What To Watch In The Short Term

 | Jan 29, 2019 13:46

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

  • While share markets fell earlier in the week on the back of trade and growth worries, they then rebounded helped on Friday by reports of the Fed considering ending its quantitative tightening program earlier than expected and a temporary end to the US partial government shutdown. This left US shares down 0.2% for the week, but Eurozone shares rose 1.1%, Japanese and Chinese shares rose 0.5% and Australian share rose 0.4%. Bond yields fell, helped by a dovish ECB. While the oil price rose on Friday, as political conflict risks disrupting Venezuelan oil production, it fell over the week. Gold and metal prices rose but the iron ore price fell. While the US dollar fell on talk of QT ending early, the Australian dollar was little changed held down by increasing expectations of lower interest rates in Australia.
  • More signs of a dovish turn at the Fed with reports that it is considering ending its quantitative tightening (QT), or balance sheet reduction, program at an earlier level than previously expected. When the Fed started to reverse its quantitative easing program back in October 2017 by not reinvesting all of the proceeds of maturing bonds it was thought the run-off in its bond holding (or QT) would continue until the Fed’s balance sheet had fallen from around $US4.5trn to around $US2-3trn, which would have taken until around late 2020 or early 2021 at least. But now the Fed looks to be reassessing what the appropriate level of bank reserves is, and this may imply an appropriate level for its balance sheet of around say $3.5trn which would be reached early next year and imply an end to QT by then. So much for being on “auto-pilot”! It’s likely that the Fed will sooner or later make a formal reference to this, possibly as early as after Wednesday’s Fed meeting. This is likely to be a marginal positive for markets to the extent that the withdrawal of liquidity associated with QT may have been one factor in last year’s share market weakness.
  • The US partial government shutdown has now also ended - at least for three weeks. This is not a permanent resolution as funding for President Trump’s wall has not been resolved so the shutdown could start up again after February 15. But the three-week reopening will allow public sector workers to be paid and keep airports and border security going, and so it will minimise (for now) the impact on the economy. While the tension between Trump and the Democrats in Congress remains intense, today’s deal to reopen - and the fact that it was achieved without any “down payment” on Wall funding - shows Trump is sensitive to the impact on the economy. The same applies to the trade issue with China and the coming need to raise the debt ceiling. The five-week shutdown was a record but since it was only 25% of government it was equivalent to 8.5 days of a full shutdown in terms of its macro-economic impact (versus say the 16 day shutdown in 2013). That said, for an affected public servant five weeks without pay is five weeks and it must have been pretty painful for many!
  • The IMF catches up to markets. While the IMF revised down its 2019 growth forecast from 3.7% to 3.5% and its 2020 global growth forecast from 3.7% to 3.6% and warned of threats to global growth there was nothing new here. As usual the IMF is just catching up to the slowdown in global growth seen last year and the falls seen in share markets. That said the return to the post GFC norm of growth downgrades (where global growth forecasts start near 4% and end near 3%) reminds us that we have still yet to escape the caution and fragility that has characterised the post GFC period. This is clearly a threat, but it also keeps inflation down and monetary policy easy which is a positive for investment markets.
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