The Global Equities Storm Is Back

 | Feb 06, 2019 12:09

Originally published by BetaShares

Global equities returned a strong 7.3% in local currency terms during January, unwinding their 7.2% slump in December. The return in Australian dollar terms, however, was a more muted 4.5% reflecting a rebound in the Australian dollar over the month.

Several factors supported the equity rebound, though the most important was likely an easing in US interest rate fears as the Federal Reserve turned more “dovish”. Indeed, after having raised rates four times in 2018, the Fed now says it can be more “patient” in raising rates further, and the market has largely priced out the risk of further policy tightening this year. Other supportive factors were ongoing good economic growth indicators in the US economy, a solid start to the Q4 US earnings reporting season and encouraging signs that the US and China will conclude some form of a trade deal in coming months.

Easing Fed fears saw bond yields drop further, which supported fixed-income bond returns, while an associated weakening in the US dollar also helped gold prices – despite the rebound in risk sentiment. Listed property also continued to benefit from the decline in bond yields.

Across the seven benchmark asset classes, Australian listed property (A-REITs) produced the best performance in December, returning 6.2%. Cash produced the lowest return of only 0.2%. By 6-12 month return momentum rank, listed property was the best performing asset class, followed by international equities – while gold remains the worst performer.