the week higher at 1.290%, up from 1.276%. Meanwhile, US 10Y yields rose to 2.701% from 2.668%. We also saw the first high yield bond issuance in weeks as the gas pipeline company Targa Resources raised $1.5bn. Oil prices continued to recover amid fading supply, surging +7.6%. Gold was flat throughout the week in Sterling terms.

CIO Analysis

Last week saw US stocks continue their post-Christmas rebound on the back of a good start to the earnings period and attractive valuations. However the news for investors for this week is mostly centred around Brexit. The vote on Theresa May’s deal is scheduled to be conducted on Tuesday. Markets abhor uncertainty and, more than a preference to any particular event, investors in British assets would like to see some kind of road map. Is this the week where investors finally get visibility over Brexit after more than two and a half years of almost zero-certainty? If the deal goes through then Britain begins the final steps towards an organised Brexit and the “unknown” becomes “somewhat known”, or at least the subject of informed economic forecasting. The Brexit proposition morphs from a “wanderer in the desert” to a “train on the tracks”, albeit with many junctions ahead. If the vote fails, however, a thick cloud of fog descends upon investors. Failure of the deal to clear Parliament opens the gate to a litany of possibilities: a new PM, a general election, another government altogether, another type of deal, no-deal and crash Brexit or no-deal and stopping the clock on Brexit.

At the time of writing it is uncertain which way the vote will go. We feel, however, that a failure to pass the deal would cause more volatility than approval of the bill, at least in the short term. For long term investors we suggest patience. Brexit is a story with many twists and turns and even this milestone is not indicative of what the final relationship will be between the UK and Europe, or what political ramifications may follow in the coming months. We remain underweight UK risk assets until we have enough information to forecast a path for the British economic and market landscape.

David Baker, CIO

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