A quiet week with some swelling volatility

April 19, 2022
On the face of it was a fairly quiet week leading into the Easter break with most markets ending flat for the shortened week; however, you didn’t have to look too far below the surface to find volatility.

The week that was

On the face of it was a fairly quiet week leading into the Easter break with most markets ending flat for the shortened week. However, you didn’t have to look too far below the surface to find volatility which continues to manifest itself in energy markets and US tech stocks, sectors whose fates have become strangely intertwined. The increasingly intractable and deadly outlook in Ukraine is forcing European politicians to consider boycotting Russian oil and gas (or at least weaning their economies off it sooner) which is sending energy prices and inflation higher. Even stripping out usually volatile energy and food prices the flow on effects of higher input prices combined with tight employment markets is potentially stoking a wage price spiral and cost of living concerns that are affecting people and politics from France to the US. So even though there were grounds for tentative optimism in last week’s US CPI numbers (used car prices at least started to abate) the pressure on the Fed to tighten monetary policy has increased, even amid signs of a slowing global economy. The upwards pressure on short-term interest rates is well documented but the winding down of the Fed’s balance sheet (discussed in this week’s video with Andrew Hunt) is less well understood. The idea is that the Fed buying bonds suppresses long-term interest rates and lowers the cost of capital for companies who borrow. It has elevated the values of houses and tech stocks whose long duration earnings are particularly sensitive to shifts in long-term interest rates.

All of that resulted in a noisy environment for energy and inflation, leading to long-term interest rates seesawing on successive days and the NASDAQ index moving up and down by 3% all week, ending up down more than 2%. The more industrially focused US Dow Jones index, and most European and Asian markets were down only slightly. The Australian market was again one of the best performing markets and ended slightly up for the week mainly due to the contribution of the iron ore and gold miners.

Credit spreads eased again slightly so, with rates heading up as well, this year has been death by a thousand cuts for many bond investors. In the US and globally, blue chip investment grade corporate bonds were down another 1.5% last week bringing year to date losses to almost -15%, of which 2/3rds is due to interest rates and the rest higher credit spreads. While credit spreads in the small but relatively high-quality Australian bond market have remained quite tight most diversified bond managers in Australia have also been paddling against the wind, usually with some interest rate risk in their portfolios and local government bonds also down by 6%. That means most of these diversified bond funds are also down 1-3% for the year but last week there were signs of life and we saw some of the managers we follow closely up over 0.5%. Many local bond managers feel that the market, especially in Australia, has moved too far with local 10-year rates surpassing 3% last week and have positioned for a risk-off rally in bonds. Incremental, one-way upwards pressure on yields and credit spreads has provided little scope for opportunism but maybe the noisy cross-currents of inflation, geopolitics, post-COVID earnings and monetary policy will provide a more fertile environment form this higher yield starting point.

Markets Retreat on Fading Rate Cut Hopes Before Late Rally

August 2, 2024
Risk assets broadly declined last week as economic data showed resilience and central banks pushed back against aggressive market pricing for rate cuts, puncturing investor hopes.
Read More

Global Equities Up on Hopes of Economic Stimulus

August 2, 2024
Last week saw a notable upswing in global equities, driven by optimism over a potential economic stimulus in China and dubious results in corporate earnings.
Read More

U.S. Jobs Report Sparks Market Shift

August 2, 2024
Amid a mixed bag of US corporate earnings and a strong jobs report fueling rate hike expectations, global markets face contrasting fortunes, highlighting the complexity of forecasting economic trends in a time of technological growth and geopolitical uncertainty.
Read More

S&P 500 Breaks 5,000 Amid Mixed Economic Signals and Rate Cut Speculations

August 2, 2024
It was an up and down week for markets after a strong finish the prior week.
Read More

Unpacking a Volatile Week Amid Inflation Warnings and Surprising Strengths

August 2, 2024
Markets gyrated last week as hotter-than-expected US inflation data sparked an initial tech rout before recovering. Meanwhile better-than-feared earnings results and recession-resilient emerging markets outperformed.
Read More

Global Markets Navigate Mixed Signals: Earnings Surges, Inflation Divergences, and the Persistent Volatility Ahead

August 2, 2024
Global markets were mixed this week as investors digested the latest economic data and corporate earnings results.
Read More

Positive Momentum Continues Amid Mixed Signals

August 2, 2024
Read More

ASX closes higher as cooling US inflation fuels anticipation of rate cuts

August 2, 2024
Read More

Nvidia Shines Amid Persistent Inflation Concerns in a Mixed Week for Global Markets.

August 2, 2024
Read More

May: A Month of Gains Tempered by Volatility

August 2, 2024
Read More

Fluctuating global markets and mixed economic signals in the last week of May

August 2, 2024
Read More

Tech Gains and Conflicting Economic Signals Drive a Mixed Market

August 2, 2024
Read More

"What do I tell a client who wants to invest in Crypto?"

August 2, 2024
With 2021 bringing cryptocurrencies into the spotlight for both retail and institutional investors, is there a place for these currencies within client portfolio's?
Read More

The market has a "breadth" problem

August 2, 2024
Join InvestSense Director Jonathan Ramsay and Andrew Hunt of Hunt Economics as they discuss the markets ‘breadth’ problem and how strong liquidity should keep things afloat until February.
Read More

Finding value and maintaining confidence in a FOMO world

August 2, 2024
Join host Toby Potter of IMAP with Nick Kirrage of Schroders and Jonathan Ramsay of InvestSense as they discuss value as a style, and as a driver of conviction when investing.
Read More

Inflation in 2022 - Beware of cross currents in 2022

August 2, 2024
With inflation appearing to be on the way up again, what are some of the possible scenario’s for 2022? Where does inflation go from the zero bound we’ve reached?
Read More

What happened in markets in 2021, and why?

August 2, 2024
Join InvestSense Director, Jonathon Ramsey to reflect on the price action seen in markets in 2021 and what this might mean for 2022.
Read More

We've got a bad case of FOMO, but it's not what you think

August 2, 2024
With valuation still being the lightening rod for when markets react to external forces, the most expensive things tend to move the most. What does this mean for global asset allocators, and what is InvestSense’s position?
Read More

Helping your clients assess the climate impact of their Portfolio

August 2, 2024
Nathan Fradley explains how the ethosesg technology can help you assess and design an ethical portfolio that aligns to an investor’s personal values.
Read More

Carbon credits and investing – is it the outcome we expect?

August 2, 2024
ETFs that invest in carbon credits are now available. Why should we assume that their price will go up over time? And does buying a carbon credit ETF actually contribute positively to emissions reduction? Will it actually generate the outcome investors are expecting? This article explores the issues around investing in carbon credits.
Read More

Better World makes a difference with investment in renewables

August 2, 2024
There are many direct assets and funds that contribute positively to climate action within the InvestSense Better World Portfolios. Meridian Energy is one of the stand-out direct assets in the portfolio with a climate energy focus.
Read More

Bad news equals good news

August 2, 2024
In recent years professional investors have got increasingly used to the fact that good news is bad news for markets because higher interest rates are likely to be necessary, and of course vice-versa. However, last week the effect was stronger than ever and stocks rallied mid-week amidst reports of widespread lay-offs and expectations of a weak US jobs report.
Read More

‘Buy the dip’ opportunism start surfacing

August 2, 2024
The US market finally market caught a bid last week. Early in the week the market was down few percent after an earnings miss by ad dependent social media platform Snap (of Snapchat fame) combined with weak guidance raised more doubts about the economy and economic resilience of tech companies.
Read More

US momentarily dips into official bear market territory

August 2, 2024
The seventh negative week in a row for the US sent it briefly into official bear market territory before it recovered slightly late on Friday. The world’s largest stocks (Apple, Microsoft Amazon and Google) are all down 25%.
Read More

How Mark Lewin saved 13 hours a week with Managed Accounts

August 2, 2024
Mark Lewin was a financial planner, but is now the Director of Back Office Heros. In his planning business he gained significant efficiencies by recommending and implementing managed accounts for his clients. He tells us how...
Read More
Icon of a letter

InvestSense insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Icon of a letter

Get the latest industry news

Icon of a letter

Get the latest industry news

Icon of a letter

Get the latest industry news