Weekly Market Update: Markets fall on tech selloff

Read our full Market Update Week 36

Market Update

US Tech stocks saw their momentum reversed on Thursday, dragging other sectors and regions into negative territory for the week. Apple, Amazon, Alphabet (Google), Microsoft and Facebook all fell between -4% and -8% on Thursday, with US equities as a whole down -3.5% on the day. There was more volatility on Friday, with the sell-off apparently driven by profit taking in the sector which has soared during the COVID-19 crisis. In Sterling terms Europe and Emerging Markets were down -1.4% and -1.3% respectively. UK equites saw the largest losses, down -2.7%. Meanwhile Japanese equities held up relatively well, up +0.5%, having performed poorly the previous week on news of Abe’s resignation. IT was the weakest sector over the week, although Energy also saw a significant sell-off with Oil prices down -7.4% in US Dollar terms. Yields fell slightly in the UK and Germany, with yield curves flattening slightly there and in the US also, however in the US the 10Y yield was largely unchanged at 0.72%. Sterling had a mixed week, falling -0.6% vs the US Dollar, but flat against the Euro and up +0.3% vs the Yen. Meanwhile Gold fell -1.6% in US Dollar terms.

CIO Analysis

Last week saw US stocks again at all-time highs and a wholly different news set affecting long and short-term investors. Despite a Tech stock driven retrenchment in the last couple of days, mainly due to a roll-back of big institutional (Softbank) and retail trades, equity valuations remain very high. The moral of this particular story is simple: while investors should always be cognisant of the inherent risks of concentrated bets and the volatility they may cause, they ought to keep their eye on the ball and acknowledge that market movements are still dominated by central bank rhetoric. Those afraid of short-term volatility should be wary of possible regulatory interventions in e-trading platforms, which have caused a surge in leveraged trading, and, among other things, allow investors to blindly copy movements of peer market leaders, leaving room for good old-fashioned market manipulation and corrections. Longer term investors, on the other hand, all but certain that long-term volatility will remain suppressed for some time, have their eye fixed on the Fed’s September meeting where Jay Powell is widely expected to make good on his promise and materially augment stimulus in a bid to stoke inflation.

-David Baker, CIO

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