March 24, 2023 Newsletter
Tangents: Happy Friday.
March 24th, 1877: The annual university boat race between Oxford and Cambridge ends in a dead heat.
1989: Exxon Valdez oil spill.
On March 24, 1989, one of the nation’s worst oil spills occurred as the supertanker Exxon Valdez ran aground on a reef in Alaska’s Prince William Sound and began leaking 11 million gallons of crude. Go to article >
Ancient Egyptian pharaoh-sphinx statues unearthed at sun temple: Archaeologists in Egypt have discovered broken statues of ancient royalty at a sun temple in Heliopolis, an archaeological site that was once a major city near what is now Cairo. The stone-carved fragments include depictions of the pharos Ramesses II, Ramesses IX, Horemheb and Psamtik II. Full Story: Live Science (3/23)
James Webb telescope spots dust storm raging on a giant planet nearly 20 times the size of Jupiter
Forty light-years away, an extraterrestrial sandstorm rages on a planet orbiting two stars. Although this might sound like Luke Skywalker’s home planet of Tatooine, this sandstorm was spotted on a gaseous world up to 20 times the size of Jupiter, using the James Webb Space Telescope’s powerful detectors. Full Story: Live Science (3/23)
Aliens could be hiding in ‘terminator zones’ on planets with eternal night
Imagine if one side of the Earth always faced the sun. Half of the planet would be stuck in perpetual daylight, the other shrouded in permanent night. But for aliens in other solar systems, our doomsday scenario may be their everyday — and life might get along just fine. Full Story: Live Science (3/23)
Researchers have sequenced Ludwig van Beethoven’s DNA.
PHOTOS OF THE DAY
The week in wildlife
A bee pollinates the flower of a tree in Cieza, Spain. As the trees start to flower, the bees start to pollinate them so the flowers months later turn into peaches and apricots
Photograph: Marcial Guillén/EPA
Guiyang, China
Crabapple blossoms in south-western Guizhou province
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
The week in wildlife
A frog waits patiently for a mate in a garden pond in Killearn, Stirling, UK
Photograph: Kay Roxby/Alamy Live News
Market Closes for March 24th, 2023
Market Index |
Close | Change |
Dow Jones |
32237.53 | +132.28 |
+0.41% | ||
S&P 500 | 3970.99 | +22.27 |
+0.56% | ||
NASDAQ | 11823.96 | +36.56 |
+0.31% | ||
TSX | 19501.49 | +41.57 |
+0.21% |
International Markets
Market Index |
Close | Change |
NIKKEI | 27385.25 | -34.36 |
-0.13% | ||
HANG SENG |
19915.68 | -133.96 |
-0.67% | ||
SENSEX | 57527.10 | -398.18 |
-0.69% | ||
FTSE 100* | 7405.45 | -94.15 |
-1.26% |
Bonds
Bonds | % Yield | Previous % Yield | |||
CND. 10 Year Bond |
2.746 | 2.747 | |||
CND. 30 Year Bond |
2.908 | 2.932 | |||
U.S. 10 Year Bond |
3.3762 | 3.4266 | |||
U.S. 30 Year Bond |
3.6438 | 3.6978 |
Currencies
BOC Close | Today | Previous |
Canadian $ | 0.7275 | 0.7292 |
US $ |
1.3746 | 1.3714 |
Euro Rate 1 Euro= |
Inverse | |
Canadian $ | 1.4789 | 0.6762 |
US $ |
1.0759 | 0.9295 |
Commodities
Gold | Close | Previous |
London Gold Fix |
1977.95 | 1949.35 |
Oil | ||
WTI Crude Future | 69.31 | 69.96 |
Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1777, the U.S. foreign debt was born. Farmers General of France, a group that collects taxes from French citizens on salt, tobacco and other products, agreed to lend the U.S. 2 million livres (roughly $381,000 at the time). The loan was repayable in bales of tobacco.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose 0.2% at 19,501.49 in Toronto.
The move follows the previous session’s decrease of 0.4%.
Today, utilities stocks led the market higher, as 9 of 11 sectors gained; 124 of 235 shares rose, while 104 fell.
Brookfield Corp. contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 2.4%. Badger Infrastructure Solutions Ltd. had the largest increase, rising 6.8%.
Insights
* This quarter, the index rose 0.6%
* This month, the index fell 3.6%
* So far this week, the index rose 0.6%
* The index declined 11% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index lost 13% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is 12.2% below its 52-week high on April 5, 2022 and 9.1% above its low on Oct. 13, 2022
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 12.5 on a trailing basis and 12.7 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 3.3% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.12t
* 30-day price volatility rose to 11.95% compared with 11.91% in the previous session and the average of 9.73% over the past month
================================================================
|Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Utilities | 15.2362| 1.8| 16/0
Industrials | 11.6799| 0.4| 14/12
Materials | 10.0597| 0.4| 31/19
Consumer Staples | 6.8420| 0.8| 9/2
Communication Services | 4.8636| 0.5| 4/2
Financials | 3.2668| 0.1| 10/19
Real Estate | 0.9653| 0.2| 14/6
Energy | 0.1660| 0.0| 17/21
Health Care | 0.1450| 0.2| 3/2
Consumer Discretionary | -3.2815| -0.5| 2/13
Information Technology | -8.3816| -0.6| 4/8
================================================================
| | |Volume VS |
| Index | | 20D AVG |YTD Change
Top Contributors |Points Move| % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
Brookfield Corp | 9.6620| 2.4| -53.6| -3.4
Canadian National | 6.2870| 1.0| -22.0| -2.9
Enbridge | 6.1500| 0.9| -59.6| -4.7
Nutrien | -6.8230| -1.9| -5.4| -0.3
Suncor Energy | -6.8930| -1.8| -58.0| -7.4
Shopify | -8.7490| -1.7| -27.6| 31.3
US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — A reversal in the bank selloff that rattled markets Friday spurred a rebound in stocks, which also gained amid assurances from authorities about financial stability and growing speculation that policymakers will have to
stop raising rates to prevent a recession.
After a slide that reached 1% in the first hour of trading, the S&P 500 snapped back and notched its second straight week of gains.
A gauge of US financial heavyweights climbed from its lowest level since November 2020.
Beaten-down regional lenders drove the recovery, with Citizens Financial Group Inc. and Zions Bancorporation adding at least 2.9%.
First Republic Bank tumbled once again, extending this year’s rout to 90%.
Top US regulators said after a meeting Friday that while some banks are coming under stress, the overall financial system is still sound.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen convened the Financial Stability Oversight Council, and the panel heard a presentation from the staff of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on the latest market developments.
Global authorities continued trying to instill calm in financial markets following the recent failure of some US regional lenders and the near-collapse of banking giant Credit Suisse Group AG before its government-brokered takeover by rival UBS Group AG.
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde told European Union leaders that the region’s banking sector is strong, according to people familiar with the matter.
An earlier slump in lenders was triggered by a plunge in Deutsche Bank AG shares, with the cost of insuring its debt against default climbing, in sudden moves that some attributed to hedge funds seeking to profit from the broader turmoil roiling the financial industry.
The decline prompted German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to publicly back the lender, calling it a “a very profitable bank.”
To Mark Haefele at UBS Global Wealth Management, regulations brought in after the global financial crisis, combined with the magnitude of policymakers’ responses over the last couple of weeks, mean the recent financial turmoil is
unlikely to evolve into something akin to the 2008–2009 meltdown.
“Confidence is still fragile, volatility is likely to remain high, and policymakers may yet have to go further to ensure that faith in the global financial system stays solid,” Haefele noted. “Nonetheless, financial conditions are likely to
tighten, increasing the risk of an economic hard landing even if central banks ease off on interest rate hikes.”
Banks are often in the frontline when recession fears grow as they are the channel through which credit flows through the economy.
Traders abandoned wagers that the Fed will raise interest rates in May and added to bets that its next shift will be a rate cut as early as June — even as Chair Jerome Powell said that cuts are not his “base case.”
For the ECB and the Bank of England, traders no longer price in additional quarter-point rate hikes.
The move came as global bonds rallied, with Treasury two-year yields falling to the lowest level since September.
Echoing Powell’s determination to restore price stability, three officials said this week’s tightening was clearly needed to rein in an economy running hot. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard also said that he now forecasts raising rates to 5.625% this year, which is 50 basis points more than the median projection of his colleagues.
Earlier in the day, Fed Bank of New York data showed a gauge of US inflation activity slowed to the lowest since 2021.
Jeffrey Gundlach, DoubleLine Capital LP’s chief investment officer, sees the Fed cutting rates “substantially” soon, according to posts on Twitter.
He also warned of “red alert recession signals” emanating from the US yield curve.
Investors are fleeing to cash in the biggest rush since the onset of the pandemic as concerns of an economic slowdown mount, according to Bank of America Corp. strategists who see equity and credit markets slumping in coming months.
“Credit and stock markets too greedy for rate cuts, not fearful enough of recession,” a team led by Michael Hartnett wrote.
The strategist, who was correctly bearish through last year, said investment-grade spreads and stocks will be taking a hit over the next three to six months.
Global cash funds had inflows of nearly $143 billion, the largest since March 2020 in the week through Wednesday — adding up to more than $300 billion over the past four weeks, according to the note citing EPFR Global data. Money market funds assets have soared to more than $5.1 trillion, the highest level on record.
Prior surges coincided with large Fed interest rate cuts in 2008 and 2020, Hartnett said.
Investors are steering clear of corporate America’s most-vulnerable borrowers, even as credit markets rally on bets that the worst of the global banking crisis may be over.
The gap in spreads between the two weakest tiers of corporate debt typically issued — B and CCC — has widened dramatically since the end of February after three US regional banks failed and Credit Suisse Group AG was hastily taken over.
It now costs CCC issuers on average 531 basis points more than B rated issuers to sell bonds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 rose 0.6% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.3%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.4%
* The MSCI World index fell 0.2%
Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.4%
* The euro fell 0.7% to $1.0759
* The British pound fell 0.5% to $1.2227
* The Japanese yen was little changed at 130.76 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin fell 1.7% to $27,846.95
* Ether fell 3% to $1,764.21
Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined six basis points to 3.37%
* Germany’s 10-year yield declined seven basis points to 2.13%
* Britain’s 10-year yield declined eight basis points to 3.28%
Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude fell 1.1% to $69.18 a barrel
* Gold futures fell 0.8% to $1,997.70 an ounce
This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from John Viljoen, Vildana Hajric, Isabelle Lee, Peyton Forte, Angel Adegbesan, Carly Wanna and Emily Graffeo.
Have a wonderful weekend everyone.
Be magnificent!
As ever,
Carolann
The seven principals of conduct with people are forbearance, forgiveness, humility, generosity, compassion, good counsel, justice, and fairness. -Al-Sadiq, 702-765.
Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor
Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
www.carolannsteinhoff.com