Checklist For A Better Year In Shares

 | Feb 04, 2019 10:16

Originally published by AMP Capital h2 Investment markets and key developments over the past week/h2

  • Share markets were mixed over the last week. US shares rose 1.6% helped by a more dovish and supportive Fed and mostly good economic and earnings news, Chinese shares gained 2% helped by continuing progress in US/China trade talks and Japanese shares rose 0.1% but Eurozone shares fell 0.1% and Australian shares fell 0.7%. Bond yields mostly declined helped along by a dovish Fed. Commodity prices rose with the iron ore price getting a big boost as Vale (BA:VALE) announced production cuts as a result of its dam disaster amounting to around 2-3% of global iron ore production. The US dollar fell on the back of Fed dovishness and this along with a surge in the iron ore price saw the Australian dollar rise.
  • While the Fed was not dovish enough in December with shares plunging accordingly, it made up for it in the past week going very dovish. Thanks to various “cross currents” that are clouding the outlook gone is the reference to “further gradual increases” in the Fed funds rate to be replaced by “patience” as it assesses what to do next. Gone too is leaving the normalisation of its balance sheet (or Quantitative Tightening) on “autopilot” to be replaced by greater flexibility and an end to it at a higher level for the balance sheet than earlier expected. If the end point for the Fed’s balance sheet is around $3.5-3.7trn as Fed Chair Powell implied, then QT could be over by year end. We see the Fed being on hold regarding rates for the next six months at least. The Fed’s dovish shift and its flexibility on rates and its balance sheet is akin to its 2016 interest rate pause and so is positive for investment markets.