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For many, summer months are a time to slow down and reset for the coming colder weather. Yet for investors, it’s often a time to be on edge, as August has gained the reputation as the month that volatility begins to increase, and strange things occur. If that is what you were expecting heading into the month, you weren’t disappointed this year. As the calendar flipped from July to August, it signalled a marked change in financial markets even as most indexes remain near all-time highs.
While many Canadians were enjoying a long weekend, the first Monday of August saw one of the largest spikes in volatility ever. The VIX index, which measures volatility in the options market and is often referred to as the “fear index,” surged from a reading of 15 to 65. This was the largest one-day change in history and touched a level seen only twic this century – during the early days of Covid and the Global Financial Crisis of 2008.
Moves like this are not normal, and everyone was left trying to explain what caused them. The blame for the sudden surge of volatility and the rapid near 10% fall in equity markets was placed on developments in Japan, but there were plenty of other reasons as well.
Japan has had negative interest rates for years to encourage investment and, with it, has seen a weakening of the yen. As a result, many global hedge funds put on what is called the “yen carry trade,” which basically is a pair trade by which you borrow in Japan to fund buying what you want to be long. The last week of July saw the Bank of Japan do its first rate hike in years, returning to zero. This caused the yen to rally and the carry trade to be less attractive. This caused some forced selling of positions, and in a low volume August Monday, when many were out of the office, there were no buyers to offset this selling. The result was the quick drop we saw.
Buyers showed up to take advantage of this dip, and markets began to rally. Still, events in Japan aren’t the full story, as other risks are out there and remain. During the last week of July, we also had the U.S. Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, which many had seen as disappointing. Most global central banks had begun cutting rate, and there was a hope that the FOMC would follow in July. The fact that they didn’t left many wanting. Markets have a tendency to try to force the banks into action, and to some degree, the violent move in August may have worked. Now, everyone is fully on board with U.S. rate cuts beginning this month.
The other reason some are citing for the selling was the rapid shift in the U.S. election odds away from former President Trump and towards VP Harris. Markets had gotten very comfortable that former President Trump would return to office. He was known to measure his approval on higher equity markets and would be very business-friendly. With these odds falling and more questions being asked about the Democrats' positioning, this increased uncertainty. Markets hate uncertainty.
So, while the unwinding of the yen carry trade was the spark that lit the selling fire, there were many reasons for investors to become nervous. While most will look favourably at the end results of a flat to slightly positive month, the problem remains that these other risks haven’t gone away.
We have just finished reporting earnings for the first half of the year. While most results were ahead of expectations overall, several concerning points are arising. On both sides of the border, the consumer is starting to struggle with higher costs. Retailers and banks both cited these concerns, leading more to question whether market expectations of a recession being avoided may be wishful thinking. This will increase the odds of future rate cuts.
On the positive side, we have seen a few developments. With the market fully expecting the U.S. to join the rate-cutting party, we are finally seeing weakness in the U.S. dollar. A lower U.S. dollar is good for real assets and commodities. The fact that gold has been acting so well in the face of a stronger dollar has been notable, but now that the U.S. dollar is falling, we could begin to see an extended move higher for all commodities.
The lower U.S. dollar and a decline in interest rates have added more momentum to the sector rotation we have been looking for. For too long, the market was held up by only a handful of names, mainly in the technology sector. Through the summer, that leadership has begun to fade as many question whether the AI hype got ahead of itself. This is a positive in the long term. Narrow markets are unhealthy, and having other sectors act better is a great development. For the balance of the year, look for a continuation of this trend.
While August started with one of the fastest selloffs many have seen, the rest of the month was calmer and constructive, finishing with a positive return. While it’s nice to celebrate after near-death experiences, it's much too soon to think the volatility we saw a few weeks ago was all we were due to experience. September and October remain the toughest months historically and will be tricky.
We will see the beginning of rate cuts in the U.S. and a continuation of cuts in Canada. Both central banks are trying to thread the needle of slowing inflation while not crashing the economy. In addition to this, continued geopolitical risk and the U.S. election, no one should be surprised if the spike in volatility we saw at the start of August isn’t repeated at some point in the next few months.
Greg Taylor, CFA, is the Chief Investment Officer of Purpose Investments Inc.
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