KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Stocks rebounded from their worst year since 2008, returning to a bull market in the US.
- Inflation fell to half of last year’s peak, and the Fed paused after a year of rate increases.
- Artificial intelligence captured investors’ attention, but nothing suggests AI can beat the market.
The first half of the year has given investors plenty to process—from banking turmoil to a morphing yield curve to the debt ceiling debate. Those with diversified portfolios of equities and fixed income were in a good position to benefit from both assets’ advances at the year’s midway point, a welcome turn from last year’s broad declines.
US stocks began 2023 with gains.1 Inflation showed signs of cooling, and the Federal Reserve paused in June after a series of rate increases. Regional banks and their holdings came under increased scrutiny in early March, and several lenders were sold to larger banks as some depositors fled. Around this time, US stocks began a decline, only to resume their ascent weeks later. That rally was led by technology stocks,2 whose surge coincided with increased attention on artificial intelligence and its potential.3 Value stocks and small caps started the year with gains, but growth stocks and large caps overtook them in the second quarter through mid-June.4 The bond market rebounded after one of its worst years in decades.5
Inflation continued to retreat from last year’s four-decade high, with the 12-month rise in US consumer prices falling to 4% in May.6 The reading a year earlier was more than double that. Fed officials paused on raising the benchmark federal funds rate in June after more than a year of increases, but signaled they were leaning toward resuming rate increases if inflation doesn’t cool further. The rapid rise in interest rates left some regional banks, such as Silicon Valley Bank, in precarious financial positions, resulting in three of the four largest bank failures on record (after Washington Mutual in 2008).7 Silicon Valley Bank ended up being sold to First Citizens Bank, and other lenders similarly found themselves with new owners.
A Debt Diversion?
In Washington, politicians debated the US debt ceiling. After much back-and-forth, the president and Congress agreed on a deal to raise the debt limit in June, avoiding the impending possibility of a US default. Amid the discussions, stock and bond markets seemed to take the news in stride. While debt ceiling machinations can dominate headlines, the implications for investors are uncertain. The current deal imposes restraints on government spending for two years.
The S&P 5008 was up 15.8% through June 16, bouncing back from a two-year low in October and shifting from bear-market to bull-market mode upon reaching a 20% gain from the prior trough. Historically, US equity returns following sharp downturns have, on average, been positive. A broad market index tracking data from 1926–2022 in the US9 shows that stocks tended to continue to deliver positive returns even after the initial recovery from a bear market, or a decline of 20% (See Exhibit 1.)
After the Fall
Fama/French Total US Market Research Index returns, July 1926–December 2022