Markets In A Nutshell — For June 2024
The narrow US-market rally advanced in June, propelled to nosebleed highs by Wall Street’s relentless optimism. The S&P 500 Index closed the first half of the year more than 14% up. The air is becoming even thinner at the top: almost 60% of the gain was driven by just five stocks — Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta and Apple. Nvidia alone accounted for almost a third of the market’s first-half advance.
In the second quarter, these Fantastic Five were whittled down to the Thrilling Three — Nvidia, Apple and Microsoft. Together, they accounted for more than 90% of the 4% index return, of which 3.5% was achieved in June alone.
Meanwhile, speculative euphoria has ignited a fresh bout of meme-stock mania. Goldman Sachs’s Risk Appetite Indicator — a broad-based measure of investor enthusiasm — is near its highest levels. However, the US economy is evidently cooling. Reports on personal spending, jobless claims, housing supply and home sales raise questions about whether the slowdown might yet accelerate.
The dramatic performance by a handful of mega-cap stocks masked far weaker performance among the index’s other constituents — the returns for the equal-weighted version of the S&P 500 were negative for the second quarter. This outcome is evident in other world equity markets: those in the UK, Eurozone and China were down 2–3% in June when measured in US dollars, which gained against the other currency majors.
The market environment was again negative for the conservative Foord International Fund, given its low weighting to US tech stocks and broader diversification across other markets which were negative in the month. Shares in the materials sector were detractors. The Foord Global Equity Fund also ended lower and underperformed its US-heavy MSCI All Country World Index benchmark for similar reasons.
With US equity valuations at the top end still reflecting best-case scenarios — and risk premiums for corporate bonds the narrowest they’ve been in three years — the margin for error is wafer slim. Peak bullishness in a market lacking breadth risks collision with a US economy that is visibly slowing.
Risk of permanent capital loss in the frothiest sectors of markets is now much higher than normal. Instead of taking inordinate risk investing in a very small group of overpriced stocks, we prefer instead to hold a far wider portfolio of high-quality investments across many different asset classes, sectors and geographies. We are confident that — in time — this approach will deliver to our investors the returns they require, without exposing them along the way to the devastating risks of capital destruction.
Insights
06 Jun 2025
MARKETS IN A NUTSHELL — FOR MAY 2025
In our monthly podcast, ‘Markets in a nutshell’, Linda Eedes explores what made May 2025 one of the strongest months for equity markets in the past year and whether the rebound is built on solid ground. She also…
05 Jun 2025
MARKETS IN A NUTSHELL — FOR MAY 2025
May brought a new pontiff to Rome and a fresh breeze to markets after Beijing and Washington stepped back from the tariff cliff. The two countries agreed to steeply cut bilateral tariffs and pause further…