Weekly Market Update: Global Equities Rise, but Sterling Rallies More

Market Update

Global stocks rose +0.7% in local currency terms, which translated into a -0.4% fall in Sterling terms. Returns were mixed in local terms, however were universally down in Sterling term as the currency rose +1.0% vs the US Dollar to just short of the $1.30 mark. Emerging Markets had a challenging week falling -1.5% in local terms and -2.5% in Sterling terms. US stocks rose +0.9% in Dollar terms, with Homebuilding, Healthcare and Utilities providing the strongest gains. UK stocks were down -0.6%, with Telecommunications suffering most. BT shares fell an initial 4%, before recovering, on the announcement of plans by Labour to nationalise BT’s broadband operation network Openreach. Globally Healthcare, IT, Telecommunications and Utilities were the strongest sectors, each gaining over +1.0%. Bond yields dipped this week, losing about half of their increase the previous week. UK 10Y Gilt yields fell 6bps, with US 10Y Treasury yields falling 11.1 bps. In the commodities space the major change was found in the Metals sector which fell -2.9% in US Dollar terms, with Gold and Oil up +0.6% and +0.8% respectively.

CIO Analysis

Global stocks have consistently reached new highs in the past few weeks and we would argue that renewed Quantitative Easing was a major catalyst for the “risk on” environment observed. However, investors should take care and remember there’s no free lunch. Even though QE has so far not proved to be inflationary, soaring financial assets may create a more insidious problem: they can mask the problems of the real economy and rob central banks of the ability to have a significant impact on it. The UK, for example, grew at the lowest pace in a decade: 1% for the year to September. However with interest rates floored, there’s little the BoE can do to spur growth. With no sense of a “crisis” at hand and discontent over how debts have risen to save the financial system, governments have been reluctant to cross the fiscal Rubicon and enact impactful fiscal expansion projects. However this has perhaps been overly cautious and, as the UK general election illustrates, a shift is coming, where both parties have unveiled ambitious fiscal spending programmes in their manifestoes. Fiscal spending, even at the eleventh hour before a recession, can help. So investors should look for signs that governments, not central banks, are coming to the rescue this time. If not, then soaring asset prices that do not at all reflect economic fundamentals may prove short-lived.

David Baker, CIO

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