Weekly Market Update

Buffet Effect Boosts Japanese Market, US Consumer Remains Strong

May 5, 2023
April was a muddle through month where most markets ended where they started, some having moved about a bit more than others. The Nasdaq, and by extension the US market, continued to be the lightning rod for risk, but ended the month just in positive territory.

April was a muddle through month where most markets ended where they started, some having moved about a bit more than others. The Nasdaq, and by extension the US market, continued to be the lightning rod for risk, but ended the month just in positive territory. Emerging markets were slightly down, while the biggest winner was Japan. The Japanese market was at first buoyed by Warren Buffet increasing his bet on some of the traditional Japanese listed commodities trading houses, but the halo effect seems to be spreading to the rest of the market. The best overarching narrative around this seems to be that Buffet’s imprimatur is dislodging the ‘value trap’ label that has afflicted the market. Even though corporate earnings were relatively robust throughout COVID and remain strong, cheap has just been getting cheaper as disenchanted once (or twice) bitten global investors have stayed away.        

The US earnings season has been fairly positive, with most companies beating subdued expectations across most sectors. The biggest beats have been amongst Consumer Discretionary stocks, with those that have reported disclosing earnings that are up 17% year on year, rather than down 5% as expected. This has underpinned a wider narrative around a strong US consumer that is keeping the US economy buoyant. It is also one that runs counter to the Federal Reserve’s mission to dampen inflation, and perhaps more importantly expectations thereof. Even smaller company earnings have only slightly contracted. However, the 30% drop in real estate company earnings has materialised as expected, while more industrially sensitive materials earnings are also going backwards in a similar manner. This also supports the notion that there might be continued upwards pressure on CPI even as the underlying ‘real’ economy starts to weaken, something which was reflected in stock price moves at a sector level. Many of the large tech names that reported strong earnings have not moved much, while defensive sectors like Consumer Staples, Healthcare, and Utilities were all up around 4% for the month globally. Equity analysts saw nothing in the recent numbers or the guidance of CEOs to sound the economic alarm bells, but the share market is perhaps looking further out and positioning for a recession. Energy and commodity markets (not least iron ore) seem to concur with the recessionary thesis, while gold has been heading higher.        

In Australia the dominant banking and mining stocks languished, as question marks remained over the path of domestic inflation and global growth respectively, while every other sector was a few percent in positive territory. The traditionally defensive healthcare and utilities stocks led the way but were, perhaps surprisingly, joined by domestic Real Estate Investment Trusts which have been surprisingly resilient lately.

Central banks around the world have continued to raise rates this week (including the RBA to the surprise of many) and generally trying to sound quite hawkish. However, long term rates have only ticked up slightly, one more piece of evidence pointing to expectations of an imminent slow down.   If this sounds all a bit gloomy, credit markets appear slightly more sanguine. This is where expectations of a looming recessionary default cycle might be expected to show up first. Having ticked up around the time of the Silicon Valley bank default, they have stabilised in recent weeks, and remain below the level implied by the post Dot Com recession and in line with the ‘growth scares’ of 2015 and 2018. This would imply that for now corporate bond markets are banking on a soft landing.

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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?
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Markets ended up on the back foot after an unexpected U-turn by Fed Chair Jerome Powell on inflation. Or was it so unexpected?

August 2, 2024
Markets ended up on the back foot after an unexpected U-turn by Fed Chair Jerome Powell on inflation. The large local miners and banks fared much better but Australian market was dragged down by quite big reactions to news from a handful of stocks.
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The Santa Rally, Finally

August 2, 2024
After a volatile start to the month the traditional Santa Rally kicked in during the penultimate week of the year in the lead up to Christmas Day (and has continued overseas in the overseas markets that have been trading since then).
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2021 In Review

August 2, 2024
It turned out to be another banner year for markets, the third straight one in a row, taking most markets, and especially US markets, to all time highs.
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Tech stocks on the back foot, interest rate expectations rise

August 2, 2024
It turned out to be another banner year for markets, the third straight one in a row, taking most markets, and especially US markets, to all time highs.
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Interest rates expectations continue to set the tone

August 2, 2024
Markets were more settled last week, but interest rate expectations continued to set the tone with the US market proving especially sensitive.
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Whispers of a changing rates outlook

August 2, 2024
There was more volatility in markets last week, led again by US markets, driven in turn by US rate speculation.
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A strong month for markets

August 2, 2024
Markets capped a very strong month with a strong week and for an apparent kaleidoscope of reasons including not as dismal as expected earnings, anecdotal evidence of slowing inflationary pressures in the US and even some economic resilience in recession bound and energy starved Europe.
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US markets down while China leads the way

August 2, 2024
US markets snapped a month-long winning streak and fell back by three percent while UK, European and Asian markets were up strongly.
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An imploded crypto exchange, muted inflation and a better-than-expected result for the Democrats

August 2, 2024
Early last week it looked like an imploding crypto exchange might be the next leveraged player that the Fed hiking cycle had broken but by the end of the week early signs of a peak in inflation had sent markets rocketing higher.
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All eyes on the CPI

August 2, 2024
Most markets were soft but stable last week while US markets were down a more significant 3%, led by the large US tech stocks.
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Central banks remain wary as US inflation comes down

August 2, 2024
Uncertainty stalked markets last week amidst a raft of rate hikes, but the focus on inflation shifted from the US – where the news was ostensibly quite good – towards Europe, where inflation pressures continue unabated.
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Andrew Hunt's visit to New York and some key implications for global markets

August 2, 2024
Last week Andrew visited the InvestSense offices and shared his observations and findings from his visit to the United States, specifically New York.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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‘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.
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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%.
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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...
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