MV Weekly Market Flash: Dollar Dominance and the Ghosts of 1997
Read More From MVOne of the big stories in markets this year has been the hale performance of Japanese equities, with the benchmark Nikkei 225 index finally clawing back to and surpassing the record high it had set 34 years earlier, at the end of calendar year 1989. Currently the Nikkei is up 13.2 percent for the year – not bad! But that’s 13.2 percent in local currency terms. Unfortunately for investors whose portfolios are calculated in US dollars, the Japanese yen is down around ten percent versus the greenback. So that nice gain on Japanese stocks winds up as a fairly anemic...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Sideways, With a Splash of Uncertainty
Read More From MVWith all due respect to T.S. Eliot, April is not necessarily the cruelest month – but so far it has not been particularly upbeat either, as far as US equities are concerned. The S&P 500 established its last record high on the last Thursday in March, right before the long Easter weekend. Since then, stocks have bounced around – with a bit more volatility than we’ve been used to seeing lately – in a mostly directionless manner. As usual, there are quite a opinions out there as to what it all means – is this a pause before a long...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Oil, Jobs and Money
Read More From MVLet’s just say that it has not been a great time in recent weeks for the Six Cut Crowd. You remember these folks, the ones who took the Fed’s three rate cut scenario at last December’s FOMC meeting and promptly doubled that scenario. Not three, no, no, no, but six rate cuts in 2024! That seemingly (to us, anyway) outlandish view fully priced itself into the bond market and pushed yields down as the year came to an end. The 10-year Treasury yield, which had briefly touched five percent in October, ended the year around 3.8 percent. Equity investors got...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: China’s Long Game
Read More From MVA few weeks ago we used this space to write about China and India, the two largest countries in the world by population that both figure prominently into the global economy. If you recall from our commentary that week, India’s stock market has been going gangbusters while China’s has brought nothing but disappointment to those looking for a portfolio win from there. Not surprisingly, therefore, there has been a good deal of chatter among market pundits recently encouraging investors to get on board the India train. It’s easy to tout the benefits of a trade when that trade is enjoying...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Happiest Fed Ever
Read More From MVNo, Jay Powell did not do a happy dance at the post-FOMC press conference, but the Fed chair was feeling good on Wednesday and it showed. And why not? The big takeaway from the much-anticipated “dot plot” – the Summary Economic Projections representing Committee members’ best guesses about the economy and interest rates – was the upward revision in growth expectations. After growing 3.2 percent in the fourth quarter last year (and 3.1 percent for 2023 overall), the median FOMC projection for 2024 real GDP growth is 2.1 percent, up substantially from the 1.4 percent median estimate in the last...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Equity Investors Plow Through Hot Inflation
Read More From MVWe always arrive at work on an Inflation Day with a certain amount of uncertainty hovering over us. When the CPI or the PCE report – the two main indicators of US consumer price trends – comes out at 8:30 a.m. it has the potential to sharply shift market sentiment away from whatever direction it was moving in. When the numbers come in hotter than expected, that sentiment can turn sour very quickly. Not so for the hot numbers that came out this week. The Consumer Price Index report for February came out on Tuesday and showed inflation advancing faster...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Sometimes, Good News Is Good News
Read More From MVThe US equity market has been at one of those junctures recently that could go one of two ways. Glass half empty, or glass half full? Happily for those of us who like to see the stock prices trending in the upward direction, the glass half full crowd seems to be winning the day. The central point of contention has been thus: can Mr. Market overcome his bitter disappointment at once again being wrong, so very wrong, about how many interest rate cuts are in store for 2024, and learn to love the idea of a strong economy? Well, the...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Nothing Changes Except the FOMO-Meter
Read More From MVIf you are a long-term reader of our weekly commentaries and our annual outlooks you are no doubt familiar with our thoughts about cryptocurrencies. If you are new to our writings, then here is a short summary: at this point in the 16-odd year of this asset class, it exists essentially as speculation for speculation’s sake, with a real-world use case limited to underworld transactions on the dark web. Oh, and as a way for El Salvador’s autocratic president to style himself as the “world’s coolest dictator.” All of which is to say, we do not consider bitcoin and its...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: AI to the Rescue, Again.
Read More From MVThe Agony and the Ecstasy, one could say. Irving Stone’s famous 1961 novel may have been about the life of Michelangelo and his tortuous experiences while painting the Sistine Chapel, but the phrase easily lends itself to this week’s journey from darkness to light in the US stock market. As we wait for trading to get underway on this Friday morning, all appears well once again, thanks largely to the doings of one company and its continued ability to outdo the ever-higher expectations set by the market. Hedgies Caught Out Nvidia, the company that appears to have a dominant position...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: A Week of Mixed Signals
Read More From MVSpare a thought, if you will, for the poor bond market. The fixed income crowd lives and breathes for the certainty of where interest rates are headed, only to be forever buffeted by the crosswinds of conflicting economic data that tear apart the certitude of any directional trends. This week was particularly trying, and most of all for the masses tethered to the “6 in ’24” narrative proclaiming six Fed funds rate cuts in 2024, a narrative which, outside the seemingly impenetrable insular bubble of bond traders and their media boosters, does not exist and has not existed. The culprits...
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