Aberdeens Wochenrückblick

Was bewegt die Märkte? Pünktlich zum Wochenende fasst Aberdeen Standard Investments zusammen, welche Entwicklungen und Ereignisse die vergangene Woche besonders geprägt haben. abrdn | 30.11.2018 10:09 Uhr
© Fotalia.de
© Fotalia.de
Archiv-Beitrag: Dieser Artikel ist älter als ein Jahr.

Hinweis: Dieser Beitrag ist auch auf Aberdeens "Thinking aloud"-Plattform verfügbar

Week in review: slight relief

Buoyed by comments from the US Federal Reserve (Fed), investors enjoyed some respite from the November gloom this week. Nevertheless, most markets are set to finish the month significantly down, extending the autumn’s declines.

Well, Fed?

Following last Thursday’s Thanksgiving holiday, US investors appeared revitalised. The S&P 500 had gained 4.0% by Thursday’s close. This recovery was helped by comments from Fed chairman Jay Powell. Investors interpreted Powell’s comment that interest rates were “just below neutral” as an indication that future rate rises might not come as fast as many were expecting.

Apple falls from top of the tree

In a year dominated by the fortunes of the technology giants, we’ve heard a great deal about the FAANG stocks: Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google. But this week it was Microsoft that hogged the headlines. After a 16-year hiatus, the software giant reclaimed its former standing as the world’s largest company by market capitalisation, knocking its old rival Apple from its perch.

The main factor in this is the relative resilience of Microsoft’s share price. While the FAANGs led the surge in the stock market at the start of the year, they’ve become the biggest casualties of the autumn slump. So, as Apple has fallen, Microsoft’s lesser declines in October and November have allowed it to move ahead. On a longer-term basis, the strength of Microsoft’s cloud-computing business has helped its share price to power ahead since 2016.

Carney

The UK’s FTSE 100 also performed well this week. Although there was little sign of light at the end of the Brexit tunnel, Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England (BoE), indicated that a “disorderly” Brexit would hit the UK economy extremely hard in the short term.

On the surface, the BoE’s analysis offered some support for Theresa May’s argument that her proposed Brexit deal is the only viable option in the circumstances. This would increase its chances of gaining parliamentary approval. But some MPs are likely to take the BoE’s pronouncements with a pinch of salt, given that the central bank predicted a much more negative economic outcome from the Leave vote than actually came to pass.

There was good news from the BoE, however, when it came to Britain’s banks. Stress tests showed that the UK’s seven largest banks and building societies would be able to continue lending in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

One result of the week’s Brexit uncertainties was that the pound weakened against both the euro and the US dollar. This provided a boost for the FTSE 100 as many of its constituent companies make the bulk of their earnings overseas, rendering them more profitable in sterling terms when the pound is weak.

Emerging from the gloom?

Although they’ve had a grim 2018 so far, emerging markets fared better than developed markets in November. Most also shared in the lighter global mood this week as the softer noises from the Fed relieved some of the pressure on their currencies.

There were exceptions, however. The Mexican stock market plunged to its lowest level for four years on concerns about the new government’s economic policies. The Mexican peso hit a five-month low. And investors in China’s A-share market enjoyed only a brief respite from their year-to-date woes. A slide on Thursday erased all the gains made earlier in the week, as investors grew cautious ahead of the meeting between Presidents Xi and Trump at this weekend’s G20 summit in Argentina.

And finally …

Today is St Andrew’s Day. The saint is closely associated with Scotland, whose national flag – the saltire or St Andrew’s cross – represents the uncomfortable apparatus on which the saint was crucified. Legend tells that the saltire appeared in the sky before the battle of Athelstaneford in 832 AD.

But Scotland’s historical adoption of St Andrew’s Day appears to have been distinctly practical. It served to shift the date on which animals were slaughtered from the end of October, when the pagan festival of Samhain had been celebrated, to ensure that there was enough meat to see people through a typical Scottish winter.

St Andrew’s Day is also celebrated in other countries, including Romania, Poland, Portugal, Russia and Ukraine. There, its associations are less with battles and beef, and more with wolves and wizardry. In Romania, St Andrew’s Eve traditionally marks the start of vampire activity, which lasts until April.

So, if you’re enjoying a glass of single malt tonight to celebrate Scotland’s national day, you might just want to season it with garlic …

Performanceergebnisse der Vergangenheit lassen keine Rückschlüsse auf die zukünftige Entwicklung eines Investmentfonds oder Wertpapiers zu. Wert und Rendite einer Anlage in Fonds oder Wertpapieren können steigen oder fallen. Anleger können gegebenenfalls nur weniger als das investierte Kapital ausgezahlt bekommen. Auch Währungsschwankungen können das Investment beeinflussen. Beachten Sie die Vorschriften für Werbung und Angebot von Anteilen im InvFG 2011 §128 ff. Die Informationen auf www.e-fundresearch.com repräsentieren keine Empfehlungen für den Kauf, Verkauf oder das Halten von Wertpapieren, Fonds oder sonstigen Vermögensgegenständen. Die Informationen des Internetauftritts der e-fundresearch.com AG wurden sorgfältig erstellt. Dennoch kann es zu unbeabsichtigt fehlerhaften Darstellungen kommen. Eine Haftung oder Garantie für die Aktualität, Richtigkeit und Vollständigkeit der zur Verfügung gestellten Informationen kann daher nicht übernommen werden. Gleiches gilt auch für alle anderen Websites, auf die mittels Hyperlink verwiesen wird. Die e-fundresearch.com AG lehnt jegliche Haftung für unmittelbare, konkrete oder sonstige Schäden ab, die im Zusammenhang mit den angebotenen oder sonstigen verfügbaren Informationen entstehen. Das NewsCenter ist eine kostenpflichtige Sonderwerbeform der e-fundresearch.com AG für Asset Management Unternehmen. Copyright und ausschließliche inhaltliche Verantwortung liegt beim Asset Management Unternehmen als Nutzer der NewsCenter Sonderwerbeform. Alle NewsCenter Meldungen stellen Presseinformationen oder Marketingmitteilungen dar.
Klimabewusste Website

AXA Investment Managers unterstützt e-fundresearch.com auf dem Weg zur Klimaneutralität. Erfahren Sie mehr.

Melden Sie sich für den kostenlosen Newsletter an

Regelmäßige Updates über die wichtigsten Markt- und Branchenentwicklungen mit starkem Fokus auf die Fondsbranche der DACH-Region.

Der Newsletter ist selbstverständlich kostenlos und kann jederzeit abbestellt werden.