As European Markets Struggle, U.S. Slowdown In 2019 Could Batter Markets Further

 | Dec 24, 2018 11:13

After a fairly decent 18 months the FTSE100, DAX and S&P500 swept into 2018 with some fairly decent annual gains with the FTSE100, gaining 9%, the German DAX gaining 12%, and the S&P500 up almost 20%.

All three indices went onto post new record peaks early on into 2018, but as we noted a year ago there were signs that the goldilocks scenario that the global economy experienced throughout 2017, may well have been starting to run out of steam.

Fears over rising populism appeared to recede in the wake of electoral defeats for parties who wanted to shake up the status quo for the more established political mainstream that had managed to hold sway across Europe for most of the last 20 years.

The election of Emmanuel Macron as a reforming French President albeit on a fairly low turnout was touted as a triumph of hope over pessimism, as an improving global outlook aided a strong economic rebound through 2017.

This meant that 2018 began with a lot more optimism than was the case at the beginning of 2017, despite some residual concerns about political stability in Spain in the wake of the Catalonia crackdown, while UK Prime Minister Theresa May’s fragile majority was always bound to be tested as the Brexit withdrawal agreement started to get fleshed out.

We even got a new German government after months of back room bartering as the old Grand Coalition of the CSU/CDU and SPD got stitched back together, with Angela Merkel once again back at the helm.

Even the tensions with North Korea, which had been a staple of 2017 took a back seat as President Trump turned his attention to trade, particularly with China, as well as a raft of tax cuts, in so doing introducing a significant fiscal stimulus to an already mature economic recovery in the US.