Weekly Market Update: Bond yields rise, gold price declines

Weekly Market Update: Bond yields rise, gold price declines

Mon 11 Nov 2019

Read our full Market Update Week 45

Market Update

Global stocks rose +0.8% in local currency terms and +2.1% in Sterling terms in yet another positive week for risk assets. Meanwhile yields rose sharply and Gold had its worst week in three years as there was a flight from defensive assets. In Sterling terms US stocks rose +2.2%, Emerging Market stocks rallied +2.8% and European stocks gained +1.7%, with banks seeing a strong rally in light of a significant steepening of yield curves. UK stocks were up +0.9%, with Energy and IT stocks leading the rally. Globally, the cyclical Energy and Financials sectors performed well, while the more defensive Consumer Staples and Utilities sectors both saw losses. Sterling fell on aggregate, down -1.3% against the US Dollar and -0.3% against the Yen, as both the Conservatives and Labour set out ambitious spending plans. UK 10Y Gilt yields and US 10Y Treasury yields were up 12.6bps and 23.1bps respectively. Gold sold off -3.7% in US Dollar terms, while Oil gained +1.9%.

CIO Analysis

The confluence of trade deal hopes, yield curve steepening, better than expected earnings and some good news for the US services sector helped stocks close higher for the fifth consecutive week. Investors should be careful, however, as these factors are temporary in nature. The trade deal may or may not happen, perhaps depending on a single tweet, the yield curve is not a consistent predictor of a recession, earnings falling by just 2.5%, against expectations for 4.7%, is hardly a boon for long term enthusiasm, and the US services sector uptick does not yet show resilience. Long term portfolios, instead, should be focusing on long term factors, such as earnings trends, growth and the impact of accommodative central banks.

In the UK the election is proving to not just be about Brexit, with significant focus on both leaders’ fitness for office. This debate we have seen before in France, Austria, Italy, Greece and even more significantly in the US, with figures who depart from traditional politics seizing the centre stage. For the time being, the Conservative party is enjoying a comfortable margin of 11%-12%. With the dilution of the two-party system what matters is the size of the difference and the ability to form alliances. With the centre ground diminishing and no signs yet of the Labour resurgence we saw in the 2017 election, the current margin could be more predictive of the end result than in the previous election. What should investors be focusing on?

 1. That both parties promise to “shake up” the status quo, either through “real” Brexit or through a mix of socialist policies unseen since 1945.

 2. To balance the scales, both promise significant fiscal spending. Other things being equal, both outcomes are pound-negative and yield-positive.

3. The subsequent debate over the identity of the new head of the “BoE”. With such spending plans in mind, the willingness of the central bank to finance deficits through increasing asset purchases and decreasing interest rates will be pivotal.

David Baker, CIO

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *