Bumpy But Straight Markets Ahead…

 | Jun 06, 2017 03:03AM ET

The financial markets continued to absorb major news events with surprising ease last week. Be it the tragedies in the U.K., the withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement, or the weakness in Friday’s employment data, the stock and bond markets both continued to edge higher. Investors seem to have become conditioned toward individual isolated disappointments all while the bigger picture is toward one of global economic growth and relative stability.

But as we have mentioned many times before this year, the markets are differentiating themselves under the surface. While the S&P 500 is up 9.5% in 2017, the Nasdaq 100 is up 21%. And while the all-world iShares MSCI ACWI (NASDAQ:ACWI) is +12% YTD, Spain is +26%. To the downside, the Energy sector is -13%. So, active investors do not have excuses in 2017. The environment for uncorrelated returns is very good and it is time to put up numbers.

The year-to-date economic and political backdrops seem like they could easily continue into the fourth quarter of 2017. With little getting done in Washington D.C., the US dollar should continue to weaken providing for better returns in overseas assets or in companies that generate much of their revenues in foreign currencies. Valuations for equities, as well as relative growth, seem to favor foreign stocks. So, I’d expect the flows into international funds to continue. If you are forced to invest in the U.S., stay growth oriented and/or in multinationals that can benefit from improving foreign growth. The road ahead looks easy, but keep your hands on the wheel because the bumps will always try and throw you off.

The May jobs data was weaker than expected and the bond market did not waste time in letting everyone know…

The 10-year bond yield broke decisively below its 200-day moving average for the first time in 8 months.