Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: March 21, 2022

Weekly Market Report: March 21, 2022

Last week was certainly a nice break from the unfriendly side of market volatility. War, monetary policy, Covid BA.2 data points, and both policy and politics in China were the primary influences driving markets last week. The S&P 500 was up 6.2% while developed international (+7.5%) and emerging markets (+6.6%) performed even better. The recovery was broad-based across sectors with only energy (-3.6%) posting losses. Interest rates ticked higher, and the yield curve flattened as investors handicapped Fed policy and narratives following the highly anticipated meeting and corresponding 25bps rate hike from the FOMC. Commodity markets (-2%) and the USD (-0.9%) were down slightly last week.

Market Anecdotes

•U.S. equity markets bounced higher in strong fashion last week with a string of four +1% moves (S&P 500 and NASDAQ) and even bigger bounces in Europe and U.S. small caps.
• After a ‘death cross’ on Monday, the S&P 500 went on to rally sharply back above its 50-day moving average, broke the downtrend channel in place since the early January record, and pushed nearly back to its upper Bollinger Band.
• The Fed raised rates by 25bps, forecasted six more, and reiterated they will remain nimble as data rolls in. Dot plot
interest rate projections show a 1.9% median target by year-end and a 2.8% target by the end of 2023. Balance sheet policy guidance (QT) will be forthcoming in May.
• The FOMC GDP forecast for 2022 was ratcheted down from 4.0% to 2.8%, the inflation outlook was increased from 2.6% to 4.3%. Wage growth and housing costs are the key ‘sticky’ components while supply chain and Russia-Ukraine disruptions loom in the background.
• A key decision point for the economy and stock market will be what level is the true ‘neutral rate’ of interest. Is it the FOMC’s terminal rate of 2.4% or is it closer to 3-4%? Stock markets would appreciate the Fed halting hikes below the neutral rate in the short term, policy would eventually have to counteract remaining too stimulative in the long-term.
• Last week the BoE delivered a dovish surprise with its 25bps rate hike by signaling a more cautious outlook and policy approach while the BoJ held rates steady as expected.
• China’s top economic official provided assurance that policymakers will implement measures to stimulate the economy and support the capital markets provided a big mid-week boost to risk assets.
• China’s zero-tolerance policy towards the COVID-19 may carry consequences to domestic economic conditions in addition to further aggravating global supply chain disruptions.
• The WSJ noted Zillow’s $56,000 average home price appreciation through February 2022 is the first time in the data series history where the homes earned more than their owners.
• The specter of rising rates and a narrow equity risk premium has owners of vanilla 60/40 portfolios driving plenty of attention and focus on alternative investments.
• Oil supply is under a microscope with the spike in uncertainty given stronger than expected U.S. production discipline, core-OPEC 2.0 production increases, and Iran/Russia indicating favorable resolution of their trade concerns which should allow 1.3m b/d back into global export markets.

Economic Release Highlights

• U.S. Retail Sales for February were in line with consensus estimates (0.3% vs 0.4%)
• February PPI data were in the ballpark of very hot consensus expectations with MoM headline (0.8% vs 1.0%) and core (0.2% vs 0.6%) readings and YoY readings of 10% and 8.4%.
• February U.S. Housing Starts (1.769mm), Housing Permits (1.859mm), and Existing Home Sales (6.020mm) were relatively in line with expectations.
• The March Housing Market Index fell just short of expectations at 79 versus consensus of 81.
• February U.S. Industrial Production of 0.5% and Manufacturing Output of 1.2% were at and in excess of consensus respectively.

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.

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Retirement Architects Weekly Market Review: February 25, 2022

Weekly Market Report: February 25, 2022

The Russian invasion of Ukraine dominated headlines last week in what felt like a slow-motion offensive which became very real very fast on Wednesday evening. We’ll refrain from commenting on the specific situation in Ukraine, as it remains too fluid for any tangible takeaways currently, instead focusing our attention on financial market reactions and potential economic implications. Along those lines, and as with most geopolitical events, markets seemed to have priced in a good deal of the fallout in advance, ultimately leaving financial markets in a push-pull situation between strong economic fundamentals and geopolitical risks. U.S. equity markets finished the week in the black while developed and emerging market equities traded down 1.3% and 3.8% respectively. Oil rallied in the overseas Brent crude contract, but WTI was flat on the week while interest rates in the U.S. actually increased across the curve and we saw a subtle bid in the USD.

Market Anecdotes

• Some historical perspective on market corrections and policy uncertainty serves as a reminder to avoid the ‘in the moment’ risk aversion urge and just play through or buy the mire. • Last week’s Russian invasion of Ukraine pushed the Ruble to a record low, the Russian stock market down over 35%, Brent crude prices over the $100bbl level for the first time since 2014, European natural gas prices up nearly 50%, and strong rallies across grains and metals. • U.S. trade and financial exposure to Russia is somewhat limited but Russia is the world’s third-largest producer of oil and second-largest of natural gas. Europe and China are most reliant on Russian energy exports. • While really bad news is clearly not yet priced in, we will be monitoring the situation closely as things unfold in Eastern Europe. In the near term, we do expect some short-term strength in the USD, continued tailwinds in cyclically oriented sectors and would favor more geopolitically insulated markets for the time being. • At this point it seems that treasury yields, the USD, gold, and credit spreads aren’t sounding any significant alarm bells. • Monetary policy trajectory seems marginally impacted thus far with the expected pace of rate hikes slowing slightly, due to tightening financial conditions, with an expectation for a 25bps hike in March. No changes are expected surrounding balance sheet activity. • Foreign stocks are holding up much better than their U.S. peers thus far in 2022 with valuations and rising rates likely playing a material role in the differing results over the short term. • While rental and housing prices have garnered a lot of attention in the inflation debate, energy has been the biggest contributor to inflation every month since February 2021 and last month it added 1.71% to the 7.50% YoY rise in CPI with the geopolitical unrest set to add to the trend.
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.

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