April General Markets Comments
“Been dazed and confused, for so long, it’s not true” – a tribute to the mighty Led Zeppelin
Yes, it has been dazed and confused for investors, and it has been so for quite a long time now.
Russia-Ukraine war has not helped, but this alone can’t explain the very complicated market conditions we’re facing this year. Commodity prices had started to rise significantly before the conflict began, like interest rates and inflation, but this did not prevent equity markets from posting spectacular returns in 2021. So what’s the problem this year, notwithstanding this war (and without minimizing or underestimating its impact)? Perhaps the message from many Central Banks is what frightens investors the most: we’ve been used to having this kind of FED/ECB “put” each time things turned sour for so long, that their hawkish message today triggers discomfort and a feeling of entering unchartered territories.
At some point, Led Zeppelin’s song goes “lots of people talk, and few of them know”, which seems to echo these days’ fuss: Growth addicts tell you that IT stocks are a screaming buy, while Value disciples explain to you that it’s only the beginning of a long cycle for Cyclicals; Gold bugs urge you to go full blast on the shiny stuff and fixed-income optimists consider that today’s yields are attractive; but what happens if inflation fades away? Gold falls and bonds perform? And if inflation shoots up? So does Gold, and bonds collapse? Perma-bears maintain their prediction of an Armageddon, but Perma-bulls want you to increase risk.
As we’re in the middle of decisive earnings reports from a lot of companies, skies could clear up, or not: it will be extremely interesting to focus on the outlook, with many unknowns which have to be addressed: China lockdowns, supply chain, costs inflation and pricing power, Russia-Ukraine consequences, production bottlenecks and final demand.
April was painful; it has been a volatile and negative month. The S&P 500 lost 8.8%, the MSCI World 8.4%, the Nasdaq 100 cratered 13.4%; Europe fared relatively well (-1.1% for the MSCI Europe), but the Euro fell 4.9% versus the dollar. In the same vein, the Topix only receded by 2.4%, but the JPY sank 6.7% versus the dollar.
As credit had a very bad month, like Government bonds, like equities and like most currencies (barring the dollar), the only bright spot was Commodities with Oil rising again (+4.4%) and the Broad Commodity Index adding 4.4% as well, but it’s not supposed to help equities. Even Gold retreated by 2.1%. Dazed and confused, indeed. Hopefully not for too long.
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