Weekly Market Update: Sterling continues to depreciate, global yields

Market Update

This week saw mixed equity returns, with global stocks down -0.3% in Sterling terms. Emerging Markets posted a strong gain of +1.3%, which was supported by the Sterling depreciation observed across the period, while US stocks were down -0.7% for the week. Japanese equities fell -0.8% in local currency, however, the GBP/JPY rate also fell -0.7%, resulting in only a -0.1% loss for British investors. As highlighted, Sterling depreciated against most major currencies and was down -0.1% vs the Euro and -0.6% vs the Dollar. Bond yields fell last week with the UK 10Y Gilt yields down -10.1bps and US 10Y Treasury yields down -6.7bps. Oil experienced a significant correction, down -7.1% for the week, as global growth expectations continue to fall; in particular, in China, where forecasts show annualised GDP growth could fall below +6% in the near future.

CIO Analysis

More than a decade after the demise of Lehman Brothers, Fedspeak continues to be really the only game in town. A few years ago it was for the savants to know anyone but the Chairperson of the Fed. Now, statements from vice presidents are enough to send indices soaring, as was the case last week when Mrs Williams and Clarida confirmed Chairman Powell’s intentions to cut rates even twice this year. That explains why despite a flat or slightly negative earnings season in the US, equity indices are near all time highs and valuations, especially for American shares, are now expensive. Or why markets were not to worried with the dismal performance from FAANG darling Netflix. Or why a global manufacturing and trade contraction, amidst slowing output, seems irrelevant when discussing market performance. The implications for investors are significant. Should we just gauge at the perceived velocity of money, invest at low costs and be confident that the Fed saves the day? Or should we nitpick fundamentals and pay managers for some -hard to find at those valuations- alpha? Or maybe we should look at deteriorating fundamentals and increasingly bad politics as a sign of things to come? The answer, I think, lies in the old Russian proverb: Trust but Verify. Trust the Fed will be there, but verify fundamentals support your investment thesis. Ignoring the latter has caused the demise of many an investor -Lehman Brothers included.

George Lagarias, Senior Economist

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