Aldrich Wealth LP (“Aldrich Wealth”) is an investment advisor registered with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Aldrich Wealth provides wealth management services where it is appropriately registered or exempt from registration and only after clients have entered into an Investment Advisory Agreement confirming the terms of the client relationship and have been provided a copy of Aldrich Wealth’s Client Relationship Summary and ADV Part 2A brochure document. The information contained on this website is provided for informational purposes only, is not complete, and does not contain material information about making investments in securities including important disclosures and risk factors. Under no circumstances does the information on this website represent a recommendation to buy or sell stocks, bonds, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), other securities, or investment products.
The technical information on this website is necessarily brief. No final conclusion on these topics should be drawn without further review and consultation. Please be advised that, based on current IRS rules and standards, the information contained herein is not intended to be used, nor can it be used, for the avoidance of any tax penalty assessed by the IRS.
Q1 2018 Market Commentary + Outlook
By Aldrich Wealth
Aldrich Wealth Shares a Look at the Market
It was a roller-coaster start to the year, in which solid global equity market gains gave way to a volatility blowup in February, followed by rising concerns of a trade war and a technology-led rout near quarter end. In the end, the S&P 500 Index fell nearly 0.8% for the quarter, marking the first time in 10 quarters that the domestic equity benchmark posted a loss.
The protectionist rhetoric benefited domestically focused small-cap companies the most, while growth-oriented companies notably outpaced their value brethren. Data indicating slowing growth momentum in Europe, coupled with U.S. – China trade frictions, raised concerns among investors in non-U.S. markets. After hitting a 17-year high in December, confidence in Europe declined in each of the subsequent three months on expectations that companies will pare back investments because of Brexit, U.S. trade policies and a stronger (€) euro.
Against this backdrop, international equity markets, as measured by the MSCI EAFE, declined 1.5%, hampered by a 3.9% drop from the UK. A weaker dollar, ample economic growth and healthy corporate earnings yielded positive results for the developing markets, with the MSCI Emerging Markets Index adding 1.4% during the period.
The Federal Reserve continued its rate hike campaign with a 0.25% bump in the Federal Funds rate in March. Fixed income returns were largely negative during the quarter as the yield on the 10 Year Treasury rose over 30 basis points from 2.40% to 2.74%.
Watch our market commentary video below, featuring Nicole Rice interviewing Chief Investment Officer Darin Richards, to hear more about the market trends this quarter.
Download our full market commentary here.
Meet the Author
Share
Related Articles
Q3 2024 Market Commentary + Outlook
The Fed’s September Rate Cut Sparks a Shift in the Market
Looking for support or have a question?
Contact us to speak with one of our advisors.
"*" indicates required fields