A mixed week for equities and the stark economic reality of the virus continued to be evident in GDP growth, while US-China tension were apparent. Ian Slattery reports.
Equities saw mixed returns last week as US markets fell on Friday (most European markets were closed on Friday 1st May, rather than yesterday like Ireland). Oil posted some gains, helped by evidence that crude consumption was recovering in some countries. On the political front, US-China tensions are fully back in the picture as the US suggested last week that the COVID virus had originated in a Wuhan laboratory, a view it reiterated over the weekend.
The stark economic reality of the virus continued to be evident in GDP growth data. Figures released last week show the eurozone economy contracted 3.8% (quarter-on-quarter) in Q1 as US GDP for the same period came in at an annualised rate of -4.7%. Consumer spending and initial jobless claims releases continued the negative data trend. Given the lockdown only really took hold globally in March, Q2 figures are also expected to be extremely weak.
Oil prices recovered slightly finishing at $22 per barrel
At the ECB meeting last week the size of asset purchases was kept unchanged but the terms on existing liquidity operations for banks were made more generous and a new liquidity operation with eased conditions was introduced. The moves came as ratings agency Fitch downgraded Italian sovereign debt to BBB-. In the US, the Fed is finalising more corporate lending programmes which should help to shore up credit markets further.
News on the virus was positive as there is increasing evidence that the inflection point of infection rates has been reached. More funding and encouraging initial trial results also emerged from various sources in relation to both a vaccine and treatments. Governments around the world, including here in Ireland, also began to release clearer plans to ease restrictions over the coming weeks and months.
Equities
Global equities were down last week by -1.3% in local terms and -2.0% in euro terms. Europe showed the greatest decline down -3.8%.
Fixed Income & FX
The US 10-year yield finished at 0.67% last week. The German equivalent finished at -0.54%. The Irish 10 year bond yield finished at 0.12%. The Euro/US Dollar exchange rate remained at 1.08, whilst Euro/GBP remained at 0.87.
Commodities
Oil prices recovered slightly finishing at $22 per barrel. Gold decreased to $1,697 per troy ounce but is up 12% year to date in local terms and copper decreased to $5,094 per tonne.
The week ahead
Tuesday 6th May
US services PMI data goes to print.
Wednesday 7th May
Eurozone retail sales for March are published.
Thursday 8h May
US non-farm payrolls for April are released.