Mulling market weakness
Thursday, September 24, 2020 at 12:00PM
Simon Ward

The recent reversal in equity markets has been attributed to renewed pessimism about global economic prospects due to waning fiscal support, surging European virus cases and deadlocked UK-EU trade talks.

Investor concerns, according to this interpretation, were supported by mixed flash PMI results for September – in particular, a shock fall in the Eurozone services activity index to 47.5, a four-month low.

The Eurozone manufacturing survey, however, was notably stronger, while business expectations for the coming 12 months were the highest since February, improving in both manufacturing and services and across Germany, France and the rest of the euro area as a whole.

Globally, the flash results suggest that the manufacturing new orders index will have risen further in September, with inventories indices slipping back. The new orders / inventories differential – a widely watched indicator of cyclical direction – may reach its highest level since 2017. This manufacturing differential has tended to lead services activity historically – see first chart (which incorporates data through August only).

An alternative explanation for market weakness is that a strong economic rebound is reversing an earlier “excess” money boost to asset prices. The equities / cash switching rule followed here requires six-month growth of global real narrow money to be above that of industrial output in order to recommend holding equities. A previous post suggested that this differential, which reached a record in April, would turn negative in October.

The switching rule takes account of data reporting lags so an October cross-over would not generate a recommendation change until December. Reacting in real time would not have produced better performance historically.

Have this year’s unusual conditions resulted in heightened market sensitivity to monetary shifts, shortening the normal response time? The differential between three-month growth rates of real narrow money and industrial output turned negative in July – second chart. Again, using the three- rather than six-month growth differential for the switching rule would not have generated better performance historically.

If the excess money explanation is correct, the good news is that the recent reversal may already be tailing off. Monthly growth of global real narrow money has fallen back sharply but still averaged about 1% in July / August – third chart. Monthly growth in industrial output is likely to moderate to below this level in Q4 as the pre-covid peak is surpassed.

A further monetary slowdown would be concerning but also surprising given QE / rates support. Remaining countries will release August monetary numbers over the coming week, starting with the Eurozone tomorrow, while the US weekly report later today will give a read on mid-September.

Article originally appeared on Money Moves Markets (https://moneymovesmarkets.com/).
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