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Economic and market overview

Equity and bond markets bounced back hard from disappointing returns in June, amid suggestions that rising interest rates in key regions will help bring inflation under control.

Australian shares registered gains of more than 5%. Most major overseas share markets performed even more strongly – the MSCI World Index closed the month 8.0% higher, with selected markets enjoying double-digit gains. This made July the best month for risk assets since late 2020, when encouraging Covid vaccine trial results were first reported.

The tone of earnings announcements among US firms for the three months ending 30 June was generally encouraging.

Fixed income markets also generated solid positive returns, following dismal performance in the first half of 2022. A sharp drop in government bond yields in all key regions supported positive returns from sovereign bonds. In fact, returns from US Treasuries in July were the strongest in more than two years.

Credit securities fared well too, as the general improvement in risk appetite saw spreads narrow.

Australia:

The Reserve Bank of Australia raised the Official Cash Rate by 0.50 to 1.85 per cent on August 2, 2022.

Consumer price inflation rose by 1.8% in the June quarter, and by 6.1% on a rolling 12-month view. Whilst high, these measures were below consensus expectations. In turn, this prompted hopes that local interest rates might not need to increase as much as previously feared.

Encouragingly, Australian employment increased quite sharply in June, with more than 88,000 jobs created. This pushed the unemployment rate down to 3.5%; a record low.

New Zealand:

Controlling inflation appears to be the primary goal for now, despite the risk of strangling growth and impeding the housing and labour markets.

Inflation in New Zealand quickened to an annual rate of 7.3% in the June quarter, which was higher than expectations and seemingly unpalatable for the central bank.

US:

The US economy contracted in the three months ending 30 June. According to the latest available data, the economy shrank by 0.9% over the period, following a 1.6% contraction in the first quarter of the year. By one measure, this suggests the world’s largest economy is already in recession.

Some observers argue that activity levels remain quite buoyant, however, and not consistent with a recessionary environment.

The labour market also appears to remain healthy. More than 370,000 new jobs were created in the US in June, taking the total in the first half of 2022 to more than 2.7 million.

While debate rages on about whether or not the economy is in recession, most commentators agree that conditions are deteriorating. Consumer price inflation quickened to an annual rate of 9.1% in June, which is eroding confidence levels and clouding the outlook for spending. Households are also facing higher debt repayment costs owing to rising interest rates. Time will tell whether these pressures result in a full-blown recession or a shallower, temporary downturn.

Europe:

The European Central Bank raised interest rates by 0.50 percentage points in July; the first increase in borrowing costs for 11 years. Further rate hikes are anticipated in the remainder of the year, despite a projected slowdown in growth in the region. According to central bank forecasts, GDP in the Eurozone will rise 1.5% in 2023, down from an earlier estimate of 2.3%.

The weaker economic outlook saw the euro briefly trade below parity with the US dollar, for the first time since the inception of the currency more than 20 years ago.

The Bank of England released a Financial Stability Report in July, which warned that the UK economic outlook has ‘deteriorated significantly’.

Asia:

Chinese authorities reiterated their ‘zero Covid’ policy, which soured sentiment towards shares in China and Hong Kong. There were also concerns about further potential regulatory changes affecting Chinese technology firms.

In Japan, the central bank persisted with a negative interest rate policy, holding official borrowing costs at -0.1% – a stark contrast from policy settings among other major central banks.

Meanwhile, in a shocking development, former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was assassinated whilst giving a speech. Abe held the top job twice in Japan, initially in 2006/2007 and then again from 2012 until September 2020.

Australian dollar

The Australian dollar strengthened in July, appreciating by 1.5% against the US dollar and closing the month just under the 70 cent level; slightly below the average over the past five years.

The AUD also added 2.1% against a trade-weighted basket of other major currencies.

Australian equities

Australian equities benefited from a broad-based rally in July, with 10 out of 11 sectors posting gains. This resulted in the S&P ASX 200 Accumulation Index closing the month 5.8% higher.

The IT sector, which returned 15.2%, was the best performing area of the market. Solid gains in the A-REIT and Financials sectors also propelled the market higher, with several stocks clawing back lost ground from June.

Despite strength towards month end, Energy (+2.1%) and Materials (-0.7%) stocks initially struggled on the back of commodity price weakness, owing to US dollar strength and concerns about a moderating demand outlook. Oil prices slipped below US$100/barrel, for example, before stabilising and closing the month around US$103.

Investors in Materials stocks remained cognisant of China’s increasingly challenging GDP growth targets, given the impact of Covid outbreaks and associated disruptions. The outlook for China’s property construction market remains particularly uncertain. This is important, as the sector accounts for around a third of China’s steel demand. Concerns weighed on iron ore prices, and on sentiment towards Materials stocks in general.

The overall improvement in risk appetite supported small caps. The S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries Accumulated Index returned 11.4%, outperforming the large cap index for the first month this calendar year. All small cap sectors fared well, with performance of Health Care stocks a particular highlight.

Listed property

Global property securities performed well in July. The FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Index returned 6.4% in Australian dollar terms.

Although high frequency data are starting to show signs of an economic slowdown in the US, investors seemed confident that macroeconomic headwinds are now priced in to valuations. This supported an improvement in sentiment.

The best performing regions included Sweden (+22.8%) and France (+15.6%). Laggards included Hong Kong (+0.0%), Singapore (+2.5%) and Japan (+2.5%), all in local currency terms. In general, the more defensive Asian property markets – including Hong Kong, Japan and Singapore – significantly underperformed those in the Americas and Europe.

A-REITs performed even more strongly, with the S&P/ASX 200 A-REIT Index returning 11.9%. Stocks in the Industrials sub-sector fared particularly well, collectively adding nearly 16%. Office A-REITs performed less well, but nonetheless rose an impressive 7.6%.

Global equities

Broad-based optimism among investors supported strong gains in most major regions. The MSCI World Index added 8.0%, rebounding from weakness in the June quarter.

Developments in the US set the tone. The S&P 500 Index rose 9.2%, essentially reversing June’s move lower. Favourable earnings releases among tech firms supported a 12.4% rally in the NASDAQ. This was the best monthly return for more than two years.

Most major European markets added between 3% and 8% over the month, supporting a return of 7.3% from the Euro Stoxx 50.

Asia bourses were mixed. Stocks in Japan and Singapore registered solid gains, but the Chinese and Hong Kong markets both lost around 7% of their value.

Global and Australian Fixed Income

Sovereign bond yields fell quite sharply in most major regions, despite further increases in inflation. This resulted in favourable returns from fixed income.

Investors appear increasingly confident that central banks’ efforts to control inflation through aggressive policy tightening will be effective, and that borrowing costs might not need to be raised as high as some previous forecasts.

The evolving outlook for interest rates – primarily in the US, but elsewhere too – took the heat out of the recent increase in bond yields, and suggested fixed income investors might have priced in a little bit too much policy tightening over the past few months.

Ten-year Treasury yields in the US closed July 0.36% lower, at 2.65%. Yields fell meaningfully in Europe too, and by an even greater margin in Australia. Ten-year Commonwealth Government Bond yields fell 0.60% over the month, to 3.06%. This was a welcome development for investors in the local bond market; after losing nearly 10% of their value in the first half of the year, Australian bonds added more than 3% in July.

Global credit

Equity market strength and moderating concerns about the extent of interest rate hikes supported sentiment towards credit.

Spreads narrowed in the investment grade and high yield sub-sectors, supporting favourable returns from corporate bonds in Australia and other major markets. Spreads on EUR-denominated securities subsequently narrowed quite sharply, raising optimism that the market will be resilient without the artificial support of such a large, price-insensitive buyer.

Source: Colonial First State