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Mixed Signals: Services PMIs Hold Up, Fed Minutes Reveal Divergence, and AO World's Recovery Path

Mixed Signals: Services PMIs Hold Up, Fed Minutes Reveal Divergence, and AO World's Recovery Path
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  • Services PMIs (Jun) – 05/07 - despite the dire start of manufacturing activity, services have held up well but even here we are seeing pockets of weakness with France seeing a sharp drop in the flash numbers a few days ago, sliding from 52.5 to 48, while activity in the rest of the euro area remains broadly positive. This is an area that could help boost economic activity in Italy and Spain now we're in the holiday season and which may help avert a 3rd quarter of weakness. We're also expected to see positive readings from the UK and the US.

 

  • Fed minutes – 05/07 – recent briefings from various Fed officials do suggest that a divergence of views is forming on how to move next, as well as in the coming months, and while the commitment to a pause in June was well flagged the commitment and guidance did pose a bit of a problem to the Fed given the strong economic data only days before the meeting in question. Powell managed to overcome that with a strongly hawkish message at his press conference along with an upgrade to the central banks key economic forecasts. A number of members changed their dots to reflect the prospect that they were prepared to raise rates twice more by the end of the year, with a hike in July looking increasingly likely.  This was somewhat surprising given markets were pricing one more rate hike, however key in amongst this is the Fed's determination that markets stop pricing rate cuts by the end of this year. This insistence of pricing in rate cuts by year end has been one of the key characteristics that has helped drive recent gains in stock markets. This slowly appears to be being priced out, as is the possibility that the Federal Reserve, along with other central banks, looks to prioritise pushing inflation down at the risk of raising the level of unemployment. This week's minutes ought to give us an indication of the thought processes of the more dovish members of the FOMC, and how comfortable they are with the prospect of further rate rises. 

 

  • AO World FY 23 – 05/07 – has had its share of problems after getting a huge lift during the pandemic as business for electrical goods shifted online. These growing pains presented problems of their own in terms of scaling its operations so when the inevitable slowdown happened the business struggled to cope as costs surged. Back in 2021 the shares rose to a record high of 443p, as a pandemic buying frenzy pushed the shares up from lows of 48.5p in the space of 9 months. It's taken a little bit longer to round-trip that journey with the shares hitting a record low back in August of 39p. We've seen a decent recovery since then, helped by a number of guidance upgrades this year, one on January, with the focus on reducing costs with revenues set to see a 17.2% decline from last year. In March EBITDA guidance was raised again, to between £37.5m and £45m, with management citing further margin improvements. In April this was followed by a Q4 trading update which predicted UK revenues of £1.13bn while updating its profit guidance to the top end of its recent range upgrade of EBITDA of between £37.5m to £45m. In a sign of confidence regarding AO's turnaround plan, in June Mike Ashley's Fraser Group acquired a 19% stake in the business at 68p per share in a welcome boost for the online retailer.  
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