

AXIOMA ROOF™ SCORE HIGHLIGHTS
WEEK OF DECEMBER 16, 2024
Potential triggers for sentiment-driven market moves this week
The ROOF Highlights will be going on a break after this issue, returning on January 6th, 2025.
- US: Fed interest rate decision. Retail sales, PCE prices, personal income and spending, industrial production, manufacturing and services PMIs, building permits, housing starts, and existing home sales data.
- Europe: In the UK, BoE’s interest rate decision, inflation figures, retail sales data, and the jobs report. Moody’s downgrade of France’s credit rating to “Aa3” from “Aa2”. Germany’s Ifo business climate index, and ZEW economic sentiment. Eurozone PMI figures.
- APAC: China industrial production, retail sales, jobless rate, housing prices, and loan prime rates data. Japan’s BoJ's interest rate decision, inflation and foreign trade data.
- Global: Monetary policy decisions across major central banks (US, UK, Japan, China) will be the focus this week. Maybe for the last time.
Insights from last week's changes in investor sentiment:
Last week, sentiment improved in the US and, by extension, in Global Developed Markets, as well as in China and, consequently, in Global Emerging Markets. Conversely, sentiment declined in the UK and Australia. Investors remained bullish in Japan, neutral in Europe, slightly more positive in Global Developed ex-US markets, and bearish in Asia ex-Japan.
China: The macroeconomic outlook continues to deteriorate, with deflation risks rising further in November. New loans extended by China’s banks fell significantly short of expectations, amounting to less than half of last year’s levels, indicating persistently weak credit demand. Last week, following the third consecutive meeting since September that promised strong economic stimulus measures, the annual Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC) concluded with authorities once again pledging to “raise the cap on the budget deficit, issue more debt, and loosen monetary policy to maintain a stable economic growth rate of around 5%”, without saying how or, more importantly, how much.
According to the theory of cognitive dissonance, investors who have endured the chaos of Covid lockdowns, two failed reopening attempts, a property market collapse, and three consecutive years of negative market returns are likely to either completely reject the authorities’ promises of better economic days ahead or embrace them fully. Sentiment ended last week bullish – the Stockholm syndrome at work.
The US: This week, the focus will be on the predictable known unknowns of inflation and monetary policy decisions, rather than the unpredictable unknown unknowns surrounding the policies of the incoming Trump administration. With the Fed’s decision to cut interest rates by another 25 basis points almost certain, investors will scrutinize the language of the press release to predict if and when further cuts might occur in 2025, and what the Fed’s trigger points will be.
Europe: The UK’s economy experienced negative growth in Q3, Moody’s downgraded France’s credit rating, Germany remains without a functioning government until new elections are called, and the ECB cut interest rates for the fourth time last week. The absence of market-moving news in the last two weeks of the year is likely to keep investor sentiment neutral and markets directionless. While the ECB’s dovish monetary policy is a positive factor, the negatives of weak domestic politics and the incoming Trump administration’s tariff threats will likely keep both sentiment and markets rangebound, as they have been since late May.
It is safe to say that 2025 will have very little in common with 2024 or 2023. The primary source of risk will shift from monetary policy to trade policies and geopolitics, compelling investors to focus on politicians instead of central bankers for the first time in four years. There is a saying in the art world that if you create something no one hates, no one will love it either, and that’s true. The same applies to policy decisions, trade deals, and politicians. Especially politicians.

Note: green background = bullish, red background = bearish




















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