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EPIC Investment Partners: The Daily Update

Please see below, an update from EPIC Investment Partners which details the latest UK inflation figures and the possible policy implications for the Bank of England and the UK government. Received yesterday morning – 18/10/2023

UK inflation remains entrenched and at the highest levels of the G7 nations according to the latest figures released today. September’s headline CPI was up 0.5%mom, in-line with expectations, but higher than August, due to the jump in oil prices. Year-on-year, the figure came in above expectations at 6.7%. The core reading eased to 6.1%yoy, while services heated up to 6.9%yoy.

Given that inflation is below the BoE’s 6.9% August projected figure, coupled with the easing labour market, at this stage, there is little evidence to suggest the BoE will hike at the next meeting in a couple of weeks. The central bank will, however, need to consider the fact that wages overtook inflation in September. The market is currently pricing a 50/50 probability of another hike this year, and a higher chance of a hike in February 2024.

“As we have seen across other G-7 countries, inflation rarely falls in a straight line, but if we stick to our plan then we still expect it to keep falling this year,” the Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said. PM Sunak Tweeted: “Tackling inflation remains my number one priority as Prime Minister…. We’ve made great progress, but I know there is still a way to go…. We will stick to our plan and get it done.”

September inflation prints are used as a benchmark in setting certain benefits, which will be announced in April. These latest figures suggest that welfare recipients will receive a generous uplift in payments next year.

Please continue to check our blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Alex Kitteringham

19th October 2023

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Brewin Dolphin – Markets in a Minute

Please see below the latest ‘Markets in Minute’ update from Brewin Dolphin, which covers their views on recent events in markets and was received late yesterday (17/10/2023) afternoon:

Please continue to check our Blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Carl Mitchell – Dip PFS

Independent Financial Adviser

18/10/2023

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Weekly market commentary: US earnings season steps into gear this week

Please see below article received from Brooks Macdonald yesterday afternoon, which provides a global market update with reference to the Israel/Hamas conflict.

  • The Israel/Hamas conflict leads to significant loss of life and financial markets raise the probability of a reduction in oil supply
  • US earnings season steps into gear this week with major financials reporting alongside some important technology names
  • UK inflation data and employment data will be in focus on Tuesday and Wednesday as markets weigh UK recession risks

Last week saw equity and bond markets dominated by the events in the Middle East as well as a set of more dovish US Federal Reserve speakers. Friday saw rising concerns of a ground offensive in Gaza which saw US Treasury yields fall as investors sought safety in the US dollar and sovereign debt. The fact that this ground offensive has yet to begin has helped a cautious optimism to creep into early equity trading this week.

This week sees the US earnings season begin in earnest with a heavy focus on financials alongside a few technology heavyweights. Highlights include Tesla and Netflix which both report on Wednesday and are likely to have an outsized impact on market sentiment given their size as well as the importance of the tech focused magnificent seven to index returns this year. In terms of economic data, US retail sales will be closely watched after Friday’s University of Michigan consumer confidence surprised significantly to the downside. Also of importance will be the weekly jobless claims which have been holding up very strongly. This week is the week used for the US nonfarm payroll surveys so the jobless claims will give an insight into the US employment report in a few weeks’ time.

The UK sees the release of inflation data as well as labour market data this week. Tuesday contains the UK Claimant Count data which looks at unemployment using the % of individuals claiming unemployment benefit. This reading is lower than the wider unemployment measures as some eligible individuals do not claim unemployment benefit and some unemployed individuals are not eligible. UK unemployment is now 0.8% above the lows for the cycle and UK unemployment has increased faster than any other country in the developed world so one to watch. UK inflation meanwhile is expected to stay sticky with a 0.4% month-on-month gain at the headline level, leaving the year-on-year gain at 6.5% versus 6.7% the month prior.

Outside of the US and Europe, markets will also be paying close attention to the Japanese Consumer Price Index (CPI) release on Friday. The Bank of Japan is beginning to react to a higher inflation backdrop after struggling against deflation for decades. The 31 October central bank meeting could see the bank’s policy of yield curve control, effectively quantitative easing in the sovereign bond market, finally end. Friday’s CPI release will be a key input into that decision.

Please check in again with us soon for further relevant content and news.

Chloe

17/10/2023

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Tatton Investment Management – Monday Digest

Please see the below article from Tatton Investment Management providing their views on global economic news from the past week. Received this morning 16/10/2023.

Overview: Capital markets and war

The world took a turn for the worse last week, from a humanitarian point of view. The surprise element of the attack together with the current global economic backdrop, drew immediate parallels with the Yom Kippur War of October 1973, and the oil crisis that followed. Of course, the movements of capital markets are of trivial importance compared to the loss of life and immense human suffering brought upon the civilian populations of Israel and Gaza. However, our job at Tatton is to monitor and interpret the movements and motivations of capital markets and investors, and this remained our focus last week.

Indeed, capital markets are not considered good predictors of changes to the geopolitical risk framework. At the beginning of last week, the oil price rallied predictably by around 4% before falling back towards the end of the week and the move felt somewhat irrelevant following the previous week’s 12% fall. Perhaps this was not overly surprising after all, given the unfolding tragedy seemed to remain confined to Israel and Gaza, rather than spreading to a conflict with Iran via Hezbollah and other Arab states. This may have been a contributor to the stability and even upwards trend in equity markets during most of the week.

At a time when up-trending bond yields make the usual ‘safe haven’ assets of US bonds more at risk to capital losses, the US mega-cap stocks rose as some investors appeared to prefer them to government bonds. Still, benchmark US 10-year government bond yields fell back as well on increased demand, at one stage almost to 4.5%, before pushing back up. This came after after September’s US inflation numbers on Thursday came out higher than expected, suggestion a slowing of the recent downward inflation trend.

So, despite a paradigm-shifting week in geopolitical terms, capital markets appeared as if they had returned to being driven by the same drivers that we have been discussing over the past weeks. However, it would be wrong to conclude that markets are telling us that risks will remain contained. The coming days will be crucial in this respect. For the time being, our thoughts and prayers go out to all that have been affected by the violence and counter-violence, while we also observe that despite the parallels to 1973, oil reserves and regionality of sources 50 years later are on a much more diversified and far more stable footing.  

Is the Bank of England actually winning against inflation?

Britain’s inflation outlook is back in the spotlight (if it ever left). The International Monetary Fund (IMF) published a gloomy UK inflation report in which it forecasts prices will jump 7.7% year-on-year in 2023, and 3.7% in 2024. That is the highest predicted inflation rate of any G7 country, and it could mean another interest rate rise from the Bank of England (BoE), with UK rates staying well above peers to the end of this decade. This is despite the IMF downgrading Britain’s growth forecast to just 0.6% in 2024 – the lowest of any developed nation.

In truth, there are some reasons to doubt the IMF’s outlook. UK inflation has proven particularly persistent – compared to both other countries and our own history – but there has been a noticeable easing of price pressures in recent months. Headline consumer price index (CPI) inflation has been trending downwards since February, with the latest print of 6.7% in August. This is likely to come down further when September’s figures are released, thanks to the food price spike tailing off and increased supermarket competition.

Of course, as the BoE has repeatedly emphasised, its policymakers are worried about the tightness of the UK labour market and continuation of a wage-price spiral – one of the factors that pushed core inflation up again this year. Things remain tight, but analysts expect the labour market to loosen significantly in the next few months, moving even below balance. Given that keeping a lid on wages is the BoE’s proclaimed goal in its inflation fight, this should mean the BoE has delivered its last rate rise of this cycle. If the BoE leaves rates unchanged at its November meeting, that would mean two consecutive months of rates on hold and, if inflation comes down again in the meantime, as widely expected, it will send a strong message that the UK’s rate-hiking cycle is over.

Argentina back in crisis?

Argentina is suffering again, with political drama playing out against a backdrop of economic woes. Argentina has elections on 22 October, and markets are bracing for the possible win of radical far-right candidate Javier Milei. Milei, an economist who adheres to anarcho-capitalism, wants to dollarise the country if elected. His strong polling has led many to fear that their pesos could soon become worthless, thereby prompting a run on the currency. With an official exchange peg of 365 pesos per dollar in place since August, most Argentines have to convert savings at black market trading venues. Exchange rates there were reported at over 1,000 pesos per dollar last Tuesday – the largest gap between official and unofficial rates on record.

To heighten the tension, Argentina appears to be ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’ but with the IMF and China. Argentina owes the IMF $43.4 billion, which accounts for 30% of all the credit extended by the IMF, more than all the countries in sub-Saharan Africa combined. And while IMF officials are aware of the need to cut the cord on Argentina’s struggling economy, the idea of it aligning with China is currently too scary to countenance. In June, the People’s Bank of China gave Buenos Aires an $18 billion swap line, which it immediately used to repay debts to the IMF. This move has never happened in the 80-year history of the IMF. The significance of the event was clearly not lost on IMF officials or US politicians. Just two months later, it gave Argentina another $7.5 billion, despite it not meeting any payment conditions. Only last week, President Fernandez was in Beijing asking for more money, while Argentina has been asked to join the BRICS group, which includes China and Russia.

Those international relationships are now central to the presidential election campaign. Both Milei and centre-right candidate Patricia Bullrich have come out against BRICS membership, with Milei saying he would cut diplomatic ties with China altogether. Both promise pro-market reforms too, with Milei promising to “chainsaw” public spending. Paradoxically, the victory of an anti-China candidate could mean a harsher stance from the IMF toward Argentina, since it would effectively remove the threat of a breakaway. But the flipside is that more restrained spending would inevitably make the IMF happier.

Whatever the case, the outlook for Argentina is not good in the near term. Either free marketeers get their way, and short-term pain comes for (hopefully) longer-term stability, or profligate governments continue to dip in and out of debt crises – sustained only by a lingering geopolitical threat of separation. EM stereotypes are often exaggerated, but Argentina might still be the most deserving of them.

Please check our blog content for advice, planning issues and the latest investment, market and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Alex Clare

16/10/2023

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Evelyn Partners Update – September US CPI inflation

Please see the below article from Evelyn Partners about yesterdays US CPI inflation announcements:

What happened?

US September annual headline CPI inflation rose 3.7% (consensus: 3.6%) and compares to 3.7% in August. In monthly terms, CPI rose 0.4% (consensus: +0.3%), compared to a gain of 0.6% in August.

September annual core inflation (excluding food and energy) rose 4.1% (consensus: +4.1%), versus 4.3% in August. In monthly terms, core CPI rose 0.3% (consensus: +0.3%), compared to a gain of 0.3% in August.

What does it mean?

The ongoing slowing of inflation probably offsets the blow-out jobs report last week for the FOMC to keep interest rates on hold when it next meets on 1 November. Moreover, policymakers are likely to place importance on the recent sharp rise in long-term government yields, which reduces the need for the Fed to tighten further, as the markets have efficiently done their job for them. The FOMC will also be aware about the impact on growth from strikes in the auto sector and a potential US government shutdown from mid-November.

In the CPI details, downward pressure on inflation continues to come from core goods, which decelerated to 0%, its lowest rate since July 2020. This indicates that supply chain disruption from the pandemic has lessened significantly. One way to observe this is through used car prices, which are now falling on an annual basis as production normalises. This puts downward pressure on a past key driver of core CPI inflation from the early stages of Covid from 2020 and the disruption caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, as well as the end of China’s stringent Covid-zero rules from last year.

Meanwhile, in the services sector, inflation appears elevated over recent history, but it is nonetheless on a downward trajectory: in September, annual core services (ex energy) inflation came in at 5.7%, down from a peak of 7.3% in February 2023.

Services inflation had been lifted by rents and implied housing costs in the shelter component. However, existing house prices have slowed sharply and, as a lead indicator, point to lower shelter CPI inflation over the coming 12 months.

Bottom Line

Regardless of whether the FOMC (the US Central Bank’s interest-rate setting body) raises interest rates in November or not, the Fed is likely coming to the end of its interest rate hiking cycle. This reduces the risk that the FOMC overtightens on interest rates to creates downward pressure to the economy and financial markets.

While it is a tricky for investors to balance the impact of interest rates and economic growth on markets, the upside case for equities is that the US economy avoids a severe economic hard landing. The downside case for investors is that a rapid rise seen in interest rates could overwhelm consumers and businesses so that spending grinds to a halt. This downside scenario appears less likely, as the consensus of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, expect 1.0% real GDP growth in 2024, after a 2.1% expansion in 2023.

Please check our blog content for advice, planning issues and the latest investment, market and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Andrew Lloyd DipPFS

13/10/2023

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Brewin Dolphin – Markets in a Minute

Please see below Brewin Dolphin’s Markets in a Minute article, received yesterday afternoon – 10/10/2023

Markets mixed after surprise US jobs data

Stock markets were mixed last week following the release of a forecast-busting US nonfarm payrolls report on Friday.

US indices started Friday’s trading session sharply lower, but staged a quick recovery as investors concluded that the jobs report was less worrying than initially thought. In particular, a slowdown in wage growth helped to calm fears about a rebound in inflation. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq ended the week up 0.5% and 0.9%, respectively, whereas the Dow slipped 0.1%.

In Europe, a sharp fall in eurozone retail sales weighed on the Stoxx 600 and Germany’s Dax, which edged down 0.2% and 0.1%, respectively. The FTSE 100 fell 0.2% amid another decline in UK house prices.

In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 slid 2.4% as US bond yields surged and domestic data showed real wages and consumer spending continued to fall in August. Financial markets in China were closed for the Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day holiday.

Israel-Hamas conflict shocks financial markets

UK and European stock markets fell on Monday (9 October) after Hamas terrorists launched a violent attack on Israel over the weekend. The Stoxx 600 and Germany’s Dax declined 0.3% and 0.7%, respectively. The FTSE 100 closed only marginally lower, as the assault led to a sharp rise in energy prices, limiting losses in the commodity-heavy index. US indices saw some gains as concerns about the conflict were offset by hopes of a pause in interest rate hikes. Two members of the Federal Reserve suggested that higher bond yields could act as a substitute for additional rate hikes.

The FTSE 100 was up 0.9% at the start of trading on Tuesday following the positive session on Wall Street. In economic news, figures from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and KPMG showed retail sales rose by 2.7% year[1]on-year in September, down from 4.1% in August. Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said the high cost of living was continuing to bear down on households.

US nonfarm payrolls smash forecasts

Last week’s economic headlines focused on the release of the highly anticipated US nonfarm payrolls report. Investors were hoping the report would show a decline in hiring, which would support the case for another pause in interest rate hikes. Instead, the number of job gains exceeded even the most bullish estimate. According to the Department of Labor, payrolls surged by 336,000 in September, resulting in the biggest positive surprise since January.

While the data initially exacerbated concerns about interest rates staying higher for longer, the report wasn’t quite as inflationary as feared. Average hourly earnings rose by only 0.2% month-on-month, taking the year-on-year rate down to 4.2%, the lowest since June 2021. Meanwhile, the workforce participation rate (the number of people working as a percentage of the total working-age population) remained steady at 62.8%.

Eurozone retail sales fall more than expected

In the eurozone, retail sales fell far more sharply than expected in August. According to Eurostat, retail sales volumes fell by 1.2% month-on-month and by 2.1% year-on-year. Economists in a Reuters poll had forecast declines of 0.3% and 1.2%, respectively. The monthly fall was driven by a sharp drop in mail orders and online shopping, as well as a drop in petrol sales.

The data added to an already bleak picture of the eurozone economy in the third quarter. Earlier in the week, S&P Global’s purchasing managers’ index for the eurozone came in at 47.2 for September, marking a fourth consecutive monthly contraction (a reading below 50.0 indicates a decline in business output).

Japan household spending drops 2.5% Over in Japan, household spending fell by 2.5% year-on-year in real terms in August. This marked a sixth consecutive month of declines, although it was better than the 4.3% drop expected by markets. Rising prices saw spending on food fall for the 11th month in a row, this time by 2.5% year-on-year.

Separate data showed real wages fell for the 17th month in a row in August, as rising prices continued to outpace salaries. Average earnings fell by 2.5% from a year earlier, according to the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare.

The data came a week after Japan’s prime minister Fumio Kishida said he would release a new economic stimulus package to help boost wages and ease the pain of rising prices.

Please check our blog content for advice, planning issues and the latest investment, market and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Charlotte Clarke

11/10/2023

Team No Comments

Brooks Macdonald: Weekly Market Commentary – US earnings season begins this week

Please see below, Brooks Macdonald’s ‘Weekly Market Commentary’ which provides a brief update on global investment markets. Received yesterday afternoon – 09/10/2023

Over the weekend, a coordinated attack by Hamas militants led to more than 700 Israeli civilian and troop fatalities. The Israeli government has declared war on Hamas with its military targeting over 1,000 sites in Gaza last night. Alongside the fatalities from the attack, the UN estimates that 123,000 people have been displaced from Gaza as of Saturday. The humanitarian implications of a further escalation could be deeply troubling. For markets, the impact is being shown within the Israeli stock market which was down -6.5% yesterday and within the oil price which is seeing a move higher today after last week’s sell-off.

This week sees the start of the US earnings season with JPMorgan, Citi, BlackRock and Wells Fargo all reporting on Friday. With the market weakness of the last month, equity valuations are relatively undemanding which could lead to a rally if earnings prove to be as robust as economists predict. Whether investors ‘look through’ positive near term numbers and focus on stagflation or recessionary risks will be influenced by the evolving economic backdrop as the season develops as well as corporate forward guidance.

On Wednesday the latest producer price inflation index will be released from the US. Headline Producer Price Index (PPI) is expected to slow from 0.7% in August to 0.3% in September while the core reading is expected to stay unchanged at a 0.2% month-on-month gain. Attention will then shift to Thursday’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) report with headline CPI expected to retreat to a 0.3% monthly gain versus 0.6% the month prior. Core CPI is expected to be unchanged at 0.3% month-on-month. Gas prices were up in September versus August so higher energy prices continue to weigh on the headline CPI figures.

Last Friday the market needed to contend with a blockbuster beat in the US employment report which saw almost double the number of jobs created versus expectations. The non-farm payroll report echoes the labour market strength seen in the initial jobless claims and caused markets to forget the weaker data within last week’s Automatic Data Processing (ADP) release. Bond markets reacted sharply with the US 10-year Treasury closing at 4.8%, a fresh high. With the labour market strength showing no signs of abating, the question is whether inflation can fall despite this, making this week’s CPI report critical for bond markets.

Please continue to check our blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Alex Kitteringham

10th October 2023

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Tatton Investment Management: Monday Digest

Please see below the Tatton ‘Monday Digest’, which was received this morning (09/10/2023) and provides their views on global economic news from the past week:

Overview: Recession fears return

The balmy autumn temperatures have continued into October, but September’s market chill has also carried through and that is more troubling. Continuing the recent trend, last week saw a further rise in global long bond yields, despite some weakness signals from the global economy. The 10-year US Treasury benchmark hit a yield of 4.88% in early trading on Tuesday – its highest yield in 15 years. Other government bond markets duly responded, although rose slightly less. Yields subsequently fell back over the week but crept back towards their highs after another extremely strong US jobs report on Friday (with 336,000 new jobs reported). Because of the inverse correlation between yields and bond valuations, this meant a fall in in the global bond index price of about 1.5%. Global equity markets also fell, but mostly due to the valuation impact of rising bond yields rather than pessimism over economic growth and any impact on earnings.

While there is no denying that the forecasts for a slowdown this year have proved wrong – in the US and even here in the UK, market volatility has shifted up across all asset classes which suggests global market liquidity is getting tighter – not surprising, given the continued drain by central banks and the substantial losses across bond markets and, to some extent, commodity markets. Tighter financial conditions make it more likely that growth will slow so we suspect that, in themselves and just like with oil, higher bond yields now probably mean lower bond yields later.

For equity and credit markets, it may be that bond yields plateau and then fall without too much impact. However, the tightening of liquidity is not a helpful signal and the risks of a sharper bout of volatility are clear. Ahead of the next round of rate meetings, central bankers could make things worse if their comments were seen as hawkish. However, inflation data is likely to be helpful rather than a hindrance, so we should perhaps expect them to sound slightly dovish in the next few days and weeks. We certainly hope so.

Brazil’s new era

As the ‘B’ in ‘BRICS’, South America’s largest economy naturally has a lot of growth potential. Like many of its emerging market (EM) neighbours, it also has a bit of an unstable reputation. Many investors would ascribe to it all the regular EM hallmarks: high inflation, corruption and currency woes. South American countries also have a particular reputation for political frailty, fiscal excess and debt crises. That said, Brazil’s economy has never come close to the chaos of its hyperinflation crisis of the late 1980s and early ’90s, where inflation topped 70% month-on-month for the first three months of 1990 and took seven years to stabilise. From 1990 to 1994, it had four different national currencies rolled out in a series of unconventional and mostly unsuccessful plans to stem the crisis. But the Brazil of today is markedly different. 

Like most countries, Brazil saw prices rise as it came out of the pandemic, but its inflation rate peaked in early 2022 and has come down considerably since. In fact, Brazil’s consumer price index (CPI) inflation rate has been below the UK’s every single month for more than a year, touching a low of 3.16% in June. Its government debt is fairly well contained too. Again, pandemic-era emergency spending forced an increase in the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio, but the spike was much smaller than comparable jumps in the UK and US. Improvements have not come at the expense of growth either. GDP growth has come in above 2% in all but one quarter since Q2 2021, the exception being a respectable 1.9% expansion in the last three months of 2022. Its most recent figure of 3.4% in the three months to June 2023 is impressive enough on its own, but even more so when one considers the broader global economic headwinds, as global demand has slowed and supply become tighter.

After last October’s presidential election, where Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was elected for a third term at the expense of Jair Bolsonaro, the transition from far-right Bolsonaro to left-wing Lula was expected to be difficult and potentially violent, but in the end was remarkably smooth, all things considered. In particular, there was no significant Trump-style insurrection attempt, and Lula has proven surprisingly effective at pulling the different political factions together for compromise. Even fears that Lula would loosen fiscal policy dramatically, worsen inflation and send bond yields skyward failed to materialise. In fact, Lula’s recent rhetoric has been remarkably controlled – backing the balanced budget pledge and fiscal reduction targets of his under-pressure finance minister Fernando Haddad. In the spring, Brazil’s 10-year yields fell from above 13.5% to below 11%. And while these have risen since, the step up has been closely in line with global bond market moves.

This is helping Brazil to be seen as a viable investment destination. Despite a challenging third quarter for global stock markets, Brazil’s stock market is up 12.3% over the last six months in local currency terms. Its currency has not fared too poorly either – losing recently against the dollar as all global currencies have, but by no more so than the euro, for example. It is very likely that Brazil has been a beneficiary of western investors’ exodus from Chinese assets this year. And in terms of trade reconfiguration, Brazil might end up being one of the biggest beneficiaries of US decoupling attempts from China – as Mexico has been to this point.

Undoubtedly, the fiscal control on public spending and monetary control on private debt growth comes at a cost and the next two quarters will feel substantially less ‘growthy’ to most Brazilians. This will test Lula’s popularity and may bring pressure to ease. Of course, if global growth comes under significant pressure, an easing in one or both may be warranted. But, while policy inevitably must be responsive, there is a growing sense that the path is one of stability and that could make this feel like a new era. Certainly, the world needs a politically and economically stable Brazil. Brazil is no longer the risky country it once was, and it is in everyone’s interest to make sure it never is again.

Please continue to check our Blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Carl Mitchell – Dip PFS

Independent Financial Adviser

09/10/2023

Team No Comments

EPIC Investment Partners – The Daily Update

Please see below article from EPIC Investment Partners outlining the ‘Dutch Disease’ and giving insight into the Presidential line of succession.  

We wrote in our Daily Update last week about Guyana’s record growth, which is being driven by substantial profits generated from its oil production and export sector, however, having the very real danger of being bedevilled with Dutch disease.

Dutch disease is a term that describes an economic phenomenon where the rapid growth of one sector of the economy, usually natural resources, leads to a decline in other sectors. It is often characterised by a significant appreciation of the domestic currency, which has a detrimental effect on the rest of that country’s economy, hindering exporters and, in turn, other sectors of the economy.

The term “Dutch disease” originated in 1977 when it was introduced in The Economist magazine to analyse the economic situation in the Netherlands (hence the name). This occurred after the discovery of substantial natural gas reserves in the late 50’s. While the Dutch economy benefited massively from increased revenues generated by natural gas exports, the substantial influx of capital into the sector resulted in a significant appreciation of the currency. This, in turn, led to a decline in the manufacturing industry that was not connected to oil, and higher unemployment rates.

There are various ways to mitigate Dutch disease, from actively managing your currency appreciation to economic diversification, including targeted public spending. One commonly employed method is the establishment of a sovereign wealth fund. Numerous developed and developing countries, including Norway, China, Abu Dhabi, Singapore and Qatar, have successfully implemented sovereign wealth funds to use as a counterbalance to their newfound wealth.

Sovereign wealth funds serve the purpose of stabilising capital inflows into the economy to prevent overheating and substantial currency appreciation. Excess revenues can be channelled into areas like education or infrastructure development, again facilitating economic diversification.

Elsewhere, with Kevin McCarthy’s ousting as House speaker on Tuesday, the congressional body is now without an elected leader, meaning the US is also without its second person in the presidential line of succession. The US presidential line of succession is the list of people who would assume the presidency should the sitting leader of the free world be unable to do their job, say due to death, incapacitation, or even removal from office.

After the Vice President, Kamala Harris, it’s the Speaker of the House of Representatives, followed by the President pro tempore of the Senate, Patty Murray. Murray has been promoted to second in line until the House gets a new speaker. The full list includes Cabinet secretaries in order of their agencies’ creation. So, the Secretary of State is fourth in line, while the Secretary of Homeland Security is last, at number 18.

Nine VPs have assumed the presidency mid-term. However, that’s as far as it got, as the offices of president and vice president have never been simultaneously vacant. The closest ever was one Andrew Johnson, Lincoln’s VP, who was impeached in 1868 but acquitted by the Senate.

Dick Cheney served as acting US president for a total of 4.5 hours when George W. Bush was sedated for colonoscopies in 2002 and 2007. In 2021, Kamala Harris became the first woman with presidential powers for 85 minutes during Biden’s colonoscopy.

Please check our blog content for advice, planning issues and the latest investment, market and economic updates from leading investment houses.

06/10/2023

Alex Clare

Team No Comments

EPIC Investment Partners – Daily Update

Please see below the latest ‘Daily Update’ from EPIC Investment Partners, which covers their views on recent events in markets and was received this afternoon (05/10/2023):

In what may be the first signs that the US’s tight labour market could be loosening, companies on the other side of the pond added the fewest number of jobs since the start of 2021 last month, along with pay growth slowing. Private payrolls rose 89k in September after climbing 180k the month before, versus a market consensus of 150k, according to figures by the ADP Research Institute in collaboration with Stanford Digital Economy Lab. Annual wage growth slowed to 5.9%, the 12th consecutive monthly decline.

Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP said: “We are seeing a steepening decline in jobs this month. Additionally, we are seeing a steady decline in wages in the past 12 months”. Within the numbers virtually all jobs added came from leisure and hospitality, whist there were job losses in professional and business services, transportation and utilities, along with manufacturing. ADP’s performance as a predictor of the overall economy is patchy, however, it’s one to be aware of.

It has also been reported that US 30-year fixed mortgages topped 7.5% for the first time since the turn of the century. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, fixed rate mortgages rose 12bp to 7.53% at the end of September. From there, borrowing costs have continued to rise this week, with the Mortgage News Daily, which updates more frequently, putting 30-year fixed deal at 7.72% on Tuesday. Of course, this has a knock effect and consumer demand is starting to dry up. The purchase index which measures mortgage applications for the purchase of a home fell 5.7% from a week ago, with purchase applications at their lowest level since Apollo 13 was released.

One market that is moving in the opposite direction from its recent highs is oil, which dropped sharply again today, with West Texas now trading below $85 per barrel, down from over $93pb last week. As we have recently discussed, oil has been grinding higher since its near $70pb low in June on continued supply side deficiencies, particularly on the back of OPEC supply cuts. However, the selling has been driven by a change in demand side dynamics. The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) released their crude oil inventory report yesterday, which showed the four-week average of implied gasoline demand fell to the lowest level in 25 years for this time of year, whilst oil exports from the US soared. There were also supply-side drivers as well, as Cushing Oklahoma crude stockpiles rose slightly after seven straight weeks of decline.

Please continue to check our Blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Carl Mitchell – Dip PFS

Independent Financial Adviser

05/10/2023