July General Markets Comments
« Whose Side Are You On? » – Matt Bianco, 1984
Are you on the optimists’ or the pessimists’ side? Or rather on the side of those who have no idea?
So far, 2022 tends to plead in favour of the pessimists, but optimists could argue that July 2022 was the best month for the S&P 500 since November 2020 (when Pfizer-BioNTech announced they had a vaccine against Covid), and those who have no idea could point out that finally markets were roughly flat for June-July 2022, as June was a dreadful month.
There are many things to factor in, and all of them give arguments to one side or another: inflation is high, but expected to normalize, especially since Central Banks seem keen on tackling it rapidly; geopolitics are a mess with not only the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, but also the heightened tensions between the US and China regarding Taiwan; corporate and private debt does not seem to be a source of problems today, but Government debt across developed markets is immense; earnings reports have been surprisingly good so far, but they are expected to slow down significantly going forward; commodities do not move in sync, but there seems to be a growing threat from Russia about gas deliveries in Europe for this winter, triggering skyrocketing gas prices. With all this happening at the same time, it is not easy to choose your side and it’s not surprising to see numerous experts change their minds, depending on the most recent events.
Buoyed by convincing earnings releases and some more risk appetite, equity markets soared in July: the MSCI World gained +7.86%, the S&P 500 +9.11%, the Nasdaq +12.55%, the MSCI Europe +7.52% and the Topix +3.71%. The only detractor was Emerging Markets, down 0.69%. As nominal and real yields fell, Growth outperformed Value with a +11.51% return for the MSCI World Growth versus +4.44% for its Value counterpart.
In such a risk-prone month, Credit also rose (+3.06% for the Itraxx Crossover), and Government yields fell (-36 bps for the US 10 year, -52 bps for Germany); Gold and Oil receded by 2.29% and 6.75% respectively, and the Euro fell further against the dollar (-2.51%), weakened by the possible looming energy crisis in Europe and an unfavourable interest rate differential.
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