Written by Shane Balkham
Last week seemed to be very much the calm after a short-lived storm. Not wanting to tempt fate, the dust seems to have settled again with financial markets back to almost where they started at the beginning of the month. The S&P 500 index is only a few percentage points below its all-time high, while Japanese equities, arguably at the epicentre with the Bank of Japan’s surprise rate hike, have also recovered significantly since the sharp drop.
A timely reminder that trying to time the markets is a fool’s errand and keeping a cool head and maintaining your investment strategy has been a robust process to follow. If your investment time horizon is measured in years and decades, then short-term movements over days and weeks should not be a cause of worry.
What helped quell the recent volatility was that a series of data publications were slightly better than general expectations. In the UK we had a jobs report for the second quarter, which showed a drop in the level of unemployment and slowing wage growth. Inflation was slightly lower than expected at 2.2% year-over-year to the end of July. Although slightly up from June’s and May’s reading, UK CPI is more or less still at the Bank of England’s target rate. For the US, CPI data continued to trend downwards, reaffirming market expectations that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will cut rates in its September meeting.
The FOMC minutes from the end of July meeting are published this week. Of particular interest will be any commentary around the level of confidence in the decline in inflation and weakening of the US economy. It must be remembered that any details gleaned from these minutes are three weeks old and there has been and will continue to be, a lot of data issued before the next FOMC meeting in four weeks’ time, highlighting the problem of relying on data that is inherently lagged.
The process of bringing down US inflation without causing a recession is a difficult balancing act. The resilience of the US consumer continues to defy gravity, as retail sales data showed a continued willingness to spend. However, with savings that grew during the pandemic largely gone and wage growth cooling, the US consumer is increasingly resorting to credit, raising questions about the longevity of consumer spending, especially as data is showing delinquency on payments are increasing.
While the recent market scares have abated and the US Federal Reserve’s goal of a soft landing looks feasible once again, we have the uncomfortable period of four weeks until the central bank meets to decide whether or not to cut rates. Whatever happens over the remainder of the summer, this demonstrates the importance of holding a diversified investment when the stock market is looking significantly narrow, particularly when we have the annual economic symposium at Jackson Hole this week, which has been the stage for drama in previous years.
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