The Week In Markets – 24th August – 30th August

Markets were on edge this week as they eagerly awaited “the world’s most important stock” Nvidia’s earnings report. Nvidia has been long labelled the Artificial Intelligence (AI) posterchild, momentarily becoming the world’s largest company in June, but investors have contemplated whether insatiable demand for their processor chips is sustainable.

On Wednesday, Nvidia announced they had comfortably beaten expectations with record revenues of $30bn, however by the end of US trading the stock had fallen by 6%. Investors were worried how sustainable the extraordinary levels of growth were and also picked up on the significant delay of their second-generation Blackwell AI chips. This drop in Nvidia’s share price has been a drag on US markets given the company is a large part of US indices. At the time of writing the US market is slightly down for the week.

Last week markets were keen to hear from US Federal Reserve Chair, Jerome Powell, who spoke at the Jackson Hole Symposium on the trajectory of future rates. “The time has come for policy to adjust”, was the message as the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) digested softening employment data. Non-farm payrolls has slowed, and unemployment continues to accelerate beyond the 4% mark.

Bank of England (BoE) Governor Bailey was also present at Wyoming as he concluded that longer-term inflationary pressures had eased, however he was keen to state further interest rate cuts would not be rushed. At the beginning of this month interest rates were cut from the 16-year high of 5.25% to 5% but the BoE will remain cautious as “it’s too early to declare victory” on inflation.

Temu, the Chinese online marketplace company, has gained huge popularity since its launch at the end of 2022, breaking into the US, Canada and European markets. They gained their popularity off the wide range of products they sell at low prices, complemented by their aggressive social media campaigns and advertisements whilst also gamifying the shopping experience on their app. On Tuesday parent company, China PDD Holdings missed market estimates for Q2 revenues, and this was followed by stern comments from Co-CEO Chen Lei, which caused a one-day share meltdown wiping $55bn off the market cap. Chen Li explained that increasing challenges from competition and changing consumer demand have affected earnings with China’s domestic economy faltering.

Nigeria is a country we don’t often cover in the weekly but this week the “Giants of Africa” reported their economy grew 3.19% in Q2 (year-on-year) boosted by agriculture and the increase in crude oil output. There have been disruptions to agriculture driven by weather conditions, security and logistic issues however it was still the greatest contributor (22.61%) to growth. Crude production has grown to 1.4m barrels a day with the target of reaching 2m barrels a day by the end of 2024.

The US dollar has continued to weaken over recent days and is now at levels last seen in March 2022 against Sterling (£). A weakening US dollar is often associated with a risk-on sentiment in markets. Markets have definitely been in more optimistic spirits recently, bouncing back after an extremely rocky first few days in August.

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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