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UK Financial Bulletin 20 Feb – from Neil Gubbins, St James Place Wealth Management

Please download the Market Bulletin 20 February 2012 which contains the following points:

  • Global equities resumed their upward path last week as investors put to one side the worries over Greece and took heart from further signs of a brightening outlook for the US economy.
  • The relative strength of recent market performance masked another week of twists and turns in the ongoing Greek saga, which saw the prospect of a ‘disorderly’ default by Athens increasing in the minds of many.
  • The price of Brent crude, the benchmark for oil prices in Europe, has been steadily rising over the past few weeks as investors grow increasingly worried about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, with the US, UK and Europe all imposing sanctions to restrict Iran’s ability to sell oil.
  • The official measure of inflation, the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) fell sharply last month to a 14-month low of 3.6% from 4.2% in December, according to the Office for National Statistics.

Regards

Neil

Neil Gubbins

www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

ST. JAMES’S PLACE WEALTH MANAGEMENT

11 Hamilton Place
Mayfair
London W1J 7DA

T: 020 7495 1771
M: 07739 263334

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January 3rd 2012 Market Bulletin

Follow the link to the  Market Bulletin 03 January 2012 for this week’s Bulletin which contains the following points:

  • 2011 is probably a year most investors wish to forget; one which witnessed high volatility amidst the eurozone sovereign debt crisis and left global markets suffering from crisis fatigue.
  • However not all asset classes suffered – high quality government bonds did very well and not all equity markets fell. The Dow Jones index of super blue-chip US companies actually ended the year higher. Anyone investing in a balanced portfolio with an income bias would have most likely been surprised on the upside.
  • With the eurozone crisis unresolved there will, almost without doubt, be continued uncertainty this year and we mull over some of the most likely questions investors may be concerned about. Despite continued uncertainty, for those investors taking a pragmatic approach there are positive solutions in the form of diverse portfolios which can offer investors some degree of confidence in the year ahead.
  • To start the New Year, a number of our managers give their views on the outlook for equity markets.

Regards

Neil Gubbins
ST. JAMES’S PLACE
WEALTH MANAGEMENT
11 Hamilton Place
Mayfair
London W1J 7DA
T: 020 7495 1771
M: 07739 263334
www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

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Finance Update 14/11/2011

Please find attached this week’s Bulletin Market Bulletin 14 11 2011which contains the following points:

  • Italy took centre stage in the markets as the issue of their rising sovereign debt yields came to the fore. French bond yields also came under fire following a mistaken downgrade by Standard & Poor’s rating agency. However, a new government for both Greece and Italy and ECB intervention in the bond markets pushed the FTSE 100 up 0.3% in the week to close at 5545.38.
  • The yield on Italy’s 2-year and 10-year bonds crossed the psychologically important 7% mark last week which was the point as which Portugal, Ireland and Greece had to be bailed-out. Thankfully ECB intervention caused the yields to fall back and Italy managed to raise €5 billion in an auction of one-year securities paying an average rate of 6.09%.
  • Data from China showed that inflation is falling and growth is strong so where is the eurozone aid that was suggested some weeks ago? According to independent sources in the Chinese government it is tied up in a political deadlock after Europe spurned all of Beijing’s demands.
  • EU leaders have many routes to take, none of which are easy but the sudden change in Italy’s fortunes, considering just how big it is, may just force EU leaders to take decisive action and implement policy that could bring Europe out of its debt crisis.
  • Finally, with European sovereign debt in the press we take a look at the UK Gilt market, exploring why yields are so low compared to Europe and Ian McVeigh, UK Equities Team Director at Jupiter Asset Management, gives his view.

Regards

Neil

Neil Gubbins

ST. JAMES’S PLACE
WEALTH MANAGEMENT
11 Hamilton Place
Mayfair
London W1J 7DA

T: 020 7495 1771
M: 07739 263334
www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

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Financial Market Bulletin 07/11/2011

Please find attached this week’s Market Bulletin 07 11 2011 which contains the following points:

  • Better than expected economic data from the US and UK was, once more, overshadowed by the ongoing eurozone sovereign debt crisis causing equity markets to give ground and end the week mostly lower.
  • Greece’s announcement of a referendum on the latest bail-out package was unexpected and sent stock markets into reverse – the idea was subsequently shelved and the Greek Prime Minister narrowly won a vote of confidence. This proved short-lived too – Mr Papandreou resigned over the weekend and discussions are taking place to find a new cross-party leader pending elections.
  • The G20 summit in Cannes proved a damp squib with leaders failing to agree on funding sources for the EU bail-out fund – hopes that China might contribute were also dashed. The last port of call was the IMF but here too there was opposition from the US and in its final communiqué the G20 talked of providing more solutions next February.
  • One major agreement though was for Italy to informally open up its books and allow IMF officials to monitor its austerity programme – unfortunately this backfired when Prime Minister Berlusconi said the sell-off in the Italian bond markets was a “passing fashion”. Investors, fearing that IMF involvement was a precursor to a full bail-out reacted by selling off bonds, causing yields to rise to record levels.
  • Despite the ongoing crisis, professional investors are reminding people that there are many high quality international businesses that are doing well and that growth in the emerging world continues to offer huge opportunities – Jupiter investment Management’s CIO John Chatfeild-Roberts gives his views.

Regards

Neil

Neil Gubbins

 

ST. JAMES’S PLACE

WEALTH MANAGEMENT

11 Hamilton Place

Mayfair

London W1J 7DA

T: 020 7495 1771

M: 07739 263334

www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

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Market Bulletin

Please find the latest  Market Bulletin 30 08 2011 which contains the following points:

  •  Equity markets rebound on better than expected US consumer data and hopes for further stimulus packages in the US.
  • Global banks remain in the spotlight as data sends conflicting messages on their ability to raise capital – a strong banking system is crucial to economic expansion.
  • The price of gold falls $200 as investors move back into equity markets.

Kind regards.

Neil

Neil Gubbins
ST. JAMES’S PLACE
WEALTH MANAGEMENT
11 Hamilton Place
Mayfair
London W1J 7DA

T: 020 7495 1771
M: 07739 263334

www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

If you wish to view the St. James’s Place Partnership email disclaimer, please click here

 

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UK Market Bulletin

Please find  (attached to this link) this week’s Bulletin which contains the following points:

Global equity markets enjoyed a mini-bull run last week – one of the best since the Japanese earthquake – enabling most major indices to return to two-year highs with Wall Street leading the way

  • Better-than-expected US employment data reinforced optimism that the economic recovery is gathering further momentum
  • Whilst some believe current US equity values are justified, others take the view that it is only the US Federal Reserve’s QE2 policy that is keeping the economy going and this is due to finish in June
  • Eurozone woes hit the headlines – Irish banks are being bailed-out once again to the tune of €24bn and Portugal is also expected to ask for help via the newly established European Stability Mechanism
  • Economic data showed that the Japanese economy had, unsurprisingly, taken a huge downturn following last month’s terrible earthquake
  • Star fund manager, Neil Woodford of Invesco Perpetual, believes now is the best time for a decade to buy British shares and he explains why

 

Kind regards,

Neil

Neil Gubbins

ST. JAMES’S PLACE WEALTH MANAGEMENT

11 Hamilton Place, Mayfair, London W1J 7DA

T: 020 7495 1771          M: 07739 263334

www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

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Monday Market Bulletin

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Colin Evans and Neil Gubbins

St Jame’s Place  Wealth Management

Please find attached this week’s Monday Market Bulletin 23 08 2010 which contains the following points:

  • Global equity markets received a welcome boost from resurgent Merger & Acquisition activity last week with BHP Billiton’s $39bn for PotashCorp of Canada. Although rejected investors expect rival bids to emerge
  • The relentless rise in demand for both soft commodities as well as oil and metals reflects increased demand amongst the growing middle class in emerging markets but is pushing up inflation in the West. It is also leading to potential shortages as East Asian countries seek to build reserves
  • Another outcome has been to fuel investor demand for products to capture these opportunities – Emerging Market funds (and our own Alternative Assets Fund) can be part of this strategy
  • But poor economic data from the US and Japan weighed on sentiment resulting in equities drifting as investors opted for the safe haven of government bonds where yields continued to fall
  • Contrarian fund manager Andrew Green of GAM, shares his thoughts on the economic outlook and explains why he continues to favour Japan

Kind regards,

Neil

www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

Neil Gubbins  ST. JAMES’S PLACE  WEALTH MANAGEMENT

11 Hamilton Place, Mayfair, London W1J 7DAT: 020 7495 1771 – M: 07739 263334

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the £ and the € (and the $)

GBPEUR/GBPUSD

Following on from last week, the Pound rallied back above the 1.20 level against the Euro on Thursday, approaching the highest rate in 18 months, after a report from the Nationwide Building Society showed that UK house prices climbed to the highest level in almost two years. Sterling also gained to within a cent of the three week high against the U.S Dollar, as the report fuelled optimism that the economic recovery is gathering momentum.

Prudential Plc confirmed last week that the collapse of its proposed acquisition of AIG Inc’s main Asian unit will cost roughly £450 million and that the failure may also cost the Chief Executive Tidjane Thiam his job. The insurer was due to pay AIG in Dollars after raising the cash in Pounds and the UK currency had risen above $1.47 versus its U.S counterpart on speculation that the transaction was destined to fail.

In terms of economic data, the Pound was buoyed by reports that UK construction expanded in May at the fastest pace since September 2007, led by homebuilding. An index of building activity, based on a survey of purchasing managers, rose to a reading of 58.5, from 58.2 in April, as the overall improvement in the manufacturing sector continues to support the economic recovery.

The UK economy expanded 0.3% in the preliminary estimate for the first quarter, more than initially forecast, after an upward revision in manufacturing and construction. Bank of England policy makers voted unanimously to keep the £200 billion bond-purchasing program on hold last month, but reserved the right to continue quantitative easing should the recovery stall.

Elsewhere, UK mortgage approvals rose to the highest level in four months in April, as banks free up lending conditions and the conclusion of a transaction tax on home purchases for first time buyers helped improve demand. Lenders granted 49,871 loans to buy homes, compared with 49,008 in March, the highest reading since December.

The Pound has climbed 5.7% against the struggling Euro this year, amid reports that signaled the UK economic recovery is gathering momentum, while European economies falter and remain mired in the sovereign-debt crisis. Analysts at Citigroup Inc believe that the Euro may decline further against the Pound, after it closed above 1.20 on Tuesday.

The Pound briefly rose above $1.47 against the U.S Dollar on Thursday, as UK stocks rallied for the first time in three days. The FTSE 100 Index climbed, amid speculation that the U.S economic recovery is spreading, while investors also speculated that shares in BP Plc had fallen too far. BP gained for the first time in four days, as it struggled with efforts to stop the oil spill off the Gulf of Mexico.

The leak has wiped out a third off the value of BP stock since April 20th and the company is bracing itself for a huge clean up bill from the U.S government. The FTSE 100 rose 1.2% yesterday and the Pound subsequently strengthened against the Dollar, as the correlation between stock market sentiment and Sterling’s performance against the U.S currency remains intact.

By the close of trading on Friday, the Pound had recorded its second weekly gain against the Euro and the UK currency climbed to a fresh 18-month high over the weekend of 1.2132. The Pound also gained against the Dollar last week, the first advance in over a month, but the volatile swings in risk sentiment has brought the rate back down towards $1.43 this morning.

Niels Christensen, a foreign exchange strategist at Nordea Bank AB, said that “people are becoming a little more positive on the UK. We’ve had some good data and that has left sterling with a positive sentiment.” The UK currency rose 0.7% against the Euro on Friday, bringing the weekly gain to 2.9%, as concerns over the European sovereign debt crisis persists.

The focus this week will be firmly fixed on the Bank of England interest rate announcement on Thursday. The latest round of positive economic data are unlikely to result in any changes to the Bank’s judgment on the medium term outlook for growth and inflation. Consumer prices rose to 3.7% year-on-year in April, but is expected to fall back towards 2% over next year.

EUR/USD

The Euro fell below $1.20 for the first time in more than four years against the U.S Dollar on Friday, amid speculation that Europe’s sovereign debt crisis is spreading. Investors promptly flocked to the safest currencies, as stocks also tumbled. The Yen and the Dollar rose against all of the 16 most actively traded currencies, as a lower-than-forecast U.S nonfarm payrolls report fueled speculation that the U.S recovery may be slowing.

American companies hired fewer workers in May than predicted, indicating that the government still needs to support the labour market to spur the economy. Payrolls rose by 431,000, boosted by a jump in hiring of temporary census workers. The jobless rate fell to 9.7%, from 9.9% in April, and the report will be of some concern to investors.

U.S stocks plunged and Treasuries rose, as the report raised concern that the U.S economy may be susceptible to the European debt crisis. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 3.4%, closing at the lowest level since February 8th. The Dollar rose to a high of 1.1877 against the struggling Euro, as risk aversion stalked the market and investors are already betting on a further deterioration of the single currency.

Jonathan Lewis, founding principal of Samson Capital Advisors LLC, said that “the euro is caught in a permanent, apparently unresolvable slide because of the tempo of bad news coming out of Europe. The market is so bearish on the Euro, it’s looking under any rock to find information that supports that conclusion.”

Market Analysis by Adam Solomon

If you need any further assistance, or require a quote – please do not hesitate to contact MABC’s manager, Gaile manager@mabc.biz , who can put you in touch with our Currency Exchange members.

With thanks to Tom Trevorrow from TOR FX for the above article

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Monday Market Bulletin

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Colin Evans and Neil Gubbins

St Jame’s Place  Wealth Management

Please find attached this Monday Market Bulletin 07 06 2010 which contains the following points:

  • European focus turns to Spain and Hungary
  • What future for the euro?
  • BP’s dividend comes under the spotlight
  • Trouble for the man from the Pru
  • Positive news flow and stronger company fundamentals remain the themes for long-term investors

Kind regards

Neil

www.sjpp.co.uk/neilgubbins

Neil Gubbins  ST. JAMES’S PLACE  WEALTH MANAGEMENT

11 Hamilton Place, Mayfair, London W1J 7DAT: 020 7495 1771 – M: 07739 263334

To Contact Colin please email colin.evans@sjpp.co.uk

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