RBC Market Update – Week ending April 17, 2025

April 22, 2025 | Finucci Janitis Allen Wealth


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Vito discusses the U.S. policy shift on tariffs, market underperformance due to high valuations, rising bond yields, and a weakening dollar highlighting growing opportunities beyond the U.S.



What a difference a few weeks, or even days, makes. In a major pivot, the U.S. administration went from proposing sweeping tariffs across many of its trading partners to then extending a three-month pause for all countries. The exception is China, where tariffs have since risen substantially. Previously announced tariffs impacting the auto sector, steel and aluminium remain in place, while new exemptions for some electronics have been granted. The shift in approach has led to some respite from the big market swings, but uncertainty remains elevated. Moreover, the “risk-off” backdrop that traditionally comes in a period of market uncertainty has turned into a “U.S.-off” environment.

The U.S. stock market has struggled this year. And while global stocks have had challenges too, U.S. stocks have underperformed many other developed markets. We attribute this underperformance to elevated valuations. The U.S. stock market entered this year at a forward Price to Earnings multiple of over 20 times versus its historical average of closer to 16 times. Investors had come to expect strong growth from the U.S. stock market and were particularly enthralled with the earnings potential driven by capital spending tied to generative artificial intelligence. That left investors with high expectations for future growth, which has now come into question. It is not surprising that technology sector have been among the weakest year-to-date.

Weakness in the stock markets is par for the course during periods of uncertainty. More surprising has been the behaviour in the U.S. government bond market in recent weeks. Around the time of the U.S. government’s policy pivot, longer-term U.S. government bond yields rose (prices fell) relatively sharply. This suggests some investors were selling. There is no way of knowing for sure, but some of the pressure can be attributed to potential deleveraging in the institutional and hedge fund community and potential selling by foreign investors, including central banks. Bond yields have moved lower more recently suggesting this could have simply been a temporary anomaly, but it bears watching, nonetheless.

Finally, the U.S. dollar. It has been weak all year and has continued to decline during the past few weeks with other major currencies such as the Canadian dollar, euro, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, and pound sterling sitting at year-to-date highs and some even at multi-year highs relative to the U.S. dollar. The U.S. dollar weakness this year reflects investor concerns and questions regarding the trajectory of U.S. economic growth, potential for global investors to rotate out of U.S. assets, unpredictable and erratic government policy, and the sustainability of the U.S. fiscal position.

The U.S. may always play an important role in our investment portfolios because of the sheer depth of the opportunity set presented by its stock and bond markets. But we are open to the possibility that longer-term trends could be changing, as they have in the past, and other markets, sectors, and currencies could be important drivers of future performance. We welcome that possibility and will continue to spend time assessing opportunities for our clients and their portfolios.

Thanks for tuning in and see you in two weeks.

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Technology