Weekly Market Update: US equities reach all-time highs, Global yields fall

Weekly Market Update: US equities reach all-time highs, Global yields fall

Mon 29 Apr 2019

Read our full Market Update Week 17

Market Update

Last week saw diverging performance in global markets as US equities delivered +1.6% in Sterling terms, however Emerging Market, UK and European equities returned -0.8%, -0.3% and +0.1% respectively. Robust earnings from tech giants and a stronger than expected Q1 annualised growth figure of 3.2% meant that US equities were able to weather fears that China is reducing stimulus, news which particularly affected miners – a relatively large proportion of UK equities. While equity markets continued to suggest conditions are broadly positive, bond markets presented a bearish picture, with yields falling across developed markets. UK 10Y Gilt yields fell -5.5bps to 1.142%, while German 10Y Bund yields are again negative at -0.022%. It was a mixed week for Sterling, gaining +0.3% vs the Euro but falling -0.6% vs the US Dollar. In US Dollar terms Gold gained +0.9% but Oil was down -1.1%.

CIO Analysis

Markets were caught off guard with regards to US Q1 GDP, which at 3.2% annualised markedly surprised to the upside. If the US can sustain high levels of growth it would go some way to calming fears about a slowdown in global growth, as despite President Trump’s “America First” agenda, a roaring US economy is likely to drag the rest of the world higher. There are a myriad of concerns that this won’t be the case, however. One is that Q1 growth has been driven by a build-up in inventories, which reduces the need for production in future periods. Another is that sustained high growth could prompt the Fed to worry about a return of inflation, flip back into a hawkish mode, and start increasing interest rates. The US stance of zero tolerance regarding sanctions on Iranian oil could further complicate the picture for investors, as it has the potential to add inflationary pressures while also slowing growth in most economies – a toxic mix. As such we remain cautious despite the stellar US figures.

David Baker, CIO

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