The Copper Street Newsletter

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    As the end of the year beckons, we choose not to dwell on recent events – which have remained static talking points for months while underlying fundamentals remain cloaked in uncertainty – and instead, focus on likely outturns for the upcoming year. 

  • October provided no major surprises, although for the first time market concerns over elevated tech valuations manifested themselves in a broad selloff. 

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    And so, just like that the first three quarters of the year are done, and by all measures it’s been a solid year thus far for risk markets. European financials have been outperforming, finally reaping the benefits of a decade-long restructuring and a normalized interest rate environment after the disastrous excesses of Monetary Theory-induced money printing.

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    There was an absence of fireworks last month despite several smouldering macroeconomic and geopolitical situations.  The relative calm owes more to the fact that it was August, rather than any sense of confidence in current leadership to resolve these outstanding problems. 

  • Sao Paulo

    The mix of politics and finance makes a terrible cocktail and recently we’ve witnessed the consequences of uneconomic decisions unravelling because of a changed political or economic environment or simple customer disinterest in certain products.

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    One long-running theme in European financial circles has been consolidation of the banking sector.  It’s something we’ve written about extensively over the years and recently it returned to the spotlight as the sector has returned to health. 

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    With no fresh calamities markets were forced to deal with the increasing banality of the current economic reality, which means growing concerns over deteriorating public finances on both sides of the Atlantic.  With good reason, as politicians of all stripes are proving the old adage that no government ever voluntarily shrinks in size, or meaningfully fund new spending. 

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    Chaos reigned in April, as a torrent of new tariffs, retaliatory tariffs and amended tariffs complicated by accelerations, delays and cancellations, upended markets that were already reeling in expectation of what was about to be announced.  Not since the days of Senator Smoot and Representative Hawley have tariffs been the cause of such disruption.