top of page
Daily Analysis 26 October 2022 (10-Minute Read)

A terrific Wednesday to you as sentiment was subdued after earnings from megacap companies.


In brief (TL:DR) 


  • U.S. stocks closed higher on Tuesday with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+1.07), the S&P 500 (+1.63%) and the Nasdaq Composite (+2.25%) all up.

  • Asian stocks advanced on Wednesday.

  • Benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury yields declined three basis points to 4.07% (yields fall when bond prices rise). 

  • The dollar declined for a second day to its lowest level in three weeks.

  • Oil fluctuated with December 2022 contracts for WTI Crude Oil (Nymex) (+0.95%) at US$86.13 as an industry report showed a rise in US crude stockpiles and investors fretted about weaker demand amid slowing growth. 

  • Gold rose with December 2022 contracts for Gold (Comex) (+0.67%) at US$1,669.10 as lower Treasury yields supported the precious metal. 

  • Bitcoin (+6.36) climbed to US$20,550, heading toward $21,000.


In today's issue...


  1. Tech Weakness Could Portend Darker Times Ahead for the Global Economy

  2. Leverage is Leaving the Building 

  3. Asian Family Offices Never Gave Up on Cryptocurrencies 


Market Overview


Stocks have been buoyed in recent days by mostly solid earnings and speculation the Federal Reserve may curb the pace of rate increases as evidence mounts that its aggressive tightening is starting to weigh on the economy. 

 

About a quarter of S&P 500 companies have reported third-quarter results, with more than two-thirds beating analysts’ estimates despite the big-tech setback. But concern is mounting that slowing output will dent corporate profits in coming months.

 

Asian markets rose on Wednesday with Tokyo's Nikkei 225 (+0.67%), Sydney’s ASX 200 (+0.18%), Seoul's Kospi Index (+0.65%) and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index (+1.00%) all up.



1. Tech Weakness Could Portend Darker Times Ahead for the Global Economy


  • U.S. tech stocks continued to buckle after some of the industry’s biggest names turned in disappointing third quarter results. 

  • If the tech sector is a bellwether for the broader economy, then slumping chip demand, slowing e-commerce and advertising growth all point towards a possible recession at worst, or a slowdown at best.  

 

While some wager that this year’s US$5.5 trillion selloff had finally bottomed out, U.S. tech stocks continued to buckle after some of the industry’s biggest names turned in disappointing third quarter results. 

 

Alphabet fell as much as 7.4% after third-quarter revenue came in well below expectations with sales far short of analyst estimates as spiraling inflation crimped growth in digital advertising and constrained marketing budgets.

 

Software giant Microsoft lost 8.1% after posting its weakest quarterly sales growth in five years, throttled by a surging dollar, slumping personal computer demand post-pandemic and faltering advertising revenue.

 

E-commerce juggernaut Amazon fell 4.9% while companies that derive sales from online advertising were dragged lower with Alphabet, as Meta Platforms and Pinterest dropped more than 4% each.

 

The selloff in extended trading was broad-based. 

 

Texas Instruments, a bellwether for the semiconductor industry, tumbled 6.1% after providing a forecast that was weaker than analyst estimates while chip firms, including Analog Devices, ON Semiconductor and Marvell Technology also slipped. 

 

Nevertheless, although pessimism is growing in the semiconductor industry, the world’s biggest chipmakers rose with Samsung Electronics up 2.6% and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing adding 0.9%. 

 

Chip shares are seen to be rising in response to actions from memory makers to cut output that could keep inventories lean. 

 

But if the tech sector is a bellwether for the broader economy, then slumping chip demand, slowing e-commerce and advertising growth all point towards a possible recession at worst, or a slowdown at best.  



2. Leverage is Leaving the Building 


  • Net leverage, a measure of industry risk appetite that measures the difference between long and short positions, has fallen almost 20% to a year low of 66%. 

  • Long-short funds have been hammered of late because their long positions have been hit by declining markets while stocks haven’t capitulated, limiting the upside from short positions. 

 

According to data earlier this month from Goldman Sachs Group’s prime brokerage, net leverage, a measure of industry risk appetite that measures the difference between long and short positions, has fallen almost 20% to a year low of 66%. 

 

Showing a simlar decline, separate figures from Morgan Stanley’s prime brokerage fell to 41% among U.S. long-short equity funds, a level reached on only a small number of occasions over the past decade.  

 

Long-short funds have been hammered of late because their long positions have been hit by declining markets while stocks haven’t capitulated, limiting the upside from short positions. 

 

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have the world’s two largest prime brokerages, serving around 5,000 hedge funds each, according to the latest ranking by Convergence.

 

These figures show that hedge funds have cut portfolio leverage this year in a conservative turn that has sucked borrowed money from global markets, adding selling pressure to stocks and bonds. 

 

The drop in leverage is believed to be driven by defensive positioning among funds as interest rates have climbed and markets have fallen. 

 

Rising interest rates, persistent inflation and geopolitical instability had heightened the risks facing investors. 

 

Hedge funds want to make sure they are not getting too close to levels that would force them to sell and leverage can quickly accelerate forced sales through cascading margin calls. 

 

The decline in leverage also reflects belt-tightening among investment banks as interest rates rise and the outlook for the global economy dims.

 

Overall, stock bulls may have to accept that markets are going to remain moribund for a little while longer as leverage is typically associated with rallies.



3. Asian Family Offices Never Gave Up on Cryptocurrencies 


  • According to a survey of 30 family offices and wealthy investors in Hong Kong and Singapore, published by KPMG China and Aspen Digital, 92% of respondents were interested in digital assets, with 58% already invested and 34% planning to do so.

  • Family offices may also see digital assets as diversification and a separate asset class, and also an appealing hedge against wider market ructions.

 

Despite months of market turmoil with Bitcoin down about 70% from its peak and Ether down about 60% year to date, Asian family offices are still buying into cryptocurrencies as weak returns from their traditional portfolios make digital assets attractive. 

 

Many Asian family offices sat on the sidelines as cryptocurrencies soared last year and have been waiting for buying opportunities this year as a wave of monetary policy tightening has hammered risk assets. 

 

According to a survey of 30 family offices and wealthy investors in Hong Kong and Singapore, published by KPMG China and Aspen Digital, 92% of respondents were interested in digital assets, with 58% already invested and 34% planning to do so.

 

More than 60% of the respondents were family offices or individuals managing assets worth between US$10 million and US$500 million. 

 

This year’s decline in digital asset prices had to be set against the poor performance of many Asian equity and real estate markets, making cryptocurrencies somewhat appealing, especially as they are often measured against the dollar which has pummeled Asian currencies. 

 

Family offices may also see digital assets as diversification and a separate asset class, and also an appealing hedge against wider market ructions.

 

At the Raffles Family Office forum held in Singapore recently, the multi-family office unveiled REVO, a family office dedicated to digital assets and helping wealthy families access them with institutional protections. 

 

Hong Kong’s traditional asset classes have suffered this year with the Hang Seng down more than 30% hammered by geopolitical tensions and repeated Covid-19 lockdowns in mainland China, the city’s equities are underperforming U.S. and European stocks. 

 

Against this backdrop, many family offices have shifted into cryptocurrencies and private equity in an effort to find shelter from the storm. 

 

The focus on family offices comes as cryptocurrency companies in Hong Kong are actively lobbying regulators on licensing requirements that will come into effect in March, but given China’s overarching influence over the territory, it remains to be seen what will become of the push.

本电子邮件通讯和任何附件中包含的信息仅供参考,不应被视为在任何司法管辖区出售或招揽购买任何证券的要约或要约,如果此类要约或招揽将违反任何当地法律。它不构成建议,也不考虑特定个人的特定分配目标、财务状况或需求。本电子邮件通讯中提及的数字资产和任何数字资产分配的价格和价值以及此类数字资产的价值可能会波动,分配者可能会在这些数字资产上实现损失,无论是数字资产还是金融损失,包括本金数字资产的损失分配. 

 

过去的表现并不具有指示性,也不保证未来的表现。我们不向我们的客户提供任何投资、税务、会计或法律建议,建议您就数字资产的任何潜在分配咨询您的税务、会计或法律顾问。本电子邮件通讯中包含的信息和任何意见均来自我们认为可靠的来源,但我们不代表此类信息和意见准确或完整,因此不应依赖此类信息。_cc781905-5cde- 3194-bb3b-136bad5cf58d_

 

没有向美国证券交易委员会、任何美国国家证券管理局或新加坡金融管理局提交注册声明。本电子邮件和/或其附件可能包含某些“前瞻性陈述”,这些陈述反映了当前对未来事件和 Novum Alpha Pte 的数字资产配置表现的看法。有限公司(“本公司”)。读者可以通过使用“展望”、“相信”、“预期”、“潜在”、“目标”、“继续”、“可能”、“将”等前瞻性词语来识别这些前瞻性陈述, “正在成为”、“应该”、“可能”、“寻求”、“大约”、“预测”、“打算”、“计划”、“估计”、“假设”、“预期”、“定位”、“目标”或这些词或其他类似词的否定版本。 

 

特别是,这包括关于区块链行业、数字资产和公司、风险投资和众筹市场的增长以及与公司进行任何数字资产配置的潜在回报的前瞻性陈述。本电子邮件和/或其附件中包含的任何前瞻性陈述部分基于历史业绩和当前计划、估计和预期。包含前瞻性信息不应被视为公司或任何其他人对未来计划、估计或预期将实现的陈述。此类前瞻性陈述受到与公司的运营、结果、状况、业务前景、增长战略和流动性有关的各种风险、不确定性和假设的影响,包括在单独的一组文件中描述的风险。如果这些或其他风险或不确定性中的一项或多项成为现实,或者如果公司的基本假设被证明不正确,则实际结果可能与本电子邮件和/或其附件中所示的结果大不相同。_cc781905-5cde-3194-bb3b -136bad5cf58d_

 

因此,您不应过分依赖任何前瞻性陈述。此处包含的所有绩效和风险目标如有更改,恕不另行通知。  无法保证公司将实现任何目标或与公司进行数字资产配置会有任何回报.  历史回报不能预测未来结果。该公司旨在成为早期技术领域和数字资产的专业数字资产配置和交易工具。早期技术中的数字资产分配具有更大的风险,可能被认为是高风险和波动性的。存在与公司分配的所有数字资产全部损失的风险-有关风险的详细信息,请参阅单独的一组文件。 

 

接受本通讯即表示您声明、保证并承诺:(i) 您已阅读并同意遵守本通知的内容,并且 (ii) 您将严格保密并保护本通讯,并同意不复制、直接或间接地重新分发或传递此通讯给任何其他人,或出于任何目的全部或部分发布此通讯。

bottom of page