Here's What the Market Did EVERY TIME the Fed Cut Rates During an Economic Expansion

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Here's What the Market Did EVERY TIME the Fed Cut Rates During an Economic Expansion
Here’s What the Market Did EVERY TIME the
Fed Cut Rates During an Economic Expansion
                                      July 12, 2019
                                    by Frank Holmes
                                of U.S. Global Investors

We’re just past the midpoint of 2019, and ordinarily that would mean it’s time for the Commodities
Halftime Report. That will need to wait until next week, though, as there are more urgent things for me
to share with you, starting with a mea culpa.

As you know, the market collapsed in the fourth quarter of 2018, sinking some 20 percent between the
end of September and December. Expressed another way, it fell four standard deviations below the
mean over 60 trading days—a huge move.

When the market has fallen by that much, it’s historically been a good time to get contrarian because a
reversion to the mean hasn’t been too far behind. Mean reversion, as I explain in “Managing
Expectations,” is the idea that prices tend to move back to their historic averages eventually.

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The reason I’m telling you this now is that I didn’t take my own advice. I believed, as others did, that
more pain was ahead. Prices bottomed, but instead of buying, I took money off the table. And watched
the market bounce strongly. By the time it became clear that this aging bull market wasn’t slowing
down, it was too late. The opportunity had come and gone.

We all have a choice on how we deal with setbacks. When asked once about the single most important
lesson he’s learned over the course of his long career, the billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio
pointed to his bad bet in the 1980s. He believed the U.S. was headed for a depression, and when one
never came, he fell so deeply into debt that he had to borrow $4,000 from his father to make ends
meet. The experience “was one of the best things that ever happened to me because it gave me the
humility I needed,” he wrote in his bestseller Principles: Life and Work.

I never stop learning, even after four decades spent in global markets. That’s as true now as it was
when I first started as a young analyst in Toronto. And I’m pleased to say that, after thoroughly
reviewing our models, our investment team and I have great confidence going forward.

Cutting Rates in an Expansionary Environment

The market is now at record highs, and unemployment is way down. Even so, a U.S. rate cut is
expected as early as this month. During his congressional testimony this week, Federal Reserve
Chairman Jerome Powell raised concerns over slower global growth and trade tensions, which in turn
have contributed to weaker demand and manufacturing activity. The most recent Global Manufacturing
Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) showed that, at 49.4, factories contracted for the second straight
month in June. We haven’t seen back-to-back sub-50.0 PMI readings since the second half of 2012.

There’s also a one-in-three chance we could see a full-blown recession sometime next year. That’s
according to the New York Fed’s recession probability index, which flashed a 12-year high of 32.9
percent last month. Since 1960, every time the index has surpassed 30 percent, the economy has
tanked within the next 12 months.

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click to enlarge

Despite the risks, the U.S. economy is still expanding—an unusual, though not unheard-of, time for the
Fed to consider cutting rates.

So let’s assume for a moment that the Fed does take action next week. What effect would that have on
the stock market as well as manufacturing activity?

That’s precisely what analysts at market research firm Fundstrat looked into recently, and what they
found is that 100 percent of the time, the market increased in the next three, six, nine and 12 months.
The median gain over nine months, in fact, was nearly 18 percent.

Hypothetically, if the same thing were to happen today, that would put the S&P 500 Index at around
3,500 by next April.

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Once again, for those in the back: In every case going back to 1971, when the Fed began a new
easing cycle while the economy was expanding, stocks went up three months, six months, nine
months and 12 months later. No exceptions.

Manufacturers Looking for Tariff Relief

That wasn’t the case with manufacturing activity. According to our own research, the ISM
Manufacturing Index, which measures the U.S. sector, rose only a third of the time three months
following a rate cut in good times. Six and nine months out, the index was up half the time. Twelve
months out, it was higher about 66 percent of the time.

Those are decent odds, but a rate cut now would be much more favorable for stocks, statistically
speaking.

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To get manufacturing up to full capacity, I think there needs to be a resolution to the U.S.-China trade
war. That was also the assessment of Renaissance Marco. In a note dated July 2, Neil Dutta, head of
economics, observed that the word “tariff” featured prominently in purchasing managers’ June
commentaries, suggesting trade issues were partly to blame for ISM weakness. If tariffs are indeed a
driver of slower manufacturing growth, “it would imply the ISM has room to pick up from here. After all,
we’ve seen some relief over the weekend (China) and earlier in June (Mexico),” Dutta wrote.

Bullish on Gold

If rate cuts are favorable for stocks, they can act as rocket fuel for the price of gold. As I’ve explained
many times before, the yellow metal has thrived in low-rate, weak-U.S. dollar environments.

This week UBS reiterated the relationship between gold and interest rates, writing: “Low to negative
rates suggest falling cost of holding gold at a time when elevated trade and geopolitical uncertainty
strengthen the case for diversification.” Strategists Joni Teves, Roque Montero and Bhanu Baweja see
gold hitting $1,450 an ounce by the end of this year and rising “modestly” to $1,500 in 2020.

TD Securities expects gold to average $1,400 for the rest of the year, followed by a lift toward $1,500
“in the final months of 2020,” driven by low to negative rates. One of President Donald Trump’s picks
for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Judy Shelton, is also constructive for gold, as she is in
favor of lowering rates and supports a return to the gold standard.

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Finally, analysts at Alpine Macro see the beginnings of gold’s “third great bull market of the post-war
period.” A rate cut by the Fed could set in motion a multi-year bear market in the dollar, analysts write,
which is very supportive of gold. With the recent technical break above $1,400, “new all-time highs for
gold should be seen in the coming years,” the research firm writes.

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Curious to know which countries produce the most gold? Our ever-popular post has been
updated with the latest data! Click below to see which country tops the list!

Gold Market
This week spot gold closed at $1,414.31, up $15.06 per ounce, or 1.08 percent. Gold stocks, as
measured by the NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index, ended the week higher by 2.67 percent. The
S&P/TSX Venture Index came in off 1.83 percent. The U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar fell 0.48 percent.

Date Event                                SurveyActualPrior
Jul-11Germany CPI YoY                     1.6% 1.6% 1.6%
Jul-11CPI YoY                             1.6% 1.6% 1.8%
Jul-11Initial Jobless Claims              221k 209k 221k
Jul-12PPI Final Demand YoY                1.6% 1.7% 1.8%
Jul-14China Retail Sales YoY              8.5% --     8.6%
Jul-16Germany ZEW Survey Current Situation5     --    7.8
Jul-16Germany ZEW Survey Expectations     -25.0 --    -21.1
Jul-17Eurozone CPI Core YoY               1.1% --     1.1%
Jul-17Housing Starts                      1260k --    1269k
Jul-18Initial Jobless Claims              216k --     209k
Strengths
         The best performing metal this week was platinum, up 2.46 percent. The yellow metal jumped on
         Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s comments spurred bets on a cut in
         interest rates later this month. Powell said concerns over trade and global growth continue to
         weigh on the domestic economic outlook. “Low rates help make gold and other commodities
         more competitive against assets that offer interest,” writes Bloomberg’s Justina Vasquez.

click to enlarge

         China’s central bank raised its gold reserves for a seventh straight month in June, buying 10.3

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tons on top of the nearly 74 tons bought since December, reports Bloomberg News. “Aside from
    its attempt to diversify holdings of dollars, owning more gold reserves is also an important
    strategy in China’s rise as a superpower,” says Howie Lee, economist at Oversea-Chinese
    Banking Corp.
    Several gold miners reported positive second quarter results this week, reports Kitco News. Gran
    Colombia Gold hiked its 2019 production guidance from 225,000 to 240,000 ounces of gold.
    SSR Mining produced over 98,000 gold-equivalent ounces from its three operations, which keeps
    it on pace to meet or beat annual guidance, says the company’s CEO. Wesdome Gold Mines
    mined 22,437 ounces in the second quarter, up from 16,628 ounces the same time a year ago.
    Lastly, Eldorado Gold is on track to meet its 2019 guidance after producing 91,803 ounces of
    gold this past quarter.
Weaknesses
    The worst performing metal this week was palladium, down 1.58 percent. Gold slipped on
    Wednesday as the U.S. dollar pared earlier losses and the yield on U.S. Treasuries hit a one-
    month high. Ed Meir, an analyst at INTL FCStone, told Bloomberg that gold “is sort of caught
    between cross-currents.” The yellow metal fell slightly on Friday morning following stronger than
    expected producer price index (PPI) data.
    Titan had the biggest single-day decline in almost six years on Monday, falling as much as 10.9
    percent, after the Indian jewelry maker said high gold prices have dented jewelry demand. The
    company said that the second quarter was a tough macro-economic environment and that growth
    was lower than planned, reports Blomberg.
    Physical gold demand in Asia slowed this week as consumers sold back bullion to cash in on the
    price rally, reports Reuters. India, the world’s second largest consumer, saw weaker demand due
    to a surprise rise in import duties from 10 percent to 12.5 percent last week and as prices hit a
    record of 35,145 rupees per 10 grams on Thursday.
Opportunities
    The World Gold Council (WGC) released its mid-year outlook and cited financial market
    uncertainty and accommodative monetary policy as likely to support gold investment demand in
    the second half of 2019. HSBC raised its gold price forecast to $1,362 an ounce in 2019, up
    from $1,314. The National Australia Bank also raised its forecast for the yellow metal for the
    remainder of the year to $1,400 per ounce, up from $1,380 previously.
    According to data compiled by Bloomberg, the iShares Silver Trust had its best week in a year
    and hasn’t seen any outflows so far in July. Plus, the fund had its biggest monthly inflow since
    2017 in June. Bloomberg’s Colin Beresford writes that silver has benefitted from haven demand
    as major central banks respond to weakening economic growth with a more dovish stance. The
    gold-to-silver ratio was at 93 this week, just shy of the high of 100 reached in February 1991.
    The U.S. dollar fell for the third consecutive day on Friday morning even after inflation data came
    in stronger than expected, reports Kitco News. Core U.S. consumer price index (CPI), excluding
    food and energy, rose 0.3 percent in June—the largest increase since January 2018. A weaker
    dollar has historically been constructive for the price of gold.
Threats
    South African platinum miners, including Anglo American Platinum, Impala Platinum Holdings
    and Sibanye Gold, are conducting pay talks this week with a major labor union. Ahead of the

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talks the miners have set aside cash and metal stockpiles to endure a labor strike. However, the
         union is asking for a pay raise of as much as 48 percent.
         KC Chang, precious metals analyst at IHS Markits, said in an interview with Kitco News that he
         expects gold prices to fall back to $1,300 an ounce by the end of the year. Chang says that the
         gold price rally in the last three weeks has run too far ahead of what economic fundamentals
         suggest and that there could be only one rate cut this year.
         The Chinese economy continues to lose stream. China’s exports fell in June by 1.3 percent from
         a year earlier as the trade war with the U.S. rages on. Reuters reports that China is expected to
         release data showing that its growth in the second quarter was the weakest in at least 27 years.
         This could contribute negatively to the overall slowdown in global growth.

Index Summary
         The major market indices finished mostly up this week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained
         1.52 percent. The S&P 500 Stock Index rose 0.78, while the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.01
         percent. The Russell 2000 small capitalization index lost 0.36 percent this week.
         The Hang Seng Composite lost 1.26 percent this week; while Taiwan was up 0.36 percent and
         the KOSPI fell 1.13 percent.
         The 10-year Treasury bond yield rose 8 basis points to 2.123 percent.

Domestic Equity Market

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Strengths
         Energy was the best performing sector of the week, increasing by 2.15 percent versus an overall
         increase of 0.78 percent for the S&P 500.
         Western Digital was the best performing stock for the week, increasing 13.97 percent.

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Shares of Cigna jumped more than 10 percent on Thursday after the Trump administration
    announced its plan to eliminate drug rebates from government prescription drug plans. The
    administration had attacked drug rebates in the past, stating that rebates provided financial
    incentives for pharmaceutical companies to set list prices for drugs artificially high.
Weaknesses
    Health care was the worst performing sector for the week, decreasing by 1.43 percent versus an
    overall increase of 0.78 percent for the S&P 500.
    Illumina was the worst performing stock for the week, falling 19.35 percent.
    Marriott got slammed with a $123 million fine after a major data breach exposed the personal
    data of 339 million hotel guests. The breach occurred in 2014 in the hotel company’s Starwood
    database, and Marriott inherited the undetected breach when it bought Starwood in 2016.
Opportunities
    Facebook is looking around for game studios to buy, The Information reports. The company is
    also signing exclusive deals to bring big blockbuster games like Assassin's Creed on its Oculus
    VR headset.
    Volkswagen announced they will inject $2.6 billion into Ford unit Argo AI taking the overall deal to
    $7 billion. Volkswagen will reportedly contribute $1 billion in capital and $1.6 in business
    activities, and VW and Ford will be equal stakeholders of the venture.
    Nintendo revealed a new console – a smaller version of the Nintendo Switch called the Switch
    Lite. The Switch Lite costs $100 less than the Switch because it's a portable-only console.
Threats
    Illumina stock fell nearly 20 percent on Friday after the genomic sequencing leader announced
    preliminary results for its second quarter on Thursday evening. Illumina said that it expects to
    report second quarter revenue of $835 million, $50 million lower than what Wall Street analysts
    anticipated. The company also updated its full-year 2019 guidance and now projects revenue
    growth of around 6 percent, less than half its previous forecast of full-year revenue growth
    between 13 and 14 percent.
    A U.S. court has ruled that Amazon can be held liable for defective products sold on its platform.
    The ruling comes after a woman sued Amazon in 2016 after she was blinded by a retractable dog
    leash that snapped and hit her in the face. Further, Amazon is coming under fire for "deceptive"
    ratings and reviews on its website, and lawmakers are now demanding answers.
    Deutsche Bank's week from hell just got worse after reported links with Jeffrey Epstein and a
    U.S. probe into its role in the 1MDB scandal. The U.S. government is reportedly probing whether
    the German bank's work with the Malaysia 1MDB fund violated foreign corruption or anti-money
    laundering laws. Further, the bank is being slammed for paying $52 million 'golden parachutes' to
    fired execs. This came after news emerged that execs were being fitted for lavish suits while the
    firings were going on.

The Economy and Bond Market
Strengths
    The number of Americans filing applications for unemployment benefits dropped to a three-

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month low last week, suggesting sustained labor market strength that could help support a
    slowing economy. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits declined 13,000 to a seasonally
    adjusted 209,000 for the week ended July 6, the lowest level since April, the Labor Department
    said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims rising to 223,000 in the
    latest week.
    U.S. underlying consumer prices increased by the most in nearly one and a half years in June
    amid solid gains in the costs of a range of goods and services. The Labor Department said on
    Thursday its consumer price index, excluding the volatile food and energy components, rose 0.3
    percent last month. That is the largest increase since January 2018 and follows four straight
    monthly gains of 0.1 percent. In the 12 months through June, the core CPI climbed 2.1 percent
    after advancing 2.0 percent in May. The Fed, which has a 2 percent inflation target, tracks the
    core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index for monetary policy. The core PCE
    price index increased 1.5 percent year-on-year in May and has undershot its target this year.
    Economists expect U.S. consumer spending, the biggest part of the economy, to pick up in the
    second quarter by more than previously estimated. Consumer spending will climb at a 3.4
    percent annualized pace in the April through June period, according to a July 5-11 survey of 53
    economists by Bloomberg News. That compares with a 2.7 percent rate seen in last month’s
    survey and a 0.9 percent reading in first-quarter data.
Weaknesses
    U.S. mortgage applications decreased last week, the Mortgage Bankers Association said on
    Wednesday. The seasonally adjusted index on loan requests, both to buy a home and refinance
    one, fell 2.4 percent to 505.8 in the week ended July 5. The week’s results include an adjustment
    for the Fourth of July holiday. “Borrowers have been less sensitive to low rates as many
    borrowers have either recently refinanced or are likely waiting for rates to fall even further,” Joel
    Kan, MBA’s associate vice president of economic and industry forecasting, said in a statement.
    American small business owners weren’t as optimistic in June as they were in May. Optimism
    slipped 1.7 points to 103.3, according to the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index. “Last month,
    small business owners curbed spending, sales expectations and profits both fell, and the outlook
    for expansion dampened. When you add difficulty finding qualified workers and harmful state-
    level laws and regulations, you’re left with a volatile mix where uncertainty has increased to levels
    not seen in more than two years,” said NFIB president and CEO Juanita Duggan.
    Americans' financial anxiety remains high despite a strong economy. Gallup’s annual survey on
    personal finances, conducted each April, found that 40 percent of Americans say they are either
    running into debt or barely making ends meet. And, about one-in-five say they have saved
    nothing at all for retirement.
Opportunities
    Treasury two-year yields may slide to 1 percent by the end of 2020 as the Federal Reserve
    makes a series of interest rate cuts to counter slowing growth, according to Citigroup Inc. The
    firm forecasts the Fed will lower its benchmark rate by 25 basis points in July and potentially cut
    another two times by year-end. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we see two-year yields dropping to 1
    percent by the end of next year,” said Shyam Devani, senior technical strategist in Singapore.”
    Such a move would be beneficial for short-term bonds.

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         Regional production surveys next week out of New York (Monday) and Philadelphia (Thursday),
         as well as the Beige Book (Wednesday), will signal the degree to which the factory sector is
         rebounding from heightened trade anxieties in the second quarter, in addition to setting the tone
         for the pace of factory activity in the second half of this year.
         While calling the slowdown in global economic growth “largely a cyclical development,” the 36-
         member Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) identified five
         “structural reform priorities” to give economic growth the shot in the arm it needs in each OECD
         member nation. The annual report, titled “Going for Growth 2019,” has identified the top five
         national reform priorities to “achieve strong, inclusive and sustainable growth.” These are: 1)
         Higher productivity growth; 2) Faster pace of reform; 3) Growth policies should ensure equality of
         opportunity; 4) Open markets that foster competition, innovation and productivity; 5)
         Environmental sustainability.
Threats
         U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday that uncertainties hanging over
         global growth and trade tensions show little sign of abating recently. Powell said crosscurrents
         such as trade tensions and concerns about global growth have been weighing on the U.S.
         economic activity and outlook.
         Bank of America Corp. cut forecasts for global economic growth this year and next, blaming the
         uncertainty wrought by the trade war between the U.S. and China. Economists at the bank now
         expect the world economy to grow 3.3 percent both this year and next, down from previous
         estimates of 3.6 percent and 3.7 percent respectively.
         The European Commission lowered its forecast on Wednesday for the eurozone economy next
         year, saying that uncertainty over U.S. trade policy posed a major risk to the bloc. The European
         Union's executive arm also lowered its estimate for inflation in the bloc.

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Energy and Natural Resources Market
Strengths
         The best performing major commodity for the week was lead, which gained 6.06 percent. Crude
         oil soared to a seven-week high as a potential hurricane has forced offshore producers to
         evacuate. Flooding around the Gulf of Mexico could disrupt refiners. WTI topped $60 per barrel
         on a report that stockpiles are at their lowest since April, reports Bloomberg.

click to enlarge

         Iron ore rose for a second day on Tuesday as supply disruptions and strong demand from China
         spur a global deficit, writes Bloomberg’s Krystal Chia. “There has been no change in the
         fundamentals—this year’s global deficit is hard to fill,” says Huatau Futures analysts Sarah Zhao.
         Futures in China rose as much as 4.5 percent after just last week seeing the biggest two-day fall
         since 2017.
         Nickel hit the highest price in three months on Friday morning on fears that major producer
         Indonesia will resume an export ban on ore in 2022, reports Reuters. In 2017, the nation relaxed
         the ban, but said that it would only last for five years and that nickel exports would be restricted
         again in 2022. Tighter supply with continued demand growth is constructive for higher prices.
Weaknesses
         The worst performing major commodity for the week was lumber, which fell 6.78 percent. While
         miners such as Rio Tinto, BHP Group and Anglo American are doing well with the rally in iron
         ore, Glencore is missing out. This is largely due to the miner relying on coal and not producing
         any iron. Bloomberg writes that Societe Generale and Macquarie Group cut their
         recommendations on the stock on Tuesday.
         BloombergNEF shows that worldwide investments in clean energy projects have hit a six-year
         low, with project financing slowing in all three major markets of the U.S., Europe and China.
         Global spending totaled $117.6 billion in the first six months of 2019, which is down 14 percent

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from a year earlier.
    Zinc fell close to its lowest level this year on Monday as Chinese output of refined zinc rose to
    501,300 tons in June, the highest level since November 2017, according to data from SMM
    Information and Technology. Teck Resources said this week that the global zinc concentrate
    market is in surplus and that trade tensions are hurting the metal’s price.
Opportunities
    As Germany is moving away from coal use, German lignite miner and power plant operator
    Lausitz Energie Kraftwerke is moving into large-scale electricity storage, reports Bloomberg.
    Capital Dynamics, an asset manager handling more than $16 billion and buyer of clean power
    plants, is betting on smaller solar projects and installations. An announcement this week said the
    company is investing in Sol Systems to develop 100 megawatts annually of solar energy.
    Since the U.S.-China trade war began, China has been focusing on replacing foreign imports
    with domestic technology, such as carbon fiber. Current capacity is around 25,000 metric tons
    and four carbon fiber companies announced this week a plan to ramp up capacity to 111,800
    metric tons by 2025, reports BloombergNEF.
    Copper fell then rose back up this week after speculation that President Donald Trump is seeking
    to weaken the dollar. Deutsche Bank analysts wrote in a note this week that copper is its
    preferred metal play for the second half of the year due to rising demand and mining disruptions.
Threats
    Tensions continue to grow in the Middle East. Iran’s military has vowed to retaliate against the
    seizure by British Royal Marines of an oil tanker filled with Iranian crude oil off the coast of
    Gibraltar last week, reports Bloomberg.
    Artisanal output of cobalt could drop 70 percnet this year in the Democratic of Congo—which
    produced 72 percent of the world’s total cobalt last year—as prices have tumbled significantly
    since early 2018. Many artisanal miners are instead switching to copper.
    The world’s largest chemical maker, BASF SE, has cut its sales and profit forecast for this year
    due to a deepening economic slowdown, a weakened automotive market and troubles from the
    U.S-China trade war, reports Bloomberg. Other chemical makers have cut forecasts and
    German-based BASF says earnings before interest, taxes and special items will be as much as
    30 percent lower this year than the previous year.

Emerging Europe
Strengths
    Romania was the best performing country this week, gaining 1.39 percent.
    The Russian ruble was the best performing currency this week, gaining 1.38 percent against the
    U.S. dollar.
    Consumer staples was the best performing sector among eastern European markets this week.
Weaknesses
    Greece was the worst performing country this week, losing 4.06 percent. The Greek stock
    market pared some of its recent gains as the market moves from pricing in a pro-business
    government to focusing on the problems that lie ahead for the local economy.
    The Turkish lira was the worst performing currency this week, losing 1.52 percent against the

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U.S. dollar. The lira extended declines and stocks fell after the country said it started receiving
         the first major cargo of a Russian missile-defense system, a purchase that could trigger U.S.
         sanctions.
         Healthcare was the worst performing sector among eastern European markets this week.
Opportunities
         French industrial output surged in May, indicating the euro area’s second-largest economy
         resisted a downturn in manufacturing in the currency bloc. Industrial production jumped 4
         percent from a year earlier, the most since 2017 and beating even the most optimistic prediction
         in a Bloomberg poll of economists. The monthly number was the best reading since 2016.
         The European Central Bank (ECB) is using its July meeting to tee up a September move via an
         easing , tiering, QE bias. The Fed signal increases somewhat the likelihood that ECB President
         Draghi will decide not to wait and pull the trigger on the whole package in July. According to
         EvercoreISI, the Bank of England will join the general turn towards more dovish policy.
         The U.K. housing market saw an increase in new buyers for the first time since November 2016
         last month, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) said. There are several signs that
         the housing market is starting to stabilize. Sales and new constructions started to pick up for the
         first time this year in June. A gauge of prices indicated stagnation after four months of declines.
         U.K. home values have been suffering since the Brexit referendum in 2016, with London hit
         particularly hard.
Threats
         Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan unexpectedly removed Murat Cetinkaya as central bank
         governor, after he refused an informal request to resign. Apart from the damage inflicted on the
         central bank’s credibility, the biggest concern for investors is whether Erdogan will force the
         central bank to cut rates too aggressively and too quickly. The lira slumped against all of the
         world’s major currencies on concern that the interest rates will be lowered faster than warranted.
         The lira’s expected volatility soared after the news broke.

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         According to Bloomberg Economics, slower exports largely explained weaker euro area growth

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last year. However, a close inspection of the data shows the trade war between the U.S. and
    China only had a small direct effect on European trade. So far, souring global sentiment is mostly
    to blame for the deteriorating outlook. Still, a further escalation of the trade war, a pivot toward
    tariffs on Europe’s automakers or a hard Brexit could all deliver another blow to exporters.
    The European Commission cut its Euro area growth and inflation forecasts for next year as trade
    tensions and policy uncertainty weigh on the region. The EC trimmed its 2020 Euro area GDP
    projection to 1.4 percent from 1.5 percent due to “increased downside risks”. On inflation, both
    this year and next were lowered to 1.3 percent. The report strengthens Mario Draghi's case for
    further stimulus measures as the ECB prepares to meet in two weeks.

China Region
Strengths
    Taiwan was the best performing country in the region this week, gaining 36 basis points.
    The Indonesian rupiah was the best performing currency in the region this week, up 81 basis
    points.
    Energy was the best performing sector this week up 18 basis points.
Weaknesses
    China was the worst performing country in the region this week, losing 2.67 percent.
    The Thai baht was the worst performing currency in the region this week, down 42 basis points.
    Consumer goods was the worst performing sector this week down 2.79 percent.
Opportunities
    China's credit growth exceeded expectations in June, indicating the central bank's efforts to spur
    lending are taking effect. Aggregate financing was 2.26 trillion yuan ($329 billion) last month,
    compared to about 1.4 trillion yuan in May.
    Trump’s trade war is turning out to be a boon for Bangladesh. For the first time in 30 years,
    Newage Group, a Bangladesh-based garment manufacturer, is sensing an opportunity to sell in
    the U.S. Newage, a supplier to Hennes & Mauritz AB, has been doing business with European
    companies for three decades, but is now getting inquiries from Macy’s Inc. and Gap Inc., Asif
    Ibrahim, vice-chairman of Newage Group, said in an interview. The company executive said
    inquiries from the U.S. have risen 30 percent.
    Thailand’s struggling tourism industry is finding support with visitors India. At a beachfront hotel
    on the tropical island of Phuket, the occupancy rate from Chinese clientele has stalled, while
    bookings from India have begun to rise. Indian arrivals accelerated in recent months due to more
    direct flights, a visa waiver and, most importantly, increasing wealth. Thailand expects to see a
    fivefold jump in Indian visitors in the next 10 years.
Threats
    Investors who have stomached the ups and downs of South Korea’s stock market this year have
    just been dealt another blow: resurgent tensions with Japan. A trade war initiated by Japan to
    curb exports of materials crucial for the production of memory chips has wiped out over $35
    billion in value from the Korean equity benchmark in July. Investors sold shares in semiconductor
    makers amid rising concern that they will be the biggest victims of the dispute.
    Singapore’s gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by an annualized 3.4 percent in the

                         Page 14, ©2019 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.
second quarter from the previous three months, which is the biggest decline since 2012.
         Singapore is often held up as a bellwether for global demand given its heavy reliance on foreign
         trade. An unexpected contraction in Singapore’s economy and a slump in China’s exports sends
         a warning shot to the world economy as simmering trade tensions wilt business confidence and
         activity.

click to enlarge

         China’s producer price index (PPI), which has a high correlation with nominal GDP, slowed year-
         over-year in June to zero – the weakest reading in nearly three years. Prices fell 0.3 percent from
         May. The downward trend accentuates fears of a return of deflation for manufacturing, which
         would erode company profits and increase debt repayment pressures.

Blockchain and Digital Currencies
Strengths
         Of the cryptocurrencies tracked by CoinMarketCap, the best performing for the week ended July
         12 was Constant, up 1,547.77 percent.
         During a panel at 92Y in New York this week, the Winklevoss twins, Tyler and Cameron, made a
         bullish long-term call on bitcoin, saying that the leading cryptocurrency is now at the “bottom of
         the first inning” and just getting started. The twins, who own an estimated 1 percent of bitcoin’s
         total reserves, also pointed out that “to shut down bitcoin, you [would] have to shut down the
         internet… like North Korea.”
         The Miami Dolphins now have an official cryptocurrency: Litecoin. The Litecoin Foundation made
         the announcement in a press release this week, writing that the collaboration “gives Litecoin the
         ability to tap into one of the NFL’s largest and most passionate fan bases through in-game
         branding and advertising opportunities at Hard Rock Stadium, as well as includion across the
         team’s various online properties and digital content.”
Weaknesses
         Of the cryptocurrencies tracked by CoinMarketCap, the best performing for the week ended July

                             Page 15, ©2019 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.
12 was Posscoin, down 98.94 percent.
         The price of bitcoin fell as much as 8 percent in less than two hours on Thursday in response to
         Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s insistence that Facebook halt its Libra crypto project.
         “Bitcoin has had a hard time maintaining buying support above $13,000 per coin during the
         recent relly,” John Todaro, director of digital currency research for TradeBlock, told Forbes.
         During his Congressional testimony on Wednesday, Powell said that “Libra raises many serious
         concerns regarding privacy, money laundering, consumer protection and financial stability,”
         adding that those concerns need to be addressed before Facebook should be allowed to move
         forward with the project.
         Retail investors don’t appear to be playing a large role in the recent bitcoin rally, according to
         Larry Cermak, director of research at The Block. Website traffic to cryptocurrency exchanges—
         Coinbase, Binance, Bitfinex and others—reached 174 million visits in June, a figure that’s
         virtually unchanged from the previous month. This came despite bitcoin’s meteoric rise in recent
         months. Between February and June, the cryptocurrency soared a whopping 250 percent, but
         over this same period, traffic to exchanges rose only 68 percent. Google searches for crypto
         exchanges were also muted, Cermak says, a sharp departure from late 2017 when bitcoin last
         had a massive price surge.

click to enlarge

Opportunities
         U.S. regulators potentially cleared the way for dozens of firms to become registered
         cryptocurrency brokers, writes Bloomberg, by issuing guidance on how securities rules apply to
         some of the complex issues posed by digital tokens. After the guidance was issued by the SEC,
         bitcoin jumped as much as 11 percent, to $12,290. Enthusiasts in the space say solving the
         issue around custody “will pave the way for more widespread investment in digital tokens,” the
         article continues.
         Bitcoin could “eclipse” the $100,000 barrier by 2021, says Anthony Pompliano, cofounder and
         managing partner at early-stage venture capital firm Full Tilt Capital. In an interview with Yahoo!
         Finance’s “The Ticker,” Pompliano reminded listeners that bitcoin is “a fixed supply asset, and so

                             Page 16, ©2019 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.
supply and demand economics apply. If there are increases in demand, you’re going to see the
     price move up.” He also forecast that Facebook’s upcoming Calibra e-wallet would support
     prices, as it will be given “to hundreds of millions of people, if not billions of people.”
     Blockchain financial services firm Diginex is scheduled to begin trading through a reverse merger
     with investment holding company 8i Enterprises Acquisition. The Hong Kong-based firm will be
     listed on Nasdaq following the deal, which is poised to value it at about $276 million, according to
     Bloomberg.
Threats
     Toward the end of last week, a group of Democrats on the House Financial Services Committee
     asked Facebook to halt plans for its Libra cryptocurrency, reports MarketWatch. “If products and
     services like these are left improperly regulated and without sufficient oversight, they could post
     systemic risks that endanger U.S. and global financial stability.”
     These same concerns were raised during a Congressional testimony this week by Fed Chairman
     Powell, who suggested that a full and complete assessment of Libra could take longer than 12
     months. President Donald Trump knocked bitcoin and Facebook’s proposed coin, writing on
     Twitter that “Unregulated Crypto Assets can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and
     other illegal activities… Similarly, Facebook Libra’s ‘virtual currency’ will have little standing or
     dependability.” Trump added that if Facebook is interested in becoming a bank, it “must seek s a
     new Banking Charter and become subject to all Banking Regulations.” Not everyone saw
     Trump’s criticism as a bad thing. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong tweeted: “Achievement
     unlocked!... First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.’ We
     just made it to step 3 y’all.” Billionaire Mark Cuban also spoke unfavorably about Libra this week,
     saying he was “not a big fan of what [Facebook is] doing there.” Cuban commented that he
     believes Libra “could be dangerous” and is a “mistake.”
     Police in Spain believe drug traffickers have been using the country’s bitcoin ATMs to launder
     money, taking advantage of a loophole in European anti-money-laundering controls, according to
     a report by Bloomberg. Know-your-client (KYC) rules do not apply to the owners of cash
     machines or crypto exchanges, but that is set to change next year when new European Union
     (EU) legislation goes into effect, making them subject to the same rules as banks, jewelry dealers
     and certain other firms.
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                          Page 17, ©2019 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.
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