Chart of the week: A few rate hikes, but then what?

In retrospect, we can say that central banks used the annual Jackson Hole symposium to revive their credibility as inflation fighters. This also applies to the ECB.

After yet another higher-than-expected inflation rate - we are now at 9.1 percent - and core inflation at a new record of 4.3 per cent, the ECB Governing Council on Thursday has adopted a record interest rate hike of 75 basis points.

Fire is on Fire

Ces dernières semaines, le nouveau documentaire de la VRT, FIRE, a fait couler beaucoup d’encre. Le programme télévisé présentait différentes personnes qui promettaient/assuraient qu’on pouvait devenir riche en suivant leur mode de vie et d’investissement.

Chart of the week: German inflation nearing 10%

It was a huge shock. The 37.2 percent increase in German producer prices, or PPI, for July that the Statistisches Bundesamt announced last week. Not only was this the biggest price increase ever, it was also more than five percentage points higher than the consensus expected.

Moreover, this number came before reports of the 50 percent increase in German electricity prices so far in August. And so the question arises, should we be getting ready for a German inflation, or CPI, of over 10 percent?

Han Dieperink: interest rates must rise further

The US equity market has rebounded some 15 percent from its low in June, helped by hopes of a Fed turnaround, better-than-expected corporate results and investors who were gloomy but invested.

The June low remarkably coincided with the peak in earnings expectations for 2022 and 2023. This means the entire price recovery can be attributed to higher valuations, made possible by lower interest rates. The fact that corporate earnings were better than expected, however, says more about expectations than about the underlying earnings trend.

Chart of the week: valuation as decisive factor

Valuation is often not the immediate trigger for a stock market turnaround. But it is a decisive factor in the amount of upward or downward potential for the market.

Re-rating

Since its low point in mid-June, the S&P 500 Index has risen 18 per cent. Over the same period, earnings per share rose by less than 2 per cent. There has thus been a considerable re-rating of equities over the past two months.