What happened in September?

Global equities spent the 1st half of September in a gradual decline as a pending interest rate increase from the Federal Reserve appeared forthcoming. With macroeconomic data displaying a stable, growing economy, regulators have been seeking an opportunity to increase the rate at which institutions borrow money. However, the decision was made to keep interest rates in place. Since then, equities gained to close the month with positive momentum heading into 4th quarter.

For the month, the S&P 500 was relatively flat, moving +0.2% with international equities (ACWI ex U.S.) at 1.2%.  The S&P 500 Index is now +7.8% YTD, while the ACWI ex-U.S. is +5.8%.

 

Moving into the 4th Quarter

The majority of market-moving indicators remained bullish in September. Ending August with a 93% exposure to U.S. equities, we slightly decreased exposure as technical indicators weakened during the 2nd half of September. We enter October with a 90% U.S. investment level. In our international strategies, we maintained a bullish posture throughout the month and enter October 93% invested.

 

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Indicators that Remain Neutral

Indicators that Declined, but remain Positive

Indicators that Remain Positive

Valuation

Even though U.S. stocks valuations remain stretched, they present a more attractive opportunity when compared against historical averages as well as against today's interest-yielding alternatives.   

Technical

The S&P 500 ended September in line with its 50-day moving average while 2% and 5% above its 100-day and 200-day moving averages, respectively.

Macroeconomic

The median household income jumped 5.2% over the previous year.  There were a reduced number of jobless claims in August along with an increase of housing construction starts.

 

Sentiment

The UM Consumer Sentiment survey ticked up in September to its highest level since June.

 

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