Global stocks started the year with a bang. Prices rose 9.5% in the first few weeks before markets began retreating in early February. By quarter end, financial markets brushed aside concerns surrounding rising interest rates and the stability of the banking system to end the quarter in positive territory. When all the dust settled, global stocks as a whole rose 7.3%, with larger foreign-developed stocks outperforming, and smaller U.S. companies lagging. The lone detractor of the group was commodities, which fell 5.5% following a significant rise in the prior year.
While the red-hot labor market has cooled off a bit in 2023, jobs remain plentiful. At the most recent reading, there were 9.9 million job openings reported. While down from 12 million a year ago, it is nearly double the 5.8 million unemployed individuals reported for March.
During the most recent labor situation report, we learned that the economy has added over 1.8 million jobs in the last six months and that the total number of employed individuals now stands at 160.8 million. This level is now two million higher than the pre-COVID peak reached in late 2019.
For much of the past 10 years, inflation has been below 2%. As COVID subsided and pent-up demand exceeded supply, prices began to increase. In a short period of time, inflation went from below 2% to above 9%. To combat rising prices, the Federal Reserve has been increasing interest rates steadily over the past 15 months. Based on recent data, it appears that the rapid rise in interest rates is indeed helping to cool inflation. In fact, when looking at year-over-year changes in the consumer price index, inflation peaked in June of 2022 at 9.1%, and while still elevated, has now fallen to 5.0%. Should this trend continue, the interest rate increases will likely cease in the months to come.
During the quarter, the Federal Reserve increased interest rates both before the bank failures—during their January meeting—and afterward—during their March meeting. Despite strong job growth, persistently high inflation, and comments from the Federal Reserve, financial markets believe interest rates will not remain quite this high for very long. We can see this when looking at interest rates across different maturities of U.S. treasury securities. Currently short-term interest rates—such as 1, 3, and 6-month—are in the 4.75% - 5.0% range, where 5, 7, 10, and even 30-year rates are much lower at roughly 3.5%. As such, at quarter end, investors holding money market securities were earning more interest than investors holding 30-year U.S. treasury bonds.