The Week In Markets – 10th February – 16th February 2024

The UK economy has officially fallen into a recession in the second half of 2023. The most anticipated recession has finally arrived many months later as data on Thursday confirmed GDP fell by -0.3% in Q4 2023. Market expectation was that GDP would only fall -0.1%. This disappointment was offset by better than expected GDP data for the month of January, pointing towards a mild and short-lived recession.

At the start of January 2023, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak made five promises, one was to grow the economy. We are in a pivotal year for the Conservative party, and this failed promise may be one of the reasons the party lose the upcoming general election. There are various reasons for the slowdown at the end of 2023; industry strikes were prevalent, poor weather kept shoppers’ home and the list goes on. The March Budget is less than three weeks away and may be one of the last chances that the Prime Minister and Chancellor get to turn the tide in favour of the Conservatives.

Politics is not our area of expertise so let’s turn back to UK inflation data which was released the day before on Wednesday. Headline inflation (year-on-year) held steady at 4% despite market expectations of a slight rise and the same was the case for core inflation, (excludes food and energy prices) reported at 5.1%.  Inflation is certainly at its sticky point and the Bank of England (BOE) must consider this before their next meeting. UK wage growth (excluding bonuses) is trending lower but still running at 6.2%. This is still double the pace that the BoE would deem acceptable to bringing inflation down to the 2% target. There were some positives in the inflation report, with food prices falling on a month-on-month basis for the first time in two years.

Valentines day was celebrated on Wednesday and this day was chosen as a tactical strike day. Delivery food drivers for companies such as Deliveroo and Uber Eats staged a strike in demand for better pay and conditions. It involved up to 3,000 drivers and riders who are generally classified as self-employed, meaning their employers are not obliged to pay them the national living wage of £10.42 an hour. This wage will be rising in April and the workers want to be compensated for the “cold, rain and absurd distances” that they have to brave. On Friday morning UK retail sales shocked the market, with January’s data showing the biggest recovery in retail sales since April 2021 with people buying more across all categories except clothing. This, coupled with positive results from companies such as NatWest led the market higher on Friday and capped off a good week for UK equities.

Inflation in the US was a shock to markets as inflation came in hotter than expected, contradicting UK data. For January the inflation rate (month-on-month) rose to 0.3% and core inflation rose to 0.4%. This data disappointed and markets began to sell off, the S&P 500 dropped 1.4% on the Tuesday. The story of the US economy has been a defiant one as it remains robust, and this has meant expectations of rate cuts have firmly been pushed to the US Federal Reserve’s May meeting rather than March. In both the US and UK, the last mile for inflation is proving the toughest. The Russell 2000 index (US small cap index) proved particularly volatile this week, falling over 4% on the back of the higher inflation data. However, it has also experienced some very positive days of late and over the last five trading sessions is still in positive territory.

Recession has also arrived in Japan as they contracted at the end of 2023. GDP growth over Q4 2023 was -0.4%, a complete blow to investor expectations of 1.4%. The road to economic recovery in Japan will surely begin when the central bank decide to exit their decade long ultra-loose monetary policy. Weak domestic demand however makes it difficult for the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to pivot towards monetary tightening as they plan to do so by April. Large cap Japan stocks have performed extremely well during this period helping drive the Nikkei 225 index up 15% year to date. This has been offset by a weakening yen which has fallen over 5% versus GBP.

While Q4 2023 data was disappointing, more recent data suggest economies are re-accelerating which has spurred on hopes of very mild recessions and future growth. This combined with lower rates and falling inflation is the bull case for equities. We are positioned for this, but equally hold a range of assets that should benefit if this base case does not occur.

Nathan Amaning, Investment Analyst

Risk warning: With investing, your capital is at risk. The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up and you may not recover the amount of your initial investment. Certain investments carry a higher degree of risk than others and are, therefore, unsuitable for some investors.

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