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Article | 06 February 2024 | Investments
Global equities were mixed in January, with the MSCI World Index rising 1.2%. Japanese stocks were the strongest performers, boosted by robust corporate earnings and a weaker yen (TOPIX +7.8%). US equities also gained (S&P 500 +1.7%), helped by a continued advance from stocks seen to benefit from the growing use of artificial intelligence. European shares also moved higher (MSCI Europe +1.6%). However, emerging market equities retreated (MSCI EM -4.6%), weighed down by weak returns in China (MSCI China -10.5%).
Global bonds weakened as hopes faded that rates may be cut as soon as March, given a re-acceleration in headline inflation rates and a stronger-than-expected start to 2024 for most economies. The yield on the 10 year US Treasury bond rose 7 basis points (bps) to 3.95% while the yield on the 10 year German Bund increased 18 bps to 2.18%. Corporate bonds held up better than government debt, with high yield outperforming investment grade bonds.
The US dollar appreciated over January, as the Fed took pains to emphasise it was in no rush to cut interest rates. While the euro weakened against the dollar, it strengthened against the Japanese yen. The Bank of Japan signalled that rising wages meant a 2% inflation rate was becoming more sustainable, but signalled it was in no rush to end its ultra-accommodative stance.
Oil prices rallied on concerns over disrupted supply given heightened tensions in the Red Sea and fears that the Israel/Hamas conflict could spread across the wider region. Brent crude closed the month +2.8% at $80.53 a barrel. Gold prices eased slightly over the month, but remained above $2,000 a troy ounce.
Volatility rallied 15.3% in January, with the Vix Index closing at 14.4. However, the index remained below the 20 level which is usually viewed to be an indicator of market stability.
Morningstar reported that, for the first time on record, global sustainable funds experienced net quarterly outflows in the final three months of 2023, primarily due to significant outflows from US funds. In contrast, European sustainable funds continued to see inflows.