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A review of the markets in 2021

Despite double-digit returns from most equity markets, 2021 still presented plenty of challenges for investors. A tug-of-war raged between COVID variants and vaccines, many economies experienced their highest levels of inflation for thirty years and, in China, the authorities launched a brutal clampdown on the country’s most successful companies whilst at the same time the world’s most indebted property developer teetered on the brink of collapse.

At the time of writing, UK equities have provided a return (including dividends) of just over 17%, more than erasing 2020’s decline of 10%. The UK economy is expected to have grown by 6-7% in 2021 and corporate profits have rebounded. The UK has also been at the forefront of the global vaccine rollout.

Many overseas stock markets recorded even bigger gains, headed once again by the US which has risen by 30% in sterling terms. An eclectic mix of a vaccine-maker (Moderna), a technology behemoth (NVIDIA) and a clutch of oil companies have all seen their stock prices more than double in 2021, whilst Tesla joined the elite club of companies valued at more than US$1trn. At the other end of the performance table and for the reasons above, Chinese equities were down in 2021.

Even though the pledges made at November’s showpiece COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow disappointed many, the emphasis on environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors amongst investors became an even more powerful force in 2021.

The economic and monetary backdrop in 2021 could not have been more benign for investors in equity markets. The rollout of vaccines allowed economies to re-open, releasing a surge of pent-up demand.  Indeed, that demand has led to shortages in many parts of the supply spectrum, ranging from labour to semiconductors to energy.  Unsurprisingly, prices have risen accordingly.  The price of shipping a standard 40ft container from Shanghai to Europe has increased approximately fivefold in 2021. Even though it has plummeted by nearly 40% over the last six weeks, the price of gas is still 50% higher than where it started the year, as is the price of oil.

Despite buoyant economic growth and rising inflation, both fiscal and monetary stimuli have remained in full flow. Central banks have seemed wary and reluctant to withdraw the punchbowl. The US Federal Reserve finally began to scale back its quantitative easing programme in November but will continue to buy bonds until June next year. Here in the UK, the Bank of England will complete its latest round of bond buying this month, taking its cumulative total to £895bn. Having hinted very strongly before its meeting in November that interest rates were set to rise from a historic low of 0.1%, the Bank then surprised almost everyone by leaving them unchanged and was accused of being an ‘unreliable boyfriend’.

We remind investors that returns from equity markets in 2021 (and indeed since the Global Financial Crisis) have been exceptional and are almost certainly not sustainable at near term levels.

Outlook for 2022

Markets will continue to grapple with many of the same factors and forces that have been present in 2021.

  • As the emergence and rapid spread of the new Omicron variant has shown, the COVID pandemic is not over. Austria is coming to the end of a three-week lockdown, many other countries in Europe have re-introduced restrictions and England has just moved to ‘Plan B’, which includes guidance to work-from-home and makes facemasks mandatory again in most indoor public places. Countries will obviously revert to full lockdowns only as a last resort but the possibility that the virus, or new vaccine-resistant variants of it, could wreak further damage on economies and corporate profits cannot be ignored.
  • The tapering and then the end of quantitative easing is in prospect for 2022. What impact will this have on bond markets whose repressed yields have long supported equity market valuations? In addition, soaring rates of inflation make the continuation of negligible and negative interest rates more and more untenable. Financial markets have operated in an environment of ultra-low bond yields and interest rates since the end of the Global Financial Crisis in 2009 and the transition to higher rates, if it comes, could be challenging.
  • Of course, the biggest determinant of the likely path of interest rates in 2022 is inflation. For most of 2021, central banks maintained that the upward trend was ‘transitory’, caused by an unsustainable explosion in demand following the end of lockdowns which had temporarily overwhelmed supply chains. With every new data point that emerges, however, that argument is undermined and it is interesting that the Federal Reserve has recently decided to ‘retire’ the word from its messaging. We think that inflation rates could spike even higher in the short term before settling lower than they are at present, albeit at above the 2% level targeted by both the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve.

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