Late month reversal of sentiment
The combination of a reduction in geopolitical risks and aggressive support from the world’s central banks proved a powerful tailwind for markets in the final quarter of 2019 and that positive momentum carried on into the early part of the new year without much of a pause. However, it wasn’t long before this new optimism was tested by an escalation of tensions in the Middle East, brought about by the latest flare up between the US and Iran. Ultimately, global markets guessed correctly on a muted Iranian response to the assassination of one of their generals and the issue quickly retreated from the front of investor minds.
“Positive momentum of the final quarter of 2019 carried on into the early part of the new year without much of a pause”
The second test for positive sentiment has proven not so easy to dismiss and in the end was enough of a concern to prompt a sharp risk-off move in markets late in the month. The issue of the coronavirus infection in China was initially downplayed by the Chinese government, before the seriousness of its potential impact prompted a large scale and aggressive policy response. Travel restrictions, speedy infection rates and a long incubation period meant there was, and still is, an unusual degree of uncertainty about how negative this issue could be for the global economy. At the time of writing we still don’t know the answer to that question, with the resulting uncertainty having predictably negative effects on riskier assets. Economically sensitive commodity markets fell -8.8% in the last week of January, with stock markets following a day or two later to end the month in negative territory (e.g. UK equities down -3.2% for the month as a whole). As could be expected, traditional safe-haven assets rallied in response to the outbreak with, for example, gold up +4% in the same time period. Perhaps the most notable performance came from government bond markets, where the flight to safety dynamic helped yields fall in the UK and US to within a whisker of all-time lows.