Market Update 22nd July 2022
Over the past week inflation continued to dominate the
news as the European Central Bank increased interest rates
for the first time in 11 years and CPI in the UK rose
again to over 9%. Both exceeded expectations but neither
generated a significant reaction. Other data out this week
is more interesting.
Current employment
vacancies are at a record high of 1.3 million but there
are signs that some of the people who left the labour
market are at last returning, and wage growth remains
below inflation. The lack of wage inflation means the Bank
of England has some leeway at its next interest rate
meeting to not hike interest rates, but they tend to
follow the Fed to a lesser or greater degree no matter
what the situation.
In the UK the battle to
become the next Prime Minister heads into its final stage.
The next five weeks will see former Chancellor Rishi Sunak
fight it out with Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. Rishi must
be hoping everyone forgets he was one of the first cabinet
members to stick the knife in Boris Johnson, and is
responsible for the highest rates of tax for the last 70
years. Meanwhile, Liz Truss is trying to gain ground with
Tory party members by criticising the current management
of the economy and promoting a reversal of the rise in
National Insurance and Corporation Tax in a bid to ease
the cost of living crisis and stimulate growth in the
economy. I think you can guess who would get my vote!
The Support for our Strategy that these markets, in these volatile times, require active investment management using common sense, not ‘follow-the herd (benchmark) passive investing’ where significant, virtually static weightings to these indices are retained no matter what the news flow and how the markets are performing.
As detailed in our last newsletter, the FTSE 100 since launch on 3rd January 1984 at 1,000 made +595% in it’s first 16 years to 30th December 1999. Since that time in the subsequent 22.5 years, the FTSE 100 made just 3.68% over that 22.5 year period at just 1/7th of 1% per annum average notwithstanding dividend income.
- Major Equity Markets – their losses since March 2022 and since the beginning of January 2022 respectively to the end of June 2022, during which time we had de-risked to just 9% across all of these markets by March and then to zero from March 2022 until July 2022:
Market Indices: | Losses since March 2022: | Losses since January 2022: |
---|---|---|
1. FTSE-100 | -7.21% | -7.30% |
2. FTSE-250 | -13.15% | -21.91% |
3. S&P-500 | -18.29% | -21.01% |
4. Nasdaq | -24.56% | -30.35% |
5. German DAX | -13.47% | -21.09% |
6. EuroSTOXX 50 | -13.71% | -21.41% |
7. Nikkei 225 | -9.94% | -13.31% |
- Major Equity Markets – their gains since we invested up to 49% (for growth-risk investors) across these markets since the beginning of July 2022:
Market Indices: | Gains since we invested from 1st July 2022: |
---|---|
8. FTSE-100 | +3.83% |
9. FTSE-250 | +8.46% |
10. S&P-500 | +5.68% |
11. Nasdaq | +9.35% |
12. German DAX | +7.31% |
13. EuroSTOXX 50 | +7.42% |
14. Nikkei 225 | +7.63% |
- We are closely monitoring these indices trading ranges and as agreed with our clients we will be taking short term profits as we go, and then reinvesting as the markets pull back to cheaper levels, as successfully identified and actioned since the beginning of 2022 detailed above.
GLOBAL: PROFITS WARNING AS SALES FALL
This week brought profit warnings from Deliveroo, Made.com
and pub-group Mitchells & Butler as they feel the
effect of rising costs and deteriorating economic outlook.
Last week saw Wetherspoons and soft drink-maker Fever-Tree
also downgrade their forecasts. One contributory factor is the
squeeze on disposable incomes as Made.com warned of a
decline in big ticket spending as consumers become more
pessimistic. After inflation regular earnings fell by a
record 2.9% between March and May. IF you’re in
need of guidance with stocks and shares, visit our
stockbroking page
for more information on how we can help.
Profit
warnings have not been restricted to sectors dependent
on consumer spending. Direct Line reduced its forecast
while insurer Sabre issued a similar warning earlier
this month. The UK has seen fewer profit warnings than
the US and Europe this year and the number of downward
revisions appears in line with the pre-Covid average.
This could be due to UK companies starting with a more
pessimistic outlook or the FTSE weighing heavily towards
energy and mining companies, which have been benefiting
from high commodity prices.
EUROPE: ECB RAISES INTEREST RATES TO A 20 YEAR
HIGH
Following the euro hitting parity with the dollar last
week, the European Central Bank increased interest rates
for the first time in 11 years as it steps up efforts to
tackle inflation. The 0.5% increase was bigger than
expected, but the ECB said it believed a larger increase
was necessary as inflation is still rising quickly. CPI
inflation for the Eurozone hit a record 8.6% in June and
energy costs account for almost half of the increase. Last
week the euro fell to parity with the dollar but the
larger hike has helped the euro rise to $1.02.
The
ECB also said it was able to raise rates faster than
expected as it has agreed details of its new bond-buying
programme. This scheme is designed to prevent a sell-off
in the debt of countries like Italy and Greece which is
more vulnerable to rising interest rates. The ECB’s task
could be made harder after Italy’s prime minister Mario
Draghi’s resigned after losing a confidence vote. The
ECB’s decision caused the yield on German 10-year
government bonds to rise 0.1% but the yield on Italian
government bonds increased 0.24% to 3.6%.
UK: INFLATION SHOWS SIGNS OF NARROWING
UK Inflation rose again in June as CPI hit 9.4%. The
increase is mainly being driven by the sharp rise in
household energy bills and petrol and diesel prices. Core
inflation (excluding food and energy costs) fell slightly
for the second month in a row. The Bank of England has
responded to rising inflation by floating the possibility
of a larger-than-expected 0.5% hike in August.
Rising
inflation is driving up the cost of servicing UK
government debt. The monthly interest bill hit £19.4bn in
June, almost double the £10.1bn cost in June 2021. This
surge in cost may play a part in the race to become the
next prime minister. Former chancellor Rishi Sunak led the
MPs’ vote and favours higher taxes to deal with some of
the costs of Covid but he currently trails Liz Truss in
polls of Conservative party members. Truss is strongly in
favour of tax reversals and cuts to ease the cost of
living crisis and a Truss victory has been tipped to push
down the value of sterling which could help stimulate
exports.
Please note that nothing written here by the author should be construed as giving advice, it merely outlines our thinking. Any advice will be discussed and proposed on an individual basis with each client when any advice that is given should be fully discussed with us before proceeding with any proposals made.
If you enjoy reading this weekly update, please feel
free to share it with your friends and / or family who may
also find the contents of interest, and do not hesitate to
contact us if you need any help, information or advice
yourself about any of the areas covered this week.
Yours sincerely,
Philip A. Simmonds MBA, LL.B(Hons), FPFS, Chartered
MCSI
Chartered Wealth Manager | Chartered Financial Planner
Solicitor (company in-house solicitor)
Chief Investment Officer | Head of Strategy
E : phil.simmonds@private-office.co.uk
phil.simmonds@private-office.law (for legal matters)