Market Key Points
- The Australian market gained 0.9% during May, led by Information Technology.
- Most overseas markets finished the month higher. U.S. markets rallied strongly, with the S&P 500 gaining 5.0%.
- European markets, represented by the FTSE Eurotop 100 Index, were also up 2.9%.
Australian equities
The ASX 200 Index recorded a modest 0.9% gain in May. There was a broad dispersion of returns at the sector level. Information Technology (I.T.) led all sectors (+5.5%), while Utilities (+3.4%), Financials ex-property (2.6%) and Property (+1.9%) also saw solid returns.
Communications (-2.6%) had the most significant downturn. Consumer Staples(-1.0%), Energy (-0.7%) and Consumer Discretionary (-0.6%) were other laggards.
A further rise in the consumer price index has seemingly raised the chances of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) keeping interest rates steady, blunting the market's risk sentiment.
Despite this, I.T. has maintained its impressive performance in 2024, mirroring the surge in the tech-dominated U.S. Nasdaq Index. Meanwhile, investors are still showing interest in Utilities. A strong May result consolidated the sector's 13.5% returns over three months.
As consumer pressures persist, the outlook for Consumer Discretionary weakens. This weakness was evident in profit guidance from the nation's largest car dealership group, Eagers Automotive (ASX: APE), which resulted in a 20% drop in its share price.
Global Equities
Emerging markets underperformed developed markets in May, returning -1.81% (MSCI Emerging Markets Index (AUD)) versus a 2.02% return (MSCI World Ex—Australia Index (AUD)), as large and mid-cap markets continue to outperform small-cap markets.
U.S. indices rallied into the end of the month as further evidence of a disinflationary environment boosted markets. The Nasdaq, Dow Jones and S&P500 hit new all-time highs during the month as the Tech sector continued to gain on A.I. trades and strong earnings.
Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet contributed more than half of the S&P 500's 4.96% gain (in local currency terms) for the month. The Nasdaq Composite gained 7.0% (in local currency terms).
European markets were mostly higher despite higher-than-anticipated inflation, while U.K. inflation continued to ease with a drop in headline inflation. The FTSE 100 Index and DAX 30 Index gained 2.08% and 3.16%, respectively (in local currency terms).
Property
The S&P/ASX 200 A-REIT Accumulation index finished May 1.9% higher. Global real estate equities (represented by the FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Ex Australia Index (AUD Hedged)) also performed well, advancing 3% for the month.
Australian infrastructure performed strongly, with the S&P/ASX Infrastructure Index T.R. returning 2.9% for the month and up 2.9% YTD.
The Australian residential property market experienced an increase of +0.8% Month on Month (as represented by CoreLogic's five capital city aggregate). Perth was the biggest riser (+2%), followed by Adelaide (+1.8%) and Brisbane (+1.5%). In contrast, Melbourne (+0.1%) was the worst performer during May.
Fixed Income
In its May meeting, the RBA left the cash rate target unchanged at 4.35%, noting that it expects inflation to remain elevated above target levels in the short term. The RBA's updated economic projections show inflation slowly returning to target over the next few years.
Australian bond yields remained relatively stable throughout the month, with 2-year Bond yields rising three basis points and 10-year Bond yields falling one basis point.
As measured by the Bloomberg AusBond Composite 0+ Yr Index, the Australian fixed-income market returned 0.39% from month-end to month-end. CPI numbers in April came back higher than expected at 3.6%, and the unemployment rate rose to 4.1% in May.
The Federal Reserve in the U.S. held a similar view and unanimously voted to keep policy rates steady, maintaining the federal fund's target rate at 5.25-5.5%.
Unlike the Australian market, the U.S. bond market gained strength in May, with U.S. 2-year and 10-year Treasury Note yields dropping 17 and 18 basis points, respectively. Softer inflation numbers and a cooling job market resulted in a drop in the Treasury yield curve, with the market pricing in at least one rate cut in 2024.
Currencies & Commodities
The Australian dollar (AUD) appreciated in May, closing 1.5% higher in trade-weighted terms to 63.1, and posting its largest monthly gain against the USD since December.
AUDUSD rose as the USD weakened following a lacklustre US employment report, which increased market expectations for Fed rate cuts this year. Mid-month, news of slowing April inflation further supported these expectations after three months of weak CPI data.
The AUD was among the strongest in the G10 currency basket, finishing the month at an 11-year high against the Japanese Yen (JPY).
Relative to the AUD, the Pound Sterling (GBP) depreciated the least during the month, closing 0.7% lower. Year-on-year, the AUD is ahead of the USD, GBP, Euro (EUR) and JPY by 2.9%, 0.1%, 0.9% and 15.9%, respectively.
Economic key points
- [The RBA left the cash rate at 4.35% in its May meeting
- Australian annual inflation came in above expectations at 3.6% in April
- Australian GDP growth came in at 1.1% for the March quarter.
Australia
The RBA left the interest rate unchanged at 4.35% in its May meeting but worse-than-expected inflation figures have put back the prospect of a cut until late 2025. The annual inflation rate in April came in at 3.6%, above the expected 3.4%. The RBA forecasts that inflation will take until late 2025 to return to the 2-3% target range, and financial markets are fully pricing in a first RBA rate cut only by the middle of 2025.
Retail sales figures for April rose 0.1%, with spending remaining subdued as cautious consumers reduced discretionary spending. Annual nominal growth was 1.3%, indicating falling demand in real terms.
These results further complicate the RBA's role in steering inflation back towards a 2-3% target range without incrementally weakening the domestic economy.
GDP growth for Q1 2024 was confirmed at only +0.1%, below market expectations. The economy's annual growth rate has slowed to +1.1%, down from +1.5% during the calendar year 2023, but upward revisions to Q4 2023 indicated surprising momentum and may have further reduced prospects for a local rate cut this year.
The unemployment rate rose to 4.1% in April, above the anticipated 3.9%. The Westpac-Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment edged down to 82.2 in May, falling for a second consecutive month, as sticky inflation and higher interest rates continue to weigh on households.
Composite PMI decreased to 52.1 in May, indicating a slower pace of growth than previous months. The NAB business confidence index remained at 1 in April, with sentiment weak in retail, wholesale and mining. The trade surplus widened to $6.55 billion in April, well below the market forecast of $7.3 billion.
Global
Insert Global section here.
US
The GDP growth rate for Q1 2023 was 1.3%, in line with forecasts, down from 3.4% in the previous quarter. The primary driver of this result was a downward revision in consumer spending.
The Federal Reserve kept the target range for the federal funds rate unchanged at 5.25%-5.50% during its May meeting for the sixth consecutive time. Ongoing inflationary pressures and a tight labour market indicate a stall in progress toward bringing inflation back down to 2%.
Per market expectations, annual inflation eased to 3.4% in April, as inflation steadied for food and shelter.
The economy added 272,000 jobs in May, well above forecasts of 185,000 and the most growth in five months. The unemployment rate rose to 4.0%, against expectations of a flat reading at 3.9%.
Retail sales were unchanged in April, below the anticipated 0.4%, suggesting consumer spending has eased slightly. Annual retail sales grew 3.0% for the year to April, below the expected 3.8% increase. Consumer sentiment dropped to 69.1 in May, well below April's 77.2. Concerns over inflation and the labour market weigh on consumers.
The composite PMI rose to 54.5 in May as growth accelerated in both manufacturing and services. The trade deficit widened to US$74.6 billion in April, below forecasts of a US$76.1 billion gap.
Eurozone
The inflation rate in the Euro area rose for the first time in five months to 2.6% in May, up on the 2.5% expected and the 2.4% reported in the prior period. Prices were higher for energy and services, with a slowdown in inflation for food, alcohol and tobacco, and non-energy industrial goods.
The unemployment rate declined to 6.4% in April, below the market forecast of 6.5%.
Retail sales declined 0.5% in April, below the anticipated 0.3%. Annual retail sales were flat, below the expected 0.1% rise. Consumer confidence rose to -14.3 in May, driven by slowing inflation and expectations of an imminent rate cut by the ECB.
The Composite PMI rose to 52.2 in May as stronger demand boosted output and hiring.
UK
Early estimates suggested that the British economy grew 0.6% on quarter in the first three months of 2024, above forecasts of 0.4%, and ending the recession it entered last year. It also marks the strongest expansion in over two years, with services rising 0.7% amid widespread growth across the sector.
The annual inflation rate eased to 2.3%, slightly above the market forecast of 2.1%. The largest downward pressure came from falling gas and electricity costs due to the lowering of the energy price cap in April.
Consumer confidence rose to -17 in May, improving for the second month, but the cost-of-living crisis and high borrowing costs continue to weigh on sentiment.
Retail sales fell 2.3% in April, compared to the expected 0.4% decline, while annual sales decreased by 2.7%, well down on the anticipated 0.4% drop.
The unemployment rate for the three months to April rose to 4.4% as manufacturing, retail and hospitality employers have cut jobs. At the same time, wage growth remains strong at 6.4%, which was helped by April’s 10% increase in the national living wage. The Bank of England are unlikely to cut interest rates until August at the earliest until wage rises moderate. Composite PMI fell to 53.0 in May, driven by solid growth in services activity.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak unexpectedly called a general election for July 4, hoping to capitalise on improved economic conditions.
China
The Chinese economy grew by a seasonally adjusted 1.6% in Q1 2024, quickening from an upwardly revised 1.2% increase in the previous quarter. This result brings annual growth in the same period to 5.3%, mainly driven by exports and manufacturing investment.
Challenges persist in real estate and local government investments, hindering economic growth.
Inflation in China increased 0.1% in April, with the annual rate coming in at 0.3%, above the market forecast of 0.1%.
China’s unemployment rate decreased to 5.0% month-on-month, below the expected 5.2%.
The composite PMI dropped to 51.0 in May as factory activity dropped for the first time since February and services growth was soft.
Annual retail sales were weaker, + 2.3%, in April, the softest gain in 15 months, and they missed the market forecast of 3.8%.
Japan
Japanese core CPI inflation slowed for the second month to an annual rate of +2.5% as food, healthcare, and education rises moderated. In a public speech, Bank of Japan Governor Ueda declared that the bank will “proceed cautiously” with its monetary policy, suggesting that further interest rate hikes may be postponed to the next calendar year.
Retail sales increased 1.2% in April, rebounding from March’s 1-1.2%, with annual sales growing 2.4%, well above the 1.9% forecast.
Consumer confidence dropped to 36.2 in May, well below market expectations of 38.9, and is at its lowest since November 2023.
Composite PMI rose marginally to 52.6 in May, as manufacturing output stabilised and the services economy remained robust.
This article contains information first published by Lonsec. Voted Australia’s #1 Research House for 2024.
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