The British Autumn drama entered its third act, and the worst seems behind us. The UK has what may pass for an equivalent to the Euro-crisis technocratic governments in Italy and Greece. That particular playbook would, at this point, see market volatility ebb. Indeed the UK’s 30Y bond is now almost at the same place as the day before the disastrous mini-budget and the Pound is back where it was at the beginning of September versus the Euro. Bar any other surprises during the Autumn budget, we would not expect the UK to be singled out by bond vigilantes again in the next few weeks.  Markets, and press headlines, seem to be finally moving on.

Which should turn our attention to global stocks. Last week was exceptionally good for US large caps, which gained nearly +5%. Unless there’s an unexpected market rout on Monday, October 2022 will be the sixth best month since the 2008 global financial crisis.

Why the market rose, however, is not really clear. The earnings season, nearing its end, saw a 1.5% quarterly rise in American corporate profits, half of that was expected. Tech earnings in particular disappointed, and suggest that this phase of tech growth has probably peaked.  The going narrative conflates more dovish than expected central banks in Europe and Canada and a stream of bad macroeconomic news. The market may be pricing in bad news soon becoming good news.

While we have been in this camp for some time, we haven’t seen evidence to justify the narrative playing out now or lasting market euphoria. The month saw the most aggressive Quantitative Tightening since last May. Fed officials have been persistently hawkish and bond futures continue to price in more than five rate hikes by mid-December. There is simply no signal from the Fed that they are willing to even consider easing up on their inflation fight right now.

Make no mistake. An equity rebound means health. And relief rallies of this magnitude are surprisingly good. But still, we believe markets may be getting slightly ahead of themselves and the rally has yet to acquire legs. Investors should tread carefully. We would not be surprised if we saw more retrenchments and volatility in the near future.

George Lagarias – Chief Economist