Weekly Market Update

How Elections, Central Banks, and Geopolitical Tensions Moved Markets

October 1, 2024

The final week of September 2024 saw markets grappling with several major developments, including escalating conflict in the Middle East, a surprise election result in Japan, and ongoing speculation about central bank rate cuts.

U.S. markets were mixed, with stocks bouncing back late in the week after some daily price fluctuations. The S&P 500 managed to eke out another record close. Treasury yields continued their upward climb, nearly touching 3.8% on the 10-year before pulling back slightly after comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Powell reiterated that the Fed will be data-dependent in its rate cut decisions going forward.

In Japan, markets were jolted by the unexpected election of Shigeru Ishiba as leader of the LDP and Japan's new Prime Minister. Japanese equities sank 6% on the news, as Ishiba is seen as more hawkish and likely to support faster normalisation of Bank of Japan policy. However, in his first comments as PM, Ishiba suggested monetary policy still needs to remain accommodative for now. The yen strengthened nearly 2% on the leadership change.

China remained in focus as more details emerged about its stimulus plans. Talk of a massive 2-10 trillion yuan fiscal package boosted Chinese stocks, with the CSI 300 surging over 8% Monday for its largest daily gain in 16 years. Commodities like iron ore also rallied on the China news. However, some scepticism remains about how quickly the stimulus will translate into real economic impact.

In Europe, a batch of softer inflation prints, especially in Germany, increased expectations the European Central Bank will cut rates at its October meeting. The euro fell against the dollar. ECB President Christine Lagarde did not provide any new policy signals in her latest remarks.

Oil prices saw some volatility, initially rising on supply concerns related to conflict between Israel and Iran-backed groups in Lebanon and Yemen. However, prices fell back sharply later in the week on reports Saudi Arabia and Russia may abandon production cuts.

The week ahead brings a host of crucial economic data, most importantly the U.S. non-farm payrolls report Friday. After some mixed signals from Fed officials, the jobs numbers will be closely watched for clues on the Fed's next moves. Other key releases include global PMI data and inflation figures from the Eurozone.

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The to and fro of US markets last week resembled the titanic struggle between Nadal and Medvedev with bulls and bears trading blows that resulted in multiple 4% round trips during the week.
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High inflation and geopolitics muddy the water

August 2, 2024
The main news of the week happened as the European market closed. An unequivocal warning by US intelligence that a Russian invasion of Ukraine might be imminent.
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All eyes on the Ukraine and Russia border

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In what has become a familiar pattern, markets rose in the early part of the week amid signs that Putin’s aggressive posturing towards Ukraine might be just that, only to fall back as he appears to up the ante yet again.
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Investors attempt to price in the invasion and the ensuing sanctions on Russia

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Bad news equals good news

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‘Buy the dip’ opportunism start surfacing

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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

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