Economic Overview - Page 9 of 14 - Efficient Private Clients
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Economic Overview

  • The past month has been a wild one! The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite, a stock market index that includes almost all of the stocks listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange in the United States (US), contracted 13.3% in April. This was its worst monthly drop since the global financial crisis in 2008.

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  • Following the severe floods in KwaZulu-Natal, many companies have suspended their operations to recover and to restore damaged equipment and infrastructure. Container depots, terminals, and warehouses that have been damaged will likely further constrain local supply chains.

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  • In the past week uncertainty caused volatility in global stock markets to drag on. Uncertainty about war, commodity prices, inflation, interest rate increases, lockdowns in China, global economic growth, and the likes, are all keeping investors, and the markets that they represent, both nervous and restless.

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  • In global markets: This past month has been all about the war in the Ukraine and its impact on the global economy. The war has almost caused investors to forget about the long-term shift in monetary policy that finally started when the United States (US) Federal Reserve (Fed) increased its interest rates.

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  • The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) has, again, increased interest rates by 0.25%. This is the third increase since December 2021, bringing the repurchase, or policy, rate that the SARB offers banks up to 4.25%. The SARB’s quarterly projection model, a model used to guide the market but also to assist the SARB in making interest rate decisions, shows that interest rates should increase gradually in South Africa (SA) over the next few years.

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  • Between all the headlines of war, interest rate hikes, volatile markets, and the concerns emanating from these, theories about an upcoming recession are becoming ever-more frequent. Technically, a country is in a recession if that country experiences two consecutive quarters of negative, or contracting, growth.

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  • As the war in the Ukraine continues, you might have heard some rumours about fuel prices in South Africa (SA). Some commentators that I would not refer to as experts even believe that fuel prices can reach R40 a litre. Although nothing is impossible, I doubt this has much more than a 10% probability of occurring.

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  • The whole world continues to look on in disbelief as Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine drags on, despite heavy sanctions and the seizing of assets from anything or anyone related to Russia. Russian flights have been restricted and travel bans have been imposed. The United Kingdom (UK) has cut Russian companies out of their insurance market, the world’s largest commercial and speciality insurance centre.

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  • During February, market uncertainty peaked, and this caused volatility to erupt. After a lot of negotiations, media staging, propaganda, and hard sanctions, Russia invaded the Ukraine. The reasons for this invasion range from believable to fanatical, and even includes a conspiracy or two.

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  • As market, economic, and finance experts, we often get asked questions about investing in alternative assets, from property to cryptocurrencies. Because these assets fall outside of the scope of many of the regulatory bodies of traditional finance in South Africa (SA), we can, at best, use our expertise to inform and to educate clients; we cannot give advice. We hope that clients can use our expertise as part of the research that they do to make the best asset allocation decisions.

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  • In his latest State of the Nation Address (SONA), President Ramaphosa, once again, delivered a pro-business message. He explained that: “The key task of government is to create the conditions that will enable the private sector to emerge, to grow, to access new markets, to create new products, and to hire more employees”.

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  • We all knew that markets would be volatile this year, but I doubt that many thought that they would see something like the 26% single-day fall in the share price of Meta, Facebook’s parent company.

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