Weekly Market Update: Nobody Wants Your Oil

Aside from UK equities, major equity market regions were positive in local currencies, boosted on Friday by reports that suggested a drug had shown positive results against COVID-19 in a clinical trial, as well as some relaxing, both planned and enacted, of restrictions in several countries. Sterling strength meant that some returns for UK investors were slightly lower, with European equities negative (-0.2%). Having fallen c.10% last week, WTI Crude futures fell around another 20% in Monday trading, to the lowest level in over 20 years, over concerns about the ability of the US to store the commodity. The falling Oil price has been a factor in recent weak equity markets, although this most recent drop doesn’t appear to have had a significant impact on equity prices this morning. 10Y Gilt yields were almost unchanged for the week, however 10Y Treasury and 10Y Bund yields were down -8bps and -13bps respectively. Meanwhile Gold fell -0.8% in US Dollar terms.

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The traditional concepts of “shopping” and “interaction” are endangered for the first time since we first organised habitations we called “cities” around steady markets in Damascus 11,000 years ago. They are not threatened by the pandemic itself, as it is only one of many pandemics in history, but rather by the fact that for the first time in human history we have the infrastructure for a viable alternative to “offices” and “downtown market” interactions. COVID-19 does not seem to be the harbinger of a new paradigm, but it rather accelerates previous trends. The longer the virus lasts, the more profound and permanent the changes and the longer the reorganisation period. Which begs the question: are markets a bit too optimistic in the face of all this sea change? After all, last week the IMF predicted that in 2020 we will see the worst global recession since the great crash of the 1930s. Their assumptions, like many, are based on a 3 month lockdown and a 3 month gradual recovery, with risks on the downside rather than the upside. Yet despite dismal unemployment data, plummeting confidence, sharp drawdowns in manufacturing and services, and significant upgrades in bank provisions, the S&P 500 is merely trading at last year’s levels. Why is that? Markets anticipate, that is a well known aphorism. But how can one anticipate what one cannot possibly know? Will there be a second wave of the virus? And if there is, will it be as deadly as the 1918 Spanish Flu second wave? Will there be an effective cure by then, which will take the pressure off intensive care units and need for ventilators? Will we have to shut down the economy again, even if not prompted by authorities? Will this, ultimately, accelerate existing trends, changing our purchasing behaviour forever? We believe that markets are pricing in a V-shaped recovery, emboldened by unprecedented liquidity and augmented by algorithmic trading. Optimism in financial markets is as evident as when traders were pouring money into IPOs of companies that had never seen a profit. Yet, the possibility of a U-shaped recovery is as real as the probability of a second wave of the virus, and as much as the concepts of “shopping” and “interacting” are in danger of changing. Thus we remain cautious about a future that seems all too fluid, and trust that long term asset allocation principles will guide us through this crisis.

David Baker, CIO

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