Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: October 14, 2022

Weekly Market Report: October 14, 2022

It was tough to read last week’s market action, particularly on Thursday’s massive intraday swing in both equity and bond markets. As has been the case, new data on inflation, jobs, and resulting monetary policy remain the primary factors in what has been a very macro driven market this year. The week finished with U.S. and developed international equity markets down approximately 1.5% but emerging markets falling nearly 4% driven by a tough week in Chinese markets. The USD and interest rates both moved higher with the 10yr UST yield closing at the 4% level for the first time since 2008. Commodity markets, particularly energy commodities, fell on global growth concerns leaving WTI crude oil at the $85bbl level.

Market Anecdotes

  • Equity markets bounced pretty decisively off a low Thursday morning and maintained throughout the afternoon and while rates followed the same path, bonds did not fully recoup early losses and saw notable upward rate pressure, particularly on the short end of the curve.
  • With equity markets down 25% and bond markets down 15% the right question to be asking might be where we are in respect to financial market capitulation than whether and when the economy will go through a recession.
  • This week’s AAII sentiment survey, not surprisingly, ranks among the 60 lowest in the survey’s history (1987) and has seen less than 35 readings more bearish than last week’s 55.9%.
  • With the midterms approaching, a brief reminder of election cycle theory serves up some constructive anecdotes as we approach the beginning of year three.
  • A snapshot of strong U.S. corporate fundamentals is clear as we began 3Q earnings season last week with margin compression and slowing growth at the forefront of guidance.
  • FOMC minutes released last week made clear the Fed’s consensus is that inflation risks outweigh over tightening risks.
  • Inflation and jobs data are the primary market focus and while inflation did surprise on the upside last week, several inflation data points are beginning to trend lower – a very important anecdote when thinking about the future path of the economy and U.S. monetary policy.
  • With the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model predicting +2.8% 3Q GDP for the U.S. economy, it feels like a relatively healthy economy & labor market for the FOMC to materially reconsider its policy path at this time.
  • A look at the past few months of Fed quantitative tightening makes the downshift clear in terms of net Treasury supply purchases by the Fed.
  • A UN resolution calling on countries not to recognize Russia’s annexation of Ukrainian territories saw 143 vote in favor, 5 opposed (Russian, North Korea, Belarus, Syria, Nicaragua), and 2 abstain (China, India).

Economic Release Highlights

• YoY headline (8.2%) and core (6.66%) CPI decreased and increased respectively from prior month readings and came in slightly higher than consensus.
• YoY headline (8.54%) and core (7.25%) PPI as well as MoM headline (0.38%) and core (0.30%) have begun to show signs of relief.
• September retail sales were flat (0.0%) while sales excluding gasoline and autos grew by 0.3%.
• UofM Consumer Sentiment reading for October of 59.8 represented a small improvement over prior month’s reading of 58.6.
• The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index rose 0.3 points over the prior month to 92.1.
• Weekly unemployment claims of 228,000 were slightly higher than expected and the 4-week moving average of 211,500 edged slightly higher.

This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.

Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: October 7, 2022

Weekly Market Report: October 7, 2022

Last week delivered some frustrating back and forth price action with remarkable gains to start the week later washed out by renewed anxiety surrounding rising policy rate expectations. Numerous FOMC members reinforced the hawkish narrative which drove risk markets lower and interest rates higher. The week finished with minor gains across global equity markets (S&P 500 +1.5%) and another leg higher in interest rates, particularly across the shorter maturities. Commodities surged higher on the back of a 16% rally in crude oil prices and the USD moved higher still, up 0.9% on the week.

Market Anecdotes

  • A graphical look at year-to-date total returns for stock and bond markets makes your stomach turn while the USD makes your heart sing. The persistent rise in interest rates (nine consecutive weeks) is the clear driving force behind all three markets. 
  • A silver lining of the surge higher in interest rates is that Treasuries are offering yields higher than any time since 2007. 
  • The move higher in yields has yet to invert the 3m/10yr portion of the curve – perhaps signaling recession may be less likely than widely assumed. 
  • Eighteen Fed speaking engagements last week served to reinforce hawkish policy expectations with repeated emphasis on the Fed’s dual mandate of labor market and price stability coupled with subtle reminders the Fed mandate does not include managing the financial markets. 
  • You can add the World Bank and United Nations to a list including Paul Krugman, Elizabeth Warren, Greg Mankiw, and maybe most importantly Nick Timiraos suggesting that the Fed may be tightening too far amidst a global economic slowdown. 
  • The business of forecasting inflation seems uniform with both the Fed and Wall Street forecasting a pretty straight line fall back to approximately 2.5% by late 2024. 
  • Bianco Research makes the case that two of three deflationary forces (cheap labor, cheap goods, better technology) have given way and technology’s ability to offset is questionable. 
  • While nominal wages have been increasing at an alarming rate, real wages have fallen notably as evidenced by average hourly pay in August down 2.1% this year, adjusted for inflation. 
  • OPEC+ agreed to a 2mbpd production cut last week which is roughly 2% of global consumption and EIA data showed U.S. inventories dropping farther than expected. 
  • Whether the Credit Suisse situation is an isolated bankruptcy risk or potential systematic event remains to be seen but markets are clearly looking past their issues. 
  • The bullish contingent at BCA again highlighted three very clear pillars of support for the U.S. economy including labor market, robust consumer demand, and confidence in the Fed’s ability/resolve in beating inflation.

Economic Release Highlights

• The September jobs report registered 263,000, slightly more job creation than consensus call of 250,000 and the unemployment rate fell two ticks to 3.5%. The participation rate (62.3% vs 62.4%) and average hourly earnings (5.0% vs 5.1%) were both relatively in line with consensus.
• The August JOLT survey showed job openings falling much further than expected to 10.053mm, well below consensus calls for 11.150mm and further yet below July’s 11.239mm.
• September ISM Manufacturing Index reading of 50.9 fell short of the consensus estimate of 52.4. ISM Services beat expectations (56.7 vs 56.0) and improved one tick over the prior month.
• The JPM Global Manufacturing PMI declined slightly to 49.8 from August’s 50.3 reading. Global Services PMI came in at 50, just above expectations for 49.3.

This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.

Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: September 30, 2022

Weekly Market Report: September 30, 2022

Markets put a bow on a week, a month, and a quarter to forget last week including hitting a fresh 52-week low and chalking up the worst month in U.S. equities since 2008. The prior week’s flurry of central bank meetings expressing resolve in battling inflation has resulted in an exceptionally strong USD, surging bond yields, oil
dipping below $80, and an extension of the equity market selloff. U.S. and emerging markets fell approximately 3% while developed international markets were off 1.3%. The 10yr UST traded briefly above the 4% mark but settled back to 3.83% to close the week. Commodities were relatively unchanged on the week and the USD weakened slightly (0.95%) on the week.

Market Anecdotes

• Commensurate with the historic selloff in bonds, a look from Refinitiv and Bloomberg at volatility in interest rates illustrates how much of an outlier we are experiencing with record high MOVE Index readings coupled with record high bond market drawdowns.
• The USD has been on a tear since early 2021 thanks to real rate differentials, risk aversion, and global growth dynamics. Ultimately, dollar strength translates to tightening financial conditions and a domestic deflationary force with respect to global trade.
• Nineteen Fed speaking engagements last week did little to change the narrative coming out of the September FOMC meeting. Focus remained with persistence and resolve on the tightening cycle at hand.
• An upward revision in Q2 personal consumption and decline in initial jobless claims added to the hawkish narrative in what’s likely to be a “good news is bad news” narrative for some time.
• U.S. GDP slipped into negative territory for the first half of 2022 and borrowing costs have risen sharply yet payrolls have increased by an average of 438,000 between January and August and consumers have continued to spend.
• A hot reading in German inflation (10.9% YoY and 2.2% MoM) underscored the need and likely justification for another 75bps ECB hike on October 27th.
• The pandemic rally in overall commodity prices has fizzled with industrial metals, energy, and precious metals all declining but agricultural commodities have stabilized (+3.5% since beginning of August).
• A look by Fidelity at weekly and three-month flows (funds/ ETFs) into equity markets shows investors have yet to run for the exits with flows remaining relatively stable. AAII bearish sentiment readings are near record highs while bullish readings are 17.7% below average.
• Cash is king in a market where both bonds and stocks have been hammered. Bloomberg reports roughly $4.6t is sitting in US money markets, just shy of the 2020 record $4.8t.
• Negative years like 2022 are when hedge funds earn their keep, and this year is no different with CTA and global macro funds profiting nicely relative to long-only/long biased strategies.
• The BoE signaled it would intervene in the bond market to prop up the gilt following a surge in bond yields due to a sizable fiscal stimulus package announced last week. Additionally, the UK government reaffirmed its commitment to BoE independence amidst rumors to the contrary.

Economic Release Highlights

• The August PIO report revealed YoY headline and core inflation of 6.2% vs 6.1% and 4.9% vs 4.8% alongside MoM readings of 0.3% vs 0.2% and 0.6% vs 0.55, all exactly 0.1% higher than forecast.
• The August PIO report revealed higher than forecasted Personal Consumption Expenditures (0.4% vs 0.2%) and in line Personal Income growth of 0.3%. 
• Consumer Confidence in September improved over the prior month, higher than forecasted (108.0 vs 104.3).
• The third revision of Q2 GDP maintained the headline QoQ AR of -0.6% but did see a material upward revision in personal consumption expenditures from 1.5% to 2.0%.
• August Durable Goods Orders were marginally better than forecast with New Orders (-0.2% vs -0.4%), ExTransportation (0.2% vs 0.1%), and Core Capital Goods (1.3% vs 0.7%) exceeding consensus forecasts.
• China’s Caixin Manufacturing PMI Index dipped further into contractionary territory registering 48.1 versus
consensus estimate of 49.4. The CFLP PMI (C, M, S) registered 50.9, 50.1, 50.6.
• July Case-Shiller Home Price Index missed consensus on both MoM (-0.4% vs +0.3%) and YoY (16.1% vs 17.0%) measures.
• August New Home Sales of 685k came in much stronger than the 498k forecasted and increased over the prior month’s reading of 532k. Pending Home Sales fell 2% versus expectation of -0.8%.

This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.

Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: September 23, 2022

Weekly Market Report: September 23, 2022

All eyes were on the FOMC decision and narrative last week with a relatively light economic calendar and sparse 2Q earnings announcements. Safe to say, the Fed delivered another dose of tough love, and it wasn’t very well received by risk markets as it was made clear the Fed is pretty comfortable with a policy induced recession. Thanks in large part to surging global interest rates, global equity markets traded down sharply with the S&P 500 touching a new bear market low, now -23.7% below the post Covid high. Developed international and emerging market equities traded sharply lower as well as U.S., German, and U.K. bond yields all marked new multi-year highs. Oil (-7.5%) dragged the commodity complex lower in sympathy with slowing global economic activity.

Market Anecdotes

• It was a difficult week with surging global bond yields and the ripple effect in what has been a historic bond market route and commensurate slide in equity markets where we’ve now endured three 10%+ downdrafts following the record high in early January.
• The surge in bond yields is historic no matter how you look at it. The 2y/10yr inversion exceeded 50bps last week – the deepest inversion we’ve seen since 1982 and a level commonly found in recessions (22% of the time) and always within 15 months of one.
• The FOMC delivered a third consecutive 75bps rate hike last week, taking rates to 3.0-3.25% and revised projections to another 125bps by year end with terminal rate expected to land at 4.5%-4.75%.
• In addition to median rate expectations detailed above, the SEP included downward revisions to forecasted economic growth and upward revisions to core inflation and unemployment.
• Synchronized tightening maintained its global theme last week with the U.S., BoE, Sweden, and Swiss central banks (among others) hiking rates while the BoJ again left rates unchanged. Accordingly, overall financial conditions have tightened meaningfully.
• USD strengthened 3.12% last week, wreaking havoc on FX markets including inducing Japan to engage in its first direct FX intervention since the 1990’s. The Euro is down 17% YTD and only three EM currencies (Mexico, Peru, Brazil) are up on the year with most down over 10%.
• The British Pound traded sharply lower on the announcement of a UK plan for the largest tax cuts since 1972, including the elimination of the top income tax bracket in a bid to stoke growth.
• Despite exceedingly tight global oil markets and ever-present geopolitical risk, oil has traded down in sympathy with concerns about falling global demand amid the economic slowdown.
• The Atlanta Fed GDPNow model which was firming in early August has deteriorated sharply in recent weeks with the latest Q3 U.S. GDP estimate at 0.3%.
• One consistently dovish monetary policy talk point is that while current inflation remains elevated, households seem to expect the Fed to succeed in bringing down inflation based on NY Fed, UofM and other household survey data.

Economic Release Highlights

• September U.S. PMI (C,M,S) of 49.3, 51.8, 49.2 measures improved meaningfully relative to August and beat consensus (47.0, 51.3, 45.0) across the board.
• September composite, services, and manufacturing PMI prints for September in the EU and UK were all in contractionary territory.
• The Conference Board LEI for August declined 0.3%, more than expectations for -0.1%, posting a sixth consecutive MoM decline.
• August Housing Starts (1.575M vs 1.440M) and Permits (1.517M vs 1.621M) came in above and below respectively, their consensus estimates. Existing Home Sales of 4.8M came in higher than forecasted (4.7M) but in a slowing trend with both MoM (-0.4%) and YoY (-19.9%) cooling off.
• September’s Housing Market Index registered a depressed 46 versus a consensus estimate of 48

This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.

Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: September 16, 2022

Weekly Market Report: September 16, 2022

Markets last week had to digest a higher likelihood of a steadfast hawkish Fed in light of the economic calendar both here and abroad. Investors were again faced with little to no winners as equity markets and bond markets sank together, in what has been a clearly increasing pattern of rising rates/inflation anxiety corresponding to falling equity market prices. By the end of the week, the S&P 500 was within 5% of retesting the June lows and interest rates were at or above the June highs, depending on the term. The USD rallied in typical risk off/higher interest rate fashion while commodities broadly moved lower on the week.

Market Anecdotes

  • A hot inflation reading on Tuesday may have reduced the odds of the Fed engineering a soft landing, offsetting increased soft landing odds stemming from last month’s employment report.

     

  • That the aggressive pace of Fed rate hikes has markets on edge might be understandable given we’re looking at the fastest six-month pace of rate hikes since 1981, assuming 75bps this week.

     

  • Futures markets have priced in an additional 50bps of rate hikes in recent days, to a terminal rate of 4.5% by April of 2023, which has been reflected in both economic forecasts and stock/bond market pricing as well.

     

  • Happy endings have clearly not been the weekly trend in 2022 with more 1%+ down days ending the week than any year since 1952. This week was thanks in part to a very public warning of weakening earnings and slowing global growth from FedEx CEO Raj Subramaniam.

     

  • A current look at market technicals shows the S&P 500’s rejection of the 200 daily moving average and subsequent breakdown toward the bear market low in June means the downtrend is still very much in place with markets again flirting with oversold technical conditions.

     

  • Another look at positive stock and bond correlations and the resulting headwind to standard investment portfolios shows both shorter and longer term trends dramatically on the rise.

     

  • Election cycles and mid-term predictions will now begin to ramp up warranting a look at which policy debates have market implications and requisite historical election cycle market patterns.

     

  • Eurozone inflation is doing the ECB no favors as regional CPI marked record highs for eleven consecutive months.

Economic Release Highlights

  • CPI for August reported MoM headline (0.1% vs -0.1%) and core (0.6% vs 0.3%) and YoY headline (8.3% vs 8.1%) and core (6.3% vs 6.1%). 
  • The latest New York Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations show median 1yr, 3yr, and 5yr ahead inflation expectations falling 
  • August Retail Sales increased 0.30% (vs expectations for -0.1%), a rebound from prior month’s -0.40% reading. 
  • August’s NFIB Small Business Optimism Index improved to 91.8, slightly higher than expected (90.5) and a small improvement over the prior month (89.9). 
  • UofM Consumer Sentiment improved from 58.2 in August to 59.5 in September. 
  • Industrial Production in August softened 0.20%, a slowdown from prior month’s 0.50% growth.

This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.

Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: September 9, 2022

Weekly Market Report: September 9, 2022

In a holiday shortened week, markets digested a large dose of FOMC speaking engagements, a very light economic calendar, and requisite geopolitical interference. The result was a pronounced rally across U.S. and developed non-U.S. equity markets with emerging markets ending flat to slightly down on the week. Interest rates continued their march higher with the yield curve moving up in parallel fashion leaving the 10yr UST at its highest level since the June 2022 bout of market volatility. The USD fell slightly on the risk rally and the commodity complex finished in the red with oil trading sideways but natural gas falling 9% on the week.

Market Anecdotes

  • From an equity market technical perspective, it feels like the bears are in check until the June lows are taken out while the bulls are in check until the mid-August highs are taken out.
  • It was a busy Fed speaking circuit last week with markets (perhaps foolishly) hoping for a second consecutive slowdown in CPI data taking the Fed hawkish narrative back a bit. The labor market and wage inflation may well just take the wheel for the hawkish narrative.
  • Falling inflation data points are growing including Baltic Dry Index, Logistics Manager Index, WCI Shipping Rates, Warehousing/Transportation Pricing, ISM and regional Fed Delivery Times/Prices Paid/Prices Received, commodity prices, gas prices, vehicle prices, and rental prices.
  • Fed whisperer Nick Timiraos published a WSJ article highlighting little pushback from FOMC members regarding expectations for a 75bps hike at the September FOMC meeting. Four minutes later, market probabilities for 75bps increased from 72% to 92%.
  • Both the ECB and BoC announced 75bps hikes to their policy rates, larger than the 50bps consensus. The European rate now stands at 1.25%.
  • Bond market carnage continued last week now with the Barclays Aggregate Index 1yr, 2yr, 3yr, and 5yr total returns all at the worst levels on record.
  • The consensus case against imminent U.S. recession beyond pent up consumer demand (liquidity) and a robust job market is pent up capex where capital goods orders are near 1998 levels and the average age of fixed assets are at their ‘oldest’ since 1964.
  • Lithium refineries, battery manufacturing plants, solar/wind power installs, and power grid investment are beginning in earnest in what is expected to total $1.2t in investment by 2035, spurred in part by the recently passed climate/infrastructure bill.
  • Reuters reported this week that the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve has fallen to its lowest level (442.5mb) since November 1984.
  • The EU foreign policy chief and U.S. officials signaled a new Iran nuclear deal is not expected to happen anytime soon.
  • An eventful (and somber) week in the UK saw the passing of Queen Elizabeth and the appointment of Liz Truss as the next Prime Minister.

Economic Release Highlights

  • August ISM Services Index came in at 56.9 versus consensus forecast of 55.4, toward the higher end of consensus range of 53.5 to 57.0.
  • Weekly initial jobless claims fell slightly WoW to 222k.

This communication is provided for informational purposes only and is not an offer, recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any security or other investment. This communication does not constitute, nor should it be regarded as, investment research or a research report, a securities or investment recommendation, nor does it provide information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision. Additional analysis of your or your client’s specific parameters would be required to make an investment decision. This communication is not based on the investment objectives, strategies, goals, financial circumstances, needs or risk tolerance of any client or portfolio and is not presented as suitable to any other particular client or portfolio.