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Stocks resumed their winning streak on the back of some signals that the economy might avoid a recession in 2023. Consumer discretionary stocks were especially strong, thanks partly to a big jump in Tesla shares over the week following a favorable outlook. Defensive sectors (consumer staples, health care, and utilities) lagged. Value stocks underperformed growth shares.

US Debt ceiling reached, while funds go big and long on Chinese equities in January. Each week, the Syz investment team takes you through the last seven days in seven charts.

The major US equity indexes ended mixed for the week and US Treasury yields fell as recession fears appeared to weigh on sentiment. The Dow Jones underperformed and gave back a portion of its year-to-date advance while the Nasdaq recorded a modest gain. Indeed, dampening inflation fears helped growth stocks to outperform, as the prospects of lower interest rates support their valuation multiples.

S&P 500 performs well amid reassuring inflation figures, while Bitcoin continues to rebound. Each week, the Syz investment team takes you through the last seven days in seven charts.

Stocks recorded a 2nd consecutive week of gains as investors weighed key inflation data and quarterly earnings reporting season kicked off in earnest on Friday. The Nasdaq and growth-oriented sectors outperformed, helped by rebounds in some mega-cap technology-related names. Large US Investment banks (JPMorgan, etc.) beat consensus expectations 4th quarter earnings estimates but issued cautious outlooks.

U.S. macroeconomic statistics point to a soft landing, while Chinese equities come back to life and European stocks outperform. Each week, the Syz investment team takes you through the last seven days in seven charts.

An encouraging US jobs report pushed the major US equity indexes higher for the week – although we note that trading volumes were subdued. After a poor start of the week, Friday’s official payrolls report from the Labor Department appeared to turn sentiment back in a positive direction by raising hopes that the economy could be on its way to a “soft landing”.

The main US stock indices ended the last trading week of the year mostly lower in thin trading as the S&P 500 finished 2022 down nearly 20%. However, we note that the S&P 500 Index remained above its intraday low recorded the week before. Consumer staples and materials shares fell the most, while consumer discretionary shares were resilient, thanks in part to strength in Target and several other retailers.

The major US equities benchmarks were mixed in a week of generally quiet holiday season trading. Hawkish comments from the Fed and other global central banks over the previous week continued to be a key factor weighing on markets. Stronger than expected US GDP estimates (from 2.9% to 3.2%) and US weekly jobless claims surprising modestly on the downside intensified fears of future Fed rate hikes.

Intensified fears over rising interest rates pushed the S&P 500 Index lower for a 2nd consecutive week and to levels last seen in early November. Nearly every sector within the index recorded sharp losses with the exception of energy shares, which were supported by a rebound in oil prices. A roughly USD 4 trillion expiration in options contracts on Friday sparked additional volatility.

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