Tree-Toppers At Christmas: Nasdaq, Gold, WTI And Canadian Dollar

 | Dec 25, 2019 06:31

With this being the last trading day before Christmas, it is perhaps the perfect time to remind ourselves of 2019’s biggest winners and losers to date. The information could be useful to trend-following market participants and the mean reversionists who look for fading opportunities in over-extended price moves. To keep things simple, I have only included the major markets and excluded individual stocks and exotic currencies. So, without further ado…

Stocks: At the top of the tree is the Nasdaq 100 and at the bottom is Spain’s IBEX 35 and UK’s FTSE 100 among major global indices. Stocks have rallied across the board in 2019, even if there was turbulence along the way as investors worried over Brexit and the damaging trade war between the US and China, among other things. But as optimism grew that the world’s largest economies were agreeing to a phase one trade deal, stocks pushed higher – especially in the US. Tepid economic growth in Europe kept the gains in check for indices in this continent. But this lack of economic growth and non-existent inflationary pressures meant investors were confident that the major central banks were not going to exit zero or negative interest rate policy, and QE, any time soon. They therefore saw the higher-yielding equities as one of the most attractive assets again, causing global stock markets to rise sharply. But as the central bank balance sheet grows ever larger, the withdrawal of such liquidity is a major concern that could come back to haunt stocks at some point down the line.