Weekly Markets Update

Markets Update 16-08-2022

Markets last week

The week was dominated by US inflation readings and the market reaction to them. The US CPI (consumer price index) fell from 9.1% to 8.5% and the PPI (producer price index) dropped from 11.3% to 9.8%. Although in both cases the fall in energy prices over the previous month was almost entirely responsible for the softer print, markets were buoyed by the prospect of inflation having peaked. This was in keeping with previous moves in bond and equity markets anticipating a future reduction in US interest rates during 2023.

It is once again interesting that government bonds had a more subdued reaction than shares, in particular the technology sector. The US 10-year treasury yield fell briefly after the announcement of the lower CPI level, but quickly recovered and ended the week where it started. Equities, however, took the lower inflation print more seriously, with the US market driving returns in expectation of lower rates from the US Federal Reserve (Fed).

Other data during the week were mixed. Surveys rebounded somewhat in the US (University of Michigan) and in the eurozone (Sentix); UK economic growth disappointed in June and hence for the second quarter (Q2) as well; Japanese machine tool orders weakened in a sign that manufacturing is slowing down; but the significant number which investors seemed to ignore was the second consecutive quarter of large negative productivity in the US, clawing back all the progress made since COVID-19. 

Over the weekend, Chinese data softened, and the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) cut its medium-term lending facility rate by 10 bps.

Against that backdrop of economic slowdown and lower rate expectations, another four senior Fed members reiterated their views on monetary policy, stressing the need for further interest rate hikes to bring inflation down and ruling out cuts next year.

Now that we are at the tail-end of the Q2 reporting season, we note that equity analysts have been progressively reducing their earnings estimates for this year and next for most sectors, with the exception of energy, utilities and real estate.

Over the week, stock markets continued their positive run from the 16 June bottom. The surprise outperformer was Japan with China and Hong Kong lagging, although the US market overtook Japan on Friday with a strong session. The best sectors were energy, financials and materials, with healthcare and consumer staples the worst. 

The US dollar had its biggest fall in two months when the US CPI was published but bounced back thereafter. 

Oil prices once again recovered from their previous drop with Brent flirting with the US$100/bbl level but finishing the week around US$98. The gold price recovery fizzled at the US$1,800 level for the second time, but copper easily cleared the US$8,000 threshold again. 

Government bond yields fluctuated, but the US ended up stable with UK and European rates rising a few basis points.


The week ahead

Tuesday: ZEW (Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung) surveys in Germany and the eurozone

Our thoughts: the eurozone, and in particular Germany, is suffering from soaring energy prices due to the Ukraine war and Russian sanctions. This has led to slumping surveys, with the ZEW expectations for Germany at a decade low, although the current situation is still marginally above the COVID-19 low.  ZEW also publishes a eurozone-wide expectations survey and the last one was also at a decade low. It may matter to the markets whether there is a recovery this week or a further drop, given the widely-held expectation of a recession in Europe.

Wednesday: UK July inflation (CPI, RPI, PPI)

Our thoughts: the Bank of England 10 days ago did not shy away from giving us the bad news about inflation, forecasting a peak at 13% later this year. We have the opportunity for a ’progress report’ this week with the July CPI, PPI and RPI (retail price index). Economists are expecting an increase in the CPI (including core CPI ex food and energy) and the RPI, although the PPI output (factory gate prices) and PPI input (raw or intermediate inputs) are seen peaking at very high levels. Whether numbers exceed or miss estimates could impact markets trying to forecast the Bank of England’s next move.

Wednesday: Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes of the July meeting

Our thoughts: the market is going to be starved of Fed meetings and communication during the summer recess (from 26 July to 21 September) and hence may have to fly on auto-pilot regarding monetary policy. True, there is a symposium at the end of August in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where central bankers meet and from where some opinions or statements normally emerge, but they tend to define longer-term policy changes rather than short-term rate moves. The market is therefore likely to latch on to the minutes from the July meeting for clues as to where the September decisions could go.


Markets for the week

In local currency

In sterling

Index Last weekYTDLast weekYTD
UK
FTSE 1000.8%1.6%0.8%1.6%
FTSE 2501.4%-13.4%1.4%-13.4%
FTSE All-Share0.9%-1.4%0.9%-1.4%
US
US Equities3.3%-10.2%2.8%0.2%
Europe
European equities1.4%-12.1%1.7%-11.7%
Asia
Japanese equities1.3%-1.0%2.1%-5.1%
Hong Kong equities-0.1%-13.8%-0.4%-4.3%
Emerging Markets
Emerging market equities1.4%-17.5%1.0%-7.9%
Government bond yields
(yield change in basis points)
Current level Last Week YTD
10-year Gilts2.11%6114
10-year US Treasury2.83%0132
10-year German Bund0.99%3116
CurrenciesCurrent level Last Week YTD
Sterling/USD1.21380.5%-10.3%
Sterling/Euro1.1829-0.2%-0.5%
Euro/USD1.02590.7%-9.8%
Japanese yen/USD133.421.2%-13.7%
Commodities (in USD)Current level Last Week YTD
Brent oil (bbl)98.153.4%26.2%
WTI oil (bbl)92.093.5%22.4%
Copper (metric tonne)8091.52.8%-16.8%
Gold (oz)1802.41.5%-1.5%



Sources: FTSE, Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management

Central banks/fiscal policy

Fed speakers reiterate rate views despite lower inflation print. Also, was the Chinese rate reduction an emergency cut?

Fed members repeated the message of rising interest rates despite a softer inflation number. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said he wants the Fed’s benchmark interest rate at 3.9% by the end of this year and at 4.4% by the end of 2023, adding that he has not seen anything that changes the expected path of rates. 

Charles Evans, Chicago Fed President, said he expects the target range to rise to 3.25%-to-3.5% by the end of 2022 and to 3.75%-to-4% by the end of 2023: “I expect that we will be increasing rates the rest of this year and into next year to make sure inflation gets back to our 2% objective.”  

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said it was too early to declare victory and did not rule out another 75 bp hike in September (although she currently prefers 50 bps) and also pushed back on expectations of rate cuts in 2023. 

Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said: “There’s more to come to get rates into restrictive territory.” He also said he would like to see PCE inflation (Personal Consumption Expenditures, the Fed’s inflation gauge) running at target for some time.

During the week, President Biden signed the US CHIPS and Science Act, which provides US$280bn in new funding to boost domestic research and manufacturing of semiconductors in the US. The Inflation Reduction Act, which provides for US$370bn of investment in a low-carbon economy, paid for by prescription drug savings and corporation tax increases, was approved by Congress for his signature.

The Chinese one-year medium-term lending facility rate was cut from 2.85% to 2.75% in what was seemingly a reaction to poor economic data.


United States

Market paying attention to lower CPI/PPI prints but not to dreadful productivity loss clawing back post-COVID-19 gains

Inflation:in the latest survey by the New York Fed, expectations for US inflation three years ahead fell to 3.2% in July, from 3.6% the previous month, with the outlook for inflation in the coming year down to 6.2% from 6.8%. The University of Michigan sentiment survey inflation expectation similarly fell from 5.2% to 5.0% for one-year inflation but increased from 2.9% to 3.0% for 5-10-year inflation.

The small business owners survey found that 56% of them are raising prices, while 37% are planning to do so. Both are down from their peaks earlier this year but remain in record-high territory.

The CPI was flat in July, slowing to 8.5% year-on-year. The core CPI (ex food & energy) rose 0.3%, keeping the year-on-year number at 5.9%. Both core and headline CPI surprised to the downside in July. Breaking down the CPI print, services (ex food and energy) were 3.2% of the 8.5%, still rising; energy fell to 2.4% (down from 3.0%); goods ex food and energy were down to 1.4% (from 1.5%); but food was still rising, up to 1.5% (from 1.4%). The whole drop therefore comes from energy.

The PPI surprised by falling for the first time in more than two years, here too largely reflecting a drop in energy costs. The final demand PPI decreased 1.5% on the month and was up 9.8% year-on-year. The pullback was due to a decline in the costs of goods, whereas services prices edged up. Excluding food and energy, the core PPI rose 0.2% from June and 7.6% year-on-year. Some 80% of the decline in goods prices was due to a 16.7% plunge in petrol prices. 

Import prices fell 1.4% in July for a year-on-year increase of 8.8%, down from 10.7% the previous month. Import prices ex petroleum fell 0.7% on the month. Export prices fell 3.3% in July for a year-on-year increase of 13.1%, down from 18.1%.

Productivity:productivity fell 4.6% annualised in Q2, on top of the revised 7.4% plunge in Q1, the weakest two-quarter performance since records began in 1947, at -2.5% year-on-year. Given that productivity soared after lockdowns in 2020 by 10.3% during Q2 and 6.2% during Q3, the current data bring productivity back to where it was during the first half of 2020. Unit labour costs, on the other hand, rose 10.8% in Q2 following a 12.7% surge in Q1.

Employment:initial jobless claims increased to 262K this week from 248K, now in a clear upward trend from the 166K bottom in March.  Continuing claims also rose from 1420K to 1428K, a slow grind up as well.

Surveys: the University of Michigan sentiment index surprisingly rose from 51.5 to 55.1, with current conditions falling from 58.1 to 55.55 but expectations surging from 47.3 to 54.9.


United Kingdom

Economic growth dropped in June resulting in a negative Q2 print. House prices starting to move down

Retail: the BRC (British Retail Consortium) sales like-for-like rose 1.6% year-on-year in July, up from a negative -1.3% in June.

Housing: the RICS (Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors) housing market survey showed sales expectations for the next 12 months at the lowest level since March 2020. The RICS house price balance fell from 65% to 63%, combining lack of supply and weak demand. The Rightmove house price index dropped 1.3% in August for a year-on-year 8.2% growth, down from 9.3%.

Growth: the June GDP was down 0.6%, driven by construction output falling 1.4% (well anticipated by the construction PMI drop), manufacturing production dropping 1.6% and also services down 0.5%. Q2 GDP eased 0.1% overall, with government spending falling the most but total business investment surging and the consumer (namely private consumption) in between, down 0.2%.

Trade: the UK trade deficit hit a record of £27.9bn during Q2, with energy costs mostly to blame for the increase.


Europe

Better than expected

Surveys: in the eurozone, the Sentix investor confidence was marginally higher at -25.2 from -26.4.

Industry: industrial production in the eurozone rose 0.7% in June for a year-on-year growth of 2.4%, both markedly above estimates.


China/India/Japan/Asia

China’s inflation is not a problem, but growth might be

China: the CPI was below estimates at 2.7% with core CPI at 0.8%. The PPI came in at 4.2%. Chinese supply chains seem to be easing, with delivery times in global electronics and autos improving and price indicators also showing broad cooling.

The July data release showed industrial production at 3.8% year-on-year, down from 3.9%; retail sales at 2.7% from 3.1%; fixed assets ex rural (i.e. property) at 5.7% from 6.1%; property investment at -6.4% from -5.4%; new home prices down 0.11% on the month and the surveyed jobless rate improving to 5.4% from 5.5%.

Japan: machine tool orders were softer in July, up 5.5% year-on-year, down from 17.1% previously, in a sign that global manufacturing is softening.  Q2 GDP growth was 0.5% annualised to 2.2%, with private consumption up 1.1%; business spending up 1.4%; inventory contribution as a percentage of GDP at -0.4% and the net exports contribution flat. The Q2 deflator was negative at -0.4%.

In June, capacity utilisation surged 9.6% after a heavily negative month and industrial production was upgraded to 9.2%.


Oil/Commodities/Emerging Markets

Record US oil output but increased energy consumption keep market more balanced

US crude oil output reached 12.2 million bbls/day, the highest level since March 2020.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) boosted its forecast for global oil demand growth this year as soaring natural gas prices and heatwaves spur industry and power generators to switch their fuel to oil. According to the IEA, world oil consumption will now increase by 2.1 million bbls/day this year, or about 2%, up 380,000 a day from the previous forecast.  

Norway decided to halt its natural gas exports, which is going to affect the UK more than any other country as Norway is responsible for about 60% of the UK’s total gas demand.  

Over the week, Brent oil rose 3.5%, copper 2.8% and gold 1.5%.

What our clients say about us

Some of our clients shared their experience

I approached Brent in March 2012, to sort out my pension and portfolio. He has been very helpful since that time, coming to my house (at a time convenient to me) for quarterly reviews, which are both enjoyable and productive. Brent, and now as Horizon have not only managed to deliver my annual pension in a timely manner but have also managed to grow the pot that provides it consistently over time (even during these times of uncertain markets). I have recommended Horizon to my family and friends and will continue to do so.

Horizon has given us financial advice and managed our portfolio for many years. Through the financial crisis and the pandemic and we have great returns from our investments as well as avoiding the Laiki losses etc. Always efficient and easy to work with.

When your investment portfolio is handled by experts, and year after year produces positive results, you know you are with a professional company. Throughout challenging times Horizon Associates has consistently kept me well informed, offering expert advice and guidance.
Their expertise and up to date knowledge have always ensured that my investment has been steered through the correct funds, to achieve the maximum results.
Horizon is always informative, courteous and proficient. I highly recommend them.

We have been dealing with Brent for almost a decade.
He has proven repeatedly that he keeps his ear to the ground, having advised and guided us through terrible times and thus saved our hides.
Over and above this, he is always efficient and prompt, polite and professional.
We would readily recommend Brent with the greatest confidence.

Horizon Associates have served me well as my investment advisor since 2012. Brent has a good awareness of the current market conditions and the fit to my retirement goals. His ideas are well founded and he has been very attentive to my needs. Good communication is consistent even though we are now very distant geographically. I highly recommend Horizon-Associates.

Horizon have managed my investments for the past 9 years and have always given me the best advise and kept me up to date with my investments.
Not only do I consider the company to be great, I class my adviser as a true friend with my best interest at heart.

Brent has looked after my investment plans for the past 9 years. His advice has always been up to date, and he has consistently provided me suggestions to swap funds according to the prevailing markets. Brent listens to my opinions regarding investment priorities, but I tend to follow his experienced lead when it comes to fund reallocations. He is always professional and genuinely takes into consideration my requests regarding risk profiles and investment funding.

When I arrived on Cyprus for my retirement, I had quite a lot of money from selling a house and, as yet undrawn pensions. I needed a Financial Adviser to set me up for retirement income. I used several firms over a period of five or six years without a satisfactory result or good working relationship. In fact, I quickly found out that I was more interested in me than they were and that I began to know more than they did. My problem was how I separated myself from these “Commission Chasers” and find someone who I could trust and who knew what they were doing. Thus far Horizon have demonstrated a command of all that was missing before, over at least a ten year period. I have to confess to myself that I wish I had started here and avoided an expensive “Learning Experience”. It is actually fun to work together to get the desired result and to recommend Horizon to others who have been through my “Learning Curve.

Horizon took over the handling my private pension fund 4 years ago after years of my previous company mis-selling and badly advising me, which resulted in dire performance.
From the very first meeting, Horizon were honest and frank about where the problems were and what was needed to get the policy back on track, and true to their word, even in a very unpredictable and volatile environment, it has now made more in the short time I have been using them than in the entire time with my previous company...the figures don't lie. Additional to this, Horizon were also available, very communicative and professional at all times, which leads me to not hesitate in recommending them to anyone.

"Being an actuary, I always thought I was doing the right thing with my pension, but then I came across Brent and found out that for years I wasn't getting the best deal possible! It's indeed a tough job to build your pension funds successfully and a lot of people don't know where to turn. Brent and Horizon have been a great help for me making it extremely easy to invest in my future with their professional approach and tools. I have now been invested for 7 years with Horizon and Brent has helped me set up my UK pension plan in the best way possible. He is really an amazing person to work with and I feel secure knowing that he and Horizon are my financial partners!”

Horizon have managed our investment portfolio for the past 8 years, through some challenging economic changes. Their advice has always been first class and consistently provided us with a balanced and educated analysis of prevailing markets. Equally, Horizon take on board our opinions regarding investment priorities and go out of their way to understand our changing circumstances. Always courteous, always professional. A good friend.

BM Horizon Associates Ltd Privacy Policy

 

BM Horizon Associates Limited (Cyprus) is a privately owned company. The Horizon Associates website provides information for European based residents which is non-regulated and for non-European residents which is regulated. For Non-EU business, Horizon Associates offer Investment Advice and Insurance Brokerage services to applicable jurisdictions via Financial Services Network Ltd, regulated by the Mauritius Financial Services Commission License No. C116016070. www.fsn-ltd.com. Horizon Associates partnership and data sharing agreement with Financial Services Network Ltd ensures any Non-EU personal data sharing is protected via third party data sharing agreements containing European Commission approved Standard Contractual Clauses.

 

Risk Warning: Any investment in financial instruments entails substantial risks, the degree of which depends on the nature of each investment, and may not be suitable for all investors. The value of any investment may increase or decrease in value and investors may lose all their invested capital.

 

This privacy policy will explain how our organisations use the personal data we collect from you when you use our website or become a Horizon Associates client. 

 

What data do we collect?

Horizon Associates shall collect and process personal information necessary to fulfil legal and regulatory requirements for the provision of Horizon Associates services and to improve our services to you. Horizon Associates gathers personally, identifiable information that may be used, either alone or in combination with other information, to personally identify, contact or locate you and may in certain circumstances, share information with third parties which will help Horizon Associates to construct a profile based on your requirements and preferences to provide our services effectively.

 

Such information shall include: 

  • Information about you that you give us by filling our client forms/agreements, or by corresponding with us by phone, e-mail, in person or otherwise. It includes information you provide when you choose to use our services, participate in any company event and when you send any information to us under any capacity. The information you give us may include your name, address, e-mail address and phone number, financial information, personal description and photograph.
  • Information we collect/receive from other sources about you if you use any of the services we provide and/or professionals we partner with. We are working closely with third parties including, for example, business partners, brokers, vendors, insurers, platforms, fund houses, trustees, search information providers, credit reference agencies. Such partnerships will be notified to you in the beginning or during the course of our relationship and the extent to which such partnerships are required to provide our services to you, such notification can be in the form of additional application forms of such partners or access to their website/platform and in such case shall be covered by GDPR in their own right as applicable.

In order for Horizon Associates to provide the most appropriate financial services and products to you Horizon Associates have data sharing agreements with the following companies, and your personal data may be shared securely with them:

API Global Ltd, SkyBound Wealth Management, Global Residential FZCO, IP Global Ltd, Cypeir Properties Ltd, Moennez Holdings Limited, CPZ Property Limited, Vistra Group, UK Legal Wills.

 

As a client you are responsible for the true and accurate nature of the personal information you provide to Horizon Associates. Your personal information and/or data shall be checked when it is collected and at regular intervals thereafter, if any personal information is found to be inaccurate or out-of-date, all reasonable steps will be taken without delay to amend or erase that data, as appropriate. You are required to keep the company informed of any changes in personal information by emailing our Support Department at admin@horizon-associates.net.

Use of your Personal Data

Horizon Associates uses your personal information only as legitimate interest for the performance of our services to you, to improve our services, and enable us to inform you of any additional products, services or promotions relevant to you and in this respect. If you no longer wish to receive any promotional communication, you may opt-out of by contacting Horizon Associates via the Contact us page on the Company’s website or send an email to our Support Department at admin@horizon-associates.net.

 

Protection and Security of Personal Data

Horizon Associates does not sell, license or lease to anyone clients’ personal data, except as described in this Privacy. Horizon Associates has implemented appropriate measures to protect personal data from accidental loss, unauthorised or unlawful access or processing or destruction. Horizon Associates employs physical, electronic, and procedural safeguards to protect personal data and it does not store personal data for longer than is necessary for the provision of services or as permitted by the applicable regulations in accordance with Article 5 of GDPR – Principals relating to processing of personal data. We limit access to your personal data to those who have a genuine business need to access it. Those processing your information will do so only in an authorised manner and are subject to a duty of confidentiality.

The Personal Data we collect from you is stored locally at our servers and/or on cloud servers within the EU, Certain email communications and/or data transmitted to us over email and/or other means of electronic transfer of documents may be transferred to, and stored at, a destination outside the European Economic Area (“EEA”). It may also be processed by third parties operating outside the EEA which work for us, where any personal data is transferred outside of the EEA Horizon Associates have data sharing agreements in place which contain the necessary Standard Contractual Clauses to ensure the security of your personal data. By submitting your personal data, you agree to this transfer, storing or processing. We will take all steps reasonably necessary to ensure that your data is treated securely and in accordance with this privacy policy and GDPR, especially in instances where data will be transferred to, and stored at, a destination outside the EEA.

Horizon Associates also informs you to maintain confidentiality and not share with others your usernames and private passwords (“credentials”) or as provided by Horizon Associates. You are responsible for keeping your credentials confidential. We ask you not to share your credentials with anyone.

The transmission of information via the internet is not completely secure. Although we will do our best to protect your personal data, we cannot guarantee the security of your data when you transmit this to us; any transmission is at your own risk. Once we have received your information, we will use strict procedures and security features to try to prevent unauthorised access.

We have also implemented procedures to deal with any suspected data security breach. We will notify you and any applicable regulator of a suspected data security breach where we are legally required to do so.

 

Disclosure of your Personal Data

You agree that we have the right to share your information with selected third parties we use to help deliver our products and/or services to you including:

  • business partners, brokers, vendors, insurers, platforms, fund houses, trustees, search information providers or any other third party required for the performance of any contract we enter into with them or you;
  • credit reference agencies and/or banking and financial institutions and/or auditors for, among others, the purpose of assessing your financial information (where this is a condition of us entering into a contract with you).
  • Law enforcement agencies and regulatory bodies such as Mauritius Financial Services Commission and/or the Police for the purposes of complying with local and international regulations against money-laundering, fraud and the general prevention of crime and illegal activities.
  • analytics and search engine providers that assist us in the improvement and optimisation of our site;

We will disclose your personal information to third parties:

 

  • In the event that this is necessary for the delivery of our products and/or services to you (for example by using appropriate and compliant IT systems that transmit financial information and/or orders and/or execute payment and/or other financial transactions);
  • If we are under a duty to disclose or share your personal data to comply with any legal and/or regulatory obligation, or to enforce or apply our terms of use and other agreements, or to protect the rights, property, or safety of us, our clients or others. This includes exchanging information with other companies and organisations for the purposes of fraud protection, anti-money laundering and credit risk reduction;
  • If we or substantially all of our assets are acquired by a third party, in which case personal data held by us about our clients will be one of the transferred assets. Should this happen you will be given the option to opt out of this data transfer;

We only allow the third parties we work with to process your personal information if we are satisfied, they take appropriate measures to protect your personal information. We also impose contractual obligations on our selected third parties to ensure they can only use your personal information to provide services to us and to you.

 

Your rights

Under Chapter 3 of the GDPR, you have the following rights, which we will always work to uphold:

 

  1. Access – The right to be provided with a copy of your personal data, together with information regarding the processing of your data.
  1. Rectification – The right to request rectification of any inaccurate or incomplete personal data we hold about you.
  1. To be forgotten – The right to request erasure of your personal information based on legitimate grounds and where there is no good reason for us to continue to process or archive it.
  1. Restriction of processing – The right to restrict the processing of your personal data, based on legitimate grounds or in the event that your contest the accuracy of the data, we no longer need to process or archive your data.
  1. Data portability – The right to receive the personal data you provided to us, in a structured, commonly used and machine readable format and/or transmit that data to another controller, where technically feasible.
  1. Objection – The right at any time to object to your personal information being processed for direct marketing (including profiling) or other automated individual decision-making.
  1. Withdrawal of Consent – The right to withdraw consent at any time where consent shall not affect the lawfulness of processing based on consent before its withdrawal. Prior to giving consent, the data subject shall be informed thereof.
  1. Complaint – The right to lodge a complaint regarding the processing of your personal data. Our details can be found in the General Information Section of this Policy. If you feel that your concerns have not been adequately addressed by us, you
  1. have the right to lodge a complaint with the Office of the Commissioner for Personal Data Protection in Nicosia, Cyprus. (http:// www.dataprotection.gov.cy)

The right to access the information held about you, under certain conditions, may be subject to a fee of €25 to meet our costs in providing you with details of the information we hold about you. We shall aim to comply with requests for access to personal information as quickly as possible and will ensure that we comply with legislation unless exceptions apply. In such cases, the reason for any delay will be explained in writing to the data subject making the request. In processing a request, the identity of the data subject will need to be verified before information will be released. No personal data will be disclosed to a third party without the written consent of the data subject.

We reserve the right to refuse repeated/vexatious requests.

Further information about your rights can also be obtained from the Office of the Commissioner for Personal Data Protection in Nicosia, Cyprus.

Use of “Cookies”

Cookies are small pieces of information which use a unique identification tag and are stored on your computer, mobile device or any other device as a result of using the Horizon Associates website or other services the Company provides. Cookies are used to assess and improve the performance of our website and its products and services offered. Cookies are normally accepted automatically, however, you can refuse to have cookies stored on your device or if available, change the settings of your browser to refuse all cookies, and/or have your device notify you each time a cookie is sent to your device.

 

For more information about cookies, you may refer to the Company’s “Cookie Policy” available on our website.

 

Privacy policies of other websites

The Horizon Associates website contains links to other websites. Our privacy policy applies only to our website, so if you click on a link to another website, you should read their privacy policy. 

 

Changes to our privacy policy

Horizon Associates keeps its privacy policy under regular review and places any updates on this web page. This privacy policy was last updated on 21st August 2023.

 

How to contact us

If you have any queries regarding this policy or the use of your personal data including making a request for access, please contact us via the Contact us page on the Company’s website or by email to our Support Department at info@horizon-associates.net or by telephone +357 25 312196 or by mail to our registered office BM HORIZON ASSOCIATES LIMITED 2 Markou Drako, Pano Kivides Limassol, 4715 Cyprus..

 

How to contact the appropriate authority

Should you wish to report a complaint or if you feel that Horizon Associates has not addressed your concern in a satisfactory manner, you may contact the Office of the Commissioner for Personal Data Protection at commissioner@dataprotection.gov.cy.

 

Cookie Policy

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How do we use cookies ?

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Disclaimer

For Non-EU business, Horizon Associates Ltd offers Investment Advice and Insurance Brokerage services to applicable jurisdictions via Financial Services Network Ltd, regulated by the Mauritius Financial Services Commission License No. C116016070. www.fsn-ltd.com

Disclaimer: This Website is for information purposes only and should not be regarded as an invitation or inducement to engage in financial services, the information contained on this Website is not intended to be an offer to buy or sell securities.  We give no representation, warranty or guarantee as to the accuracy, correctness or completeness of such information or as to the tax or legal consequences of any related transaction.

Risk Warning: Any investment in financial instruments entails substantial risks, the degree of which depends on the nature of each investment, and may not be suitable for all investors. The value of any investment may increase or decrease in value and investors may lose all their invested capital.

FEES

If you have an existing product or portfolio and you would like Horizon to become your new advisor, a simple transfer of agency would accommodate this. Horizon would then provide portfolio management which would include quarterly reviews. Horizon charge 1% per annum per portfolio, deducted quarterly.

 

For more complicated arrangements & multiple product portfolios, a research, analysis and administration fee may be charged.

Private client fees are set and agreed in advance for structured arrangements and are typically a 1% arrangement fee (Subject to man hours and complexity).

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