Markets in 2024: Wall Street's high-octane rally keeps investors captive to the US
FILE PHOTO: People walk around the New York Stock Exchange in New York · Reuters

By Naomi Rovnick, Dhara Ranasinghe and Rodrigo Campos

LONDON (Reuters) - Markets that began the year with investors expecting a global stock rally to fizzle, swift U.S. interest rate cuts to boost Treasuries and soften the dollar and emerging market currencies to strengthen have firmly defied that consensus.

World stocks are set for a second consecutive annual gain of more than 17%, unfazed by wars in the Middle East and Ukraine, Germany's economic contraction and government collapse, French budget chaos and China's slowdown.

That comes mostly thanks to a second year of huge gains for Wall Street stocks as artificial intelligence fever and robust economic growth sucked more global capital into U.S. assets and took the dollar up 7% against peers in 2024.

U.S. exuberance rose after Donald Trump's Nov. 5 election win, as traders focused on the President-elect's plans for tax cuts and deregulation, with the surge in animal spirits propelling cryptocurrency bitcoin to a 128% annual gain.

World markets enter 2025 increasingly exposed to U.S. trends - a risk factor that burst into life after the Federal Reserve roiled markets this month by pointing to fewer rate cuts in the year ahead.

That came after weak U.S. jobs data and a surprise midyear Japanese rate hike that pressured dollar-denominated assets and sent a volatility wrecking ball swinging through global markets and sparked a short-lived rout in August.

Debt investors, meanwhile, are growing anxious about Trump's proposed trade tariffs refueling inflation and fear excessive White House borrowing that could roil the $28 trillion Treasury market and spark wider government bond disruption.

"It's going to be difficult, in the event of a (U.S.) pullback, to find anywhere to hide," Barclays private bank chief market strategist Julien Lafargue said.

WALL STREET JUGGERNAUTS

Wall Street's S&P 500 share index is 24% higher this year after a similar jump last year, in its strongest two-year streak since 1998.

Shares in artificial intelligence chipmaker Nvidia rose 172% in 2024, Elon Musk's carmaker Tesla gained 69% while investors' exposure to U.S. stocks hit record levels in December.

The combined value of the so-called Magnificent Seven U.S. tech stocks accounts for around a fifth of MSCI's world share index, according to Schroders, raising market threat levels if their earnings or AI technology disappoint.

EUROPE'S STRUGGLES

The euro slid around 5.5% against the dollar this year while European stocks performed worse relative to their U.S. peers than they have in at least 25 years.