Weekly house view | The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Weekly house view | The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

The CIO's view of the week ahead.

The week in review

Even though the Fed provided its clearest hint yet that it will start cutting rates in September, the US stock market was overwhelmed by weak economic data (on manufacturing and on the employment front). Lacklustre earnings guidance, a dividend cut by one high-profile tech company and a clear reversal in investor enthusiasm for chip makers dragged down the S&P 5001 by 2% last week (in USD) and the Nasdaq2 by 3.3% (in USD). The latter index has fallen 11% from its most recent high on 10 July. Tellingly, even though US Treasury yields tumbled last week, small caps—which had been basking in the sun thanks to the market rotation away from tech—fell heavily last week, with the Russell 20003 down 6.7% (in USD). Elsewhere, while Bank of Japan policy tightening furthered the yen’s recovery against the USD, it hurt the Topix4, which dropped 6.0% (in yen) last week. Market bets that we will see a 50 bps cut from the Fed in September sparked a big bond rally, with the yield on two-year US Treasuries dropping over 50 bps on the week. With financial markets growing more volatile, gold had a good week to top out a gain of over 5% in July as a whole (in USD). 

Quote of the week

A rate cut could be on the table at the September meeting” – Fed’s Powell.

Key data

Nonfarm payrolls in the US rose 114,000 in July, below expectations and well down from 179,000 in June and 216,000 in May. Average hourly earnings grew by an annual 3.6% last month, down from 3.9% in June, while the unemployment rate jumped to 4.3% from 4.1%. The ISM purchasing managers’ index for manufacturing dipped to an eight-month low of 46.8 in July (from 48.5 in June), signalling continued contraction in activity. Despite contraction in Germany, euro area GDP grew 0.3% quarter over quarter in Q2 and 0.6% on an annual basis.  Headline consumer inflation in the euro area rose to an annual 2.6% in July from 2.5% in May. The official Chinese purchasing manager index (PMI) for manufacturing fell slightly to 49.4 in July from 49.5 the two prior months. 

 

Source: Pictet WM AA&MR, Thomson Reuters. Past performance, S&P 500 Composite (net 12-month return in USD): 2019, 31.5%; 2020, 18.4%; 2021, 28.7%; 2022, -18.1%; 2023, 26.3%.
2 Source: Pictet WM AA&MR, Thomson Reuters. Past performance, Nasdaq Composite (net 12-month return in USD):  2019, 36.7%; 2020, 44.9%; 2021, 22.2%;  2022, -32.5%; 2023, 44.6%.
3 Source: Pictet WM AA&MR, Thomson Reuters. Past performance, Russell 2000 (net 12-month return in USD):  2019, 25.5%; 2020,20%; 2021, 14.8%;  2022, -20.4%; 2023, 16.9%.
4 Source: Pictet WM AA&MR, Thomson Reuters. Past performance, TOPIX (net 12-month return in JPY): 2019, 15.2%; 2020, 4.8%; 2021, 10.4%; 2022, -5.1%; 2023, 25.1%.
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