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Weekly Market Recap – August 9, 2024

Weekly Recap:

Following a tense weekend where renewed concerns about the US economy collided with technicals associated with an unwind of the Japan carry trade, US stocks started out in freefall on Monday the 5th, extending a decline that had begun during the latter portion of the previous week. The S&P 500 opened more than 4% lower and the Nasdaq was down more than 5% to start the session. Most notably, the VIX (the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index) briefly spiked to more than 65, a level only reached previously during the severe market shocks associated with the pandemic in March of 2020 and the financial crisis in Q4 of 2008. See the Chart of the Day for a time series of the intraday highs on the VIX.

Thankfully, stocks stabilized during the course of Monday’s session, aided in part by the 10:00 am release of the ISM Services Index (51.4) for July, which came in better than expected across the board. The rest of the week was a gradual recovery as the panic subsided, with stocks finishing only modestly lower by Friday’s close.

Fixed income also experienced some normalization over the course of the week.  Rates moved higher across the curve as the flight-to-safety trade waned, and credit spreads inched tighter day by day, in sync with the gradual recovery in equities. Mortgage rates appear to be a beneficiary of the recent fall in rates, with the national average 30-year fixed rate mortgage falling roughly 1/4 percent week over week in the most recent market survey.

Besides the ISM Services print, macro news was sparse last week. Initial jobless claims (233k) pulled back slightly, and total consumer credit outstanding grew by $8.9 billion in June, slightly lower than consensus estimates.

Chart of the Week: VIX Intraday High

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy has been resilient despite the higher interest rate environment. Analysts are forecasting low double digit EPS growth in 2024; growth of that magnitude will depend on the economy avoiding recession.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 20.2x is well above the long run average, so valuations are likely to be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Eq Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns from current levels over the coming decade are likely to be in the single digits.

Interest Rates

Futures markets imply that the Fed will enact multiple interest rate cuts across the last three FOMC meetings of 2024, with additional cuts in 2025. Belly and long end rates are already at or near what are likely to be their post-pandemic equilibrium levels, unless the US economy enters a recession.

Inflation

After falling rapidly in late 2022 and all of 2023, inflation became sticky in the 3-4% range in the first half of 2024. Services inflation remains somewhat elevated, in part due to heavily lagged shelter costs. Volatile energy prices driven by geopolitical conflicts could present a risk to the inflation outlook.


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