Weekly Market Update: Stocks gain globally, Sterling back below 1.30 vs Dollar

Weekly Market Update: Stocks gain globally, Sterling back below 1.30 vs Dollar

Mon 28 Oct 2019

Read our full Market Update Week 43

Market Update

Global stocks were up in both local currency and Sterling terms last week, however due to a fall in the currency versus other major currencies, Sterling-based investors enjoyed a greater gain; global equities were up +2.1% in Sterling terms and +1.3% in local terms. US stocks were up +1.2% in US dollars and +2.1% in Sterling terms, with the S&P 500 back near all-time highs, while UK stocks were up +2.5% for the week. As of Monday morning the EU have agreed to a Brexit extension to 31 January, which means the UK will not leave on 31 October and a general election is likely to be held in early December. In business news HSBC saw its pre-tax profits fall nearly 20% in Q3 and Barclays was hit by further PPI provisions, indicating a continued challenging environment for banks. Globally, Energy stocks led the rally while Telecoms lagged. The US 10 year yield traded +4.1bps higher, closing the week at 1.794%, while UK 10 year Gilt yields fell -2.7bps, closing at 0.682%. Gold returned +1.0% in US Dollar terms while Oil prices jumped +5%.

CIO Analysis

On the face of it, last week was a good one for risk assets. Global stocks edged up and US benchmark bond yields rose to their highest in recent weeks. However, underlying causes for concerns grow, as does lack of visibility. Economic data (PMIs, US Durable goods orders) suggested that the global growth slowdown persists. US earnings meanwhile, while overall beating (low) expectations, have seen some high-profile misses from bellwether companies such as Amazon, McDonalds and Boeing. All the while, the Brexit quagmire continues, as the PM persists on asking for a general election, which the opposition party persistently refuses. Have markets then completely disconnected from fundamentals? By no means. They follow the one factor that has mattered throughout this cycle, central bank easing, and assume that money velocity will be enough to balance a deteriorating economy. We feel that 2020 might be the year when this assumption might finally be put to the test.

-David Baker, CIO

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