Market Musings 310525: The Ides of May Augur Well
Podcast this week:
Who benefits from a weaker US dollar?
(click link to listen)
In this podcast, Edmund Shing, discusses the US dollar's weakening situation and its beneficiaries.
Key points:
“Sell in May and go away” has been terrible advice this year!
Best May calendar month performance for the stock market in 25 years, with the S&P 500 up 6% (best May performance since 1990!) and +7% for the German DAX and the Italian FTSE MIB indices also both up nearly 7%.
On a statistical basis, when the US stock market performs so well in the month of May which is not traditionally a strong month for stocks,The market has always been higher one year later, 10 out of 10 times when the S&P 500’s May performance has exceeded 5%.
The key variable to watch remains bond markets, with long-term bond deals rising sharply. This suggests stress due to potentially unsustainable budget deficits and growing sovereign debt burdens.
In the short term, there are several measures that the US can use to drive up demand domestically for US government bonds, such as loosening the Supplementary Leverage Ratio for US banks, incentivising banks to buy more US Treasury bonds. This may limit any further increases in the 30-year US bond yield for now. Equally in Japan, the Ministry of Finance is shifting its bond issuance schedule to favour shorter maturities, given the sharp rise in the 30 year JGB bond yield to 3%.This is the highest level reached in decades.
Watch also the US dollar as this looks like it's about to break down looking at the DXY index.In general, a weaker dollar is usually positive for macro liquidity and thus good for stocks, corporate bonds and commodities.
Strongest performing segments of the stock markets include:
European Small Caps,
Junior Gold Miners,
Video Games/E-sports,
Listed Infrastructure.
Charts:
May not usually so good for stocks
S&P 500, DAX, FTSE MIB all performed very well over May
Ultra-long bond yields rise sharply, highlighting that bond investors worry about growing debt burdens
US dollar threatens to…