Chart #1 —
US stocks down slightly over the week
The Nasdaq 100 and the S&P 500 lost some of their gains from the previous week. The former fell by 1.1% by the end of the week and the latter by 0.7%. A restrictive speech by some Fed members and the missile fired in Poland prompted investors to take profits.
Chart #2 —
The market revises the Fed's terminal rate upwards
No less than 16 different speeches from Fed member took place last week. All delivered the same message: higher rates for longer; no pause or impending pivot...
Among the most prominent messages:
Bostic: more rate hikes are needed, "we need to keep rates up" until inflation reaches 2%.
Bullard: rates could reach 7%.
Waller: The Fed still has "a long way to go" in raising rates.
As a result, the market revised upwards the forecast of the interest rate at which the Fed will stop tightening (the "Terminal Rate"), after it had been revised downwards following the release of the inflation figures 2 weeks ago. As is often the case, an upward revision of the terminal rate de facto leads to an upward revision of the number of rate cuts expected afterwards.
Expected Terminal Fed ratwe ( in red ) and number of rate cuts expected in H2 2023 ( in green )
Source: Bloomberg, www.zerohedge.com
Chart #3 —
Investors' positioning remains cautious
Bank of America's survey of fund managers shows that they remain relatively cautious in their asset allocation (note that this survey took place before the US inflation figures). Cash is the most popular asset class with an overweight of 51%. This is followed by alternative investments and commodities. Stocks and bonds remain underweight in portfolios.
Chart #4 —
Earnings growth expectations for the S&P 500 in Q4 continue to be revised downwards
Wall Street's outlook for S&P 500 earnings is increasingly bleak. Analysts now expect earnings growth to be negative in the fourth quarter. Expectations for 2023 are also being revised downward for all S&P 500 sectors, with technology making the most negative contribution.
4Q 2022 YoY S&P 500 EPS estimates
Source: Bloomberg
Chart #5 —
Some changes in Berkshire Hathaway's top 10 positions
The investment firm led by Warren Buffet has published its positions at the end of the third quarter. New purchases by the "sage of Omaha" include Taiwan Semiconductors, timber specialist Louisiana-Pacific Corp and financial firm Jefferies. Other new holdings include oil companies Occidental Petroleum and Chevron, furniture specialist RH, media stock Paramount and chemicals company Celanese.. Indeed, the US dollar had its worst week since March 2020 and, before that, since May 2009.
Berkshire Hathaway's top 10 holdings at the end of the third quarter
Source: CNBC
Chart #6 —
The US bond yield curve continues to invert
Recent developments in the US bond market include: 1) For the first time since the Covid recession, Fed yields are higher than 30-year Treasury yields; 2) The 2-year 10-year curve is the most inverted since 1982; 3) The 3-month 10-year curve reaches a new low in the current cycle. Currently, 76% of the US curve is inverted. In the last 50 years, whenever more than 70% of the curve was inverted, a recession followed. A macroeconomic figure released last week seems to corroborate this risk: the 6-month growth rate of the leading economic index fell into negative territory again in October and is at levels that have signalled a high probability of recession in the past (2020, 2008 and 2001)...
US % of Yield curve inverse
Source: Crescat Capital, Bloomberg
Chart #7 —
Gold and bitcoin's paths are diverging
While the correlation between gold and bitcoin had been rising steadily this year, the two assets have diverged since the FTX case. The correlation between gold and bitcoin has collapsed to -0.45, the lowest level since February.
Correlation between Gold and bitcoin
Source: Bloomberg