Global updates: Equity markets rebound in July 

Despite an increasingly clouded economic backdrop, share prices around the world generally rose during July. Investor sentiment was buoyed by encouraging US earnings reports and by hopes that central banks might moderate their tightening activity in order to avoid undermining economic growth. 


  • The Fed raised US rates by another by 50 basis points
  • The US economy shrank for two consecutive quarters
  • The ECB increased its key rate to zero

Hopes that tightening might ease: despite an increasingly clouded economic backdrop, share prices  around the world generally rose during July. Investor sentiment was buoyed by encouraging US earnings reports  and by hopes that central banks might moderate their tightening activity in order to avoid undermining economic growth. 

“I do not think the US is currently in a recession” (Fed Chair Jerome Powell)

US economy contracts again: having shrunk by 1.6% in the first three months of the year, the US economy  contracted by 0.9% over the second quarter. Nevertheless, Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Jerome Powell  played down the prospect of recession, saying: “I do not think the US is currently in a recession … there are just too many areas of the economy performing too well”. The Dow Jones Industrial Average Index  rose by 6.7% over July. 

Fed tightens again: the rate of US consumer price inflation  continued to surge, hitting 9.1% year on year in June. As expected, the Fed  raised interest rates by 0.75 percentage points during July, taking the key federal funds range to a range of 2.25% to 2.5% and fuelling concerns that the increase could put further pressure on economic growth. Chair Powell sought to reassure investors, saying  it would “likely become appropriate to slow the pace of increases” while policymakers evaluate the impact of higher rates on inflation and growth. 

ECB makes its move: policymakers at the European Central Bank (ECB) raised interest rates  by 50 basis points to zero. Although further increases are widely expected, they are likely to take place on a meeting-by-meeting basis. ECB President Christine Lagarde  warned: “Economic activity is slowing … We expect inflation to remain undesirably high for some time”. The euro  fell below the dollar for the first time in almost 20 years during July, but rebounded following the ECB’s decision to raise rates. The European Commission  cut its growth forecast for the European Union for 2023 to 1.4%, citing the impact of the war in Ukraine on food and energy supplies. Over July as a whole, the Dax Index  rose by 5.5%.

Clouds lifting for Japan? The Bank of Japan  downgraded its growth forecast for the current fiscal year from 2.9% to 2.4%, but expects the economy to recover towards the second half as the impact of Covid-19 and supply-chain issues begins to moderate. The Nikkei 225 Index  rose by 5.3% during July. 


To view the series of market updates through July, click here