Team asset management : Onwards and upwards

Team plc

TEAM Asset Management’s global weekly market review for week commencing 4th December. TEAM Asset Management is a Jersey-based independent asset management company of AIM-listed parent, TEAM plc (LON:TEAM).

Much like the mountaineer crushing a steady climb, the major US stock indexes continued their ascent, with the bellwether large-cap S&P 500 Index, the tech-laden Nasdaq index, and the Dow Industrials index each recording further gains this week. Embracing FOMO (fear-of-missing-out), retail investors bought over US$ 7billion of stocks in the past five trading days, propelling the S&P index to its highest closing level since March 2022.

The key datapoint was the release of Friday’s US jobs report, which came and went without much fuss. The lens of the market has become hyper-sensitive to the unemployment picture on the basis that a deterioration in the jobs market is almost certainly required if the Federal Reserve (‘The Fed’) is going to begin reversing the path of interest rates in 2024. As it stands, the market is currently forecasting more than four separate cuts next year, commencing in the first quarter.

November’s job growth figure of +199,000 was above October’s jobs growth figure of +150,000, but below the twelve-month average of +240,000. Bond yields ‘backed up’ (lingo used by bond investors to describe a move higher in yields), pressuring bond prices on expectations that a still-healthy labour market is likely to make Chairman Powell and colleagues think twice about cuttng just yet.

What might give Powell & Co. some ammunition is the latest University of Michigan survey, which found that inflation expectations amongst US consumers – the primary growth engine of the economy – fell to their lowest level since March 2021. All told, consumers responded that they expect the annual inflation rate to be approximately +3.1% twelve months from now, sharply down from the +4.5% figure reported in the November survey. Inflation expectations are an important component of the toolkit the Fed uses in assessing whether inflation is likely ‘contained’ or may have the capacity to flare up again in the future.

Elsewhere, the Chinese stock market must be one of the contenders for most disappointing investments in 2023. The much-hyped COVID economic rebound has proved for the most part to be a damp squib, with ongoing issues in the property sector casting a large shadow over investor sentiment. The domestic stock market index is now at a 5-year low, whilst a measure of the property sector index has, incredibly, returned to Global Financial Crisis levels.

Turning to the commodity sector, oil has almost fully round tripped its second half rally this year, with WTI crude back at $71 level on abundant short term supply concerns. Gold has regained its allure, briefly touching new all-time highs of $2,100 in nominal terms before settling back under the psychologically important $2000 level. Central banks are on pace to buy over 1,000 tonnes of the yellow metal this year. It is worth nothing that these institutions once held 80% of their balance sheet in gold vs. 20% today. The crypto market remains in the spotlight, continuing its strong rally year-to-date, but cooled off over the weekend. The leading digital currency by market capitalisation, Bitcoin, declined to finish the week at around $41,000, after previously reaching a high of $45,000, a 2023 high. Little surprise that selective traders might be capitalising on the profits from the surge observed recently.

Looking to the week ahead, investors have plenty to keep an eye on including a monthly Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, a monthly update on US retail sales, and, crucially, a US Fed meeting that concludes Wednesday. While there is prevailing confidence that the Fed will keep interest rates unchanged at its final meeting for the year, market watchers will be searching for clues in rhetoric and body language over the timing of potential cuts in 2024.

Share on:
Find more news, interviews, share price & company profile here for:

Latest Company News

What the Spear’s 500 listing suggests about TEAM’s strategy

TEAM Asset Management’s Spear’s 500 inclusion reinforces its positioning as a risk-aware, long-term wealth manager focused on capital preservation.

How NEBA builds legacy plans that protect more than just wealth

NEBA’s legacy planning turns inheritance into a structured, values-driven strategy that protects wealth and purpose across generations.

TEAM plc agrees recommended all share acquisition of WH Ireland

Team plc and WH Ireland have agreed a recommended all share acquisition that will create a combined wealth and asset management group operating across Jersey, the UK and selected international markets.

Nvidia drives market momentum while the Fed keeps investors guessing

AI lifted markets early last week but shifting rate expectations forced a sharp rethink, Nvidia soared, but not everyone followed.

Investor unease amid US government reopening dynamics

Markets are treading carefully as the US government reopens, signalling that the next wave of data and policy may force a broader reset.

AI cuts and weight‑loss deals are telling investors more than expected

AI cuts and pharma deals are showing where the real delivery is, investors are beginning to shift focus from promise to execution.

Search

Search