Sectors
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Buybacks are down but not out. While financials have been weighing heavily on the S&P buybacks index, we would not write off the artificial engineering of higher EPS via equity retirement, especially in a world of ZIRP likely for the next five-to-seven years. COVID-19 has permanently scarred demand while non-residential construction is elevated. This combination will deflate commercial real estate (CRE) prices further, which risks unraveling a CRE debt deflation spiral. Continue to avoid the S&P real estate sector. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature Equities sunk late last week, as diminishing chances of fiscal easing coupled with news that the POTUS and the First Lady tested positive for COVID-19 more than offset buyers taking advantage of oversold conditions. Our sense is that the SPX will bounce around key moving averages during October (Chart 1), until the election outcome breaks the stalemate. In the back half of the month, banks also kick-start Q3 earnings season, which is important because banks’ wellbeing rests on a fresh stimulus bill. Peering over at the bond market is instructive in order to try to make sense of these crosscurrents. Two weeks ago, we first highlighted that the corporate bond market was waving a yellow flag. The selloff in the LQD ETF will continue to weigh on equities (top panel, Chart 2) and corroborates our view that the Fed is now a bystander, which puts added pressure on fiscal authorities to act. It is not a coincidence that the Fed’s balance sheet impulse peaked first and soon thereafter so did the LQD. Chart 1Trapped Between Moving Averages Worrisomely, the total return stock-to-bond ratio failed to break out to fresh all-time highs and has likely formed a head and shoulders pattern. The implication is that stocks are not out of the woods yet (bottom panel, Chart 2). Chart 2Bond Market… Junk spreads are also firing a warning shot. The high-yield option-adjusted spread (OAS) was in a tight range between 2017 and 2019. Then spreads exploded higher because of the pandemic. However, unlike the SPX making new all-time highs, junk spreads failed to make new all-time lows and more importantly have not settled back down to the 2017-2019 range (middle panel, Chart 3). The VIX index is following a similar pattern to the high-yield OAS, which is quite unnerving for equity bulls. Put differently, still elevated VIX futures in the 30s warn that in the near-term more turbulence lies ahead for the SPX (bottom panel, Chart 3). As a reminder, we first recommended buying the December VIX futures on July 27 in a joined Special Report with our sister Geopolitical Strategy service, and we continue to recommend such a hedge to long equity exposure. Chart 3…And VIX Signal Trouble For Stocks Bye-Bye Buybacks? According to the flow of funds data, a large dichotomy has taken shape between corporate debt issuance and net equity retirement. Up to very recently, the two moved in tandem. But now, the pandemic has caused a knee jerk reaction in non-financial corporate businesses that are tapping their credit lines and issuing debt at a breakneck pace. Worryingly, very little of these funds are used for equity retirement, which is a big break from recent past behavior (Chart 4). Not only does the Fed’s flow of funds data signal that buybacks have nearly ground to a halt, but also Standard and Poor’s data show that SPX buybacks collapsed to $88bn in Q2, from roughly $200bn in Q1. Crudely put, SPX buybacks have fallen by a whopping 67% quarter-over-quarter. Such a corporate buyer’s strike is negative for the near-term prospects of the S&P 500 (top panel, Chart 5). Chart 4Unsustainable Dichotomy Chart 5Buybacks Are Down… True, buybacks have come under intense scrutiny especially for bailed out sectors of the economy, nevertheless, the V-shaped economic recovery all but guarantees a rebound in depressed share buybacks sometime in 2021 (Chart 6). While our conservative $125/quarter buyback estimate proved overly optimistic in Q2, we maintain such an estimate for the next year (which it is the past decade’s average). On a cyclical 9-12 month horizon we have high conviction that SPX profits will return close to trend EPS of $162, and recovering CEO confidence should pave the way for a resumption of shareholder friendly activities, including equity retirement (middle panel, Chart 6). Drilling deeper beneath the surface is revealing. When we disaggregate the headline buybacks number into GICS1 sectors, we observe that once again the tech titans (comprising the S&P technology and the S&P communication services indexes) are doing all the heavy lifting accounting for 70% of the overall number (Chart 7). Q2 was the first time in recent memory where tech accounts for more buybacks that all the other sectors put together (bottom panel, Chart 5)! Chart 6But Not Out Chart 7GICS1 Sector Buyback Breakdown: Q1 & Q2 Chart 8 shows the ebbs and flows of sectoral SPX buybacks since late-2006. In order for our estimate to prove accurate in 2021, the Fed will have to allow financials to resume their buybacks, which collapsed from over $45bn in Q1 to just above $5bn in Q2 (Chart 7). Chart 8GICS1 Sector Buyback Breakdown: An Historical Perspective With regard to investable buyback indexes, financials dominate both the S&P 500 buyback index (Chart 9) and the NASDAQ US buyback achievers index. However, if the Fed does not relent and sustains a tight noose around banks’ shareholder friendly activities next year, then this index composition will change significantly in the 2021 rebalancing. While financials have been weighing heavily on the S&P 500 buyback index, its equal weighting methodology also partially explains why it has trailed the market cap weighted SPX by roughly 20% year-to-date (YTD). Nevertheless, in the long-haul buyback achievers come out on top. In fact, the S&P 500 buyback index has more than doubled the SPX’s return since the turn of the century (top panel, Chart 10) and such a portfolio tilt typically manages to shake off recession-related wobbles. Chart 9S&P 500 Buyback Index Sector Composition Bottom Line: We would not write off the artificial engineering of higher EPS via equity retirement, especially in a world where ZIRP is likely for the next five-to-seven years. Already buyback announcements have troughed (bottom panel, Chart 10) and factors are falling into place for a sizable resumption of buybacks in 2021 as the economy stands back on its own feet. Chart 10Buyback Comeback? Is CRE The Next Shoe To Drop? Last December in our 2020 Key Views report, the S&P real estate sector was one of our high-conviction underweight sectors for the year. However, frenetic trading in March compelled us to close out all our high-conviction trades and cement average relative gains of 3.4% in our eight high-conviction calls including 1.1% in the high-yielding S&P real estate sector. Nevertheless, we remained bearish on the prospects of this sector levered to commercial real estate (CRE) because the aftermath of the pandemic would leave this niche sector badly bruised. Already, YTD relative share prices are down 10%, and were it not for the tech/communications-laden – tower and digital storage – REITs that the S&P specialized REITs subgroup houses, then the relative underperformance would sink to 25% (Chart 11). In other words, the resilience of these mega cap tech-related REITs masks the carnage ongoing beneath the surface. Chart 11Specialized REITs Masking True Picture Charts 12 & 13 break down the YTD relative performance of the real estate sector’s sub-groups and it is clear that most REITs categories are in distress with the exception of specialized and industrial REITs. Chart 12REITs Are Weak… Chart 13…Across The Board Not only will the long-term negative ramifications due to the pandemic scar office-, apartment- and mall-exposed REITs, but also uncertainty surrounding the fiscal stimulus bill risks a fresh down-leg in the S&P real estate sector. According to the latest Q2 Fed release, CRE delinquencies are on the rise (not shown) and CRE prices are on the verge of contracting (bottom panel, Chart 14). A fresh stimulus bill could transfer funds directly to unemployed consumers and to cash-strapped business owners and extend the eviction/foreclosure moratorium as well as mortgage forbearance agreements. Absent this help, CRE will remain distressed. Refinancing risk is another threat that could cause a gap down in CRE prices, as bankers remain unwilling to dole out CRE loans despite a collapse in interest rates. Once the underlying asset gets repriced lower, then the debt related house of cards comes crumbling down (top & middle panels, Chart 14). Recent news that “Cerberus repackaged near junk rated CMBS paper into a AAA rated CDO” (effectively creating a AAA security out of thin air) is eerily reminiscent of the subprime crisis in 2008 and a stark warning that CRE excesses have yet to fully flush out.1 Chart 14More Pain Looms Chart 15Deflation Warning The downdraft in demand for CRE is already showing up in declining occupancy rates (Chart 15). We fear that there are more skeletons hiding in the closet. First the “amazonification” of the economy is still wreaking havoc on retail/shopping center REITs. Second the new “work from home” reality is putting strains on office landlords. Lastly, lodging will remain in distress at least until a vaccine is readily available. As a result, REITs cash flow growth will remain elusive, which will further dampen prospects of a recovery in the relative share price ratio (Chart 15). Finally, the relentless increase in supply is not showing any signs of abating. Non-residential construction is hovering near previous highs, and multi-family housing starts are perched close to prior cyclical peaks of 400K/annum (Chart 16). Undoubtedly, this excess supply backdrop will continue to weigh on CRE prices. Chart 16Mind The Supply Overhang Chart 17Valuations Have Yet To Fully Flush Out Despite all this dour news and near all-time lows in relative performance, valuations have only corrected down to the neutral zone, leaving ample room for an undershoot phase (middle panel, Chart 17). Encouragingly, persistent recent selling has pushed our relative Technical Indicator deep in oversold territory signaling that a near-term reflex rebound may be forthcoming. Netting it all out, COVID-19 has permanently scarred demand while non-residential construction is elevated. This combination will deflate commercial real estate (CRE) prices further, which risks unraveling a CRE debt deflation spiral. Continue to avoid the S&P real estate sector. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P real estate sector. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5RLST-AMT, EQIX, PLD, CCI, DLR, PSA, SBAC, AVB, WELL, ARE, O, SPG, WY, CBRE, EQR, ESS, FRT, PEAK, VTR, BXP, DRE, EXR, MAA, UDR, AIV, HST, IRM, KIM, REG, SLG, VNO. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-10-01/cerberus-is-repackaging-near-junk-cmbs-into-top-rated-securities Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives April 28, 2020 Stay neutral large over small caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
Rotation out of the tech titans is a high probability scenario given that the easy money has already been made as AAPL, MSFT and AMZN each commanded an almost $2tn market capitalization near the peak on September 2. Thus, booking some of these tech gains and redeploying capital in other unloved deep cyclical sectors would go a long way, especially if our thesis that the economic recovery will gain steam into 2021 pans out. Using a concrete rebalancing example to illustrate such a rotation is instructive.1 The tech titans’ (top 5 stocks) market cap weight in the SPX is 22%. Were an investor to take 10% of this weight or 220bps and redeploy it to the materials sector, which commands a 2.7% market cap weight in the SPX, would effectively double the exposure on this deep cyclical sector. The same would apply to the energy sector that comprises a mere 2.2% of the SPX, while industrials with an 8.4% market cap weight would get a sizable 26% lift. Bottom Line: As the economy opens up, it pays to rotate out of fully priced tech titans and into the beaten down deep cyclicals. Footnotes 1 Our example assumes benchmark allocation in all sectors for illustrative purposes.
Fiscal stimulus has been dominating the news flow of late. This is not surprising as COVID-19 affected consumers and businesses alike are running on empty. The Citi economic surprise index took off when the IRS started making direct payments to households in mid-April and leveled off toward the end of July when the stimulus money coffers ran dry. What is surprising, is haggling for roughly one trillion of stimulus dollars that separates Democrats from Republicans. If Congress fails to pass a new fiscal package by October 16 the latest, now that the Ruth Bader Ginsburg SCOTUS replacement seems to have become the number one priority, we doubt a fiscal package can pass during a contested election. Thus, realistically a fresh stimulus bill is likely only after the new president’s inauguration. Under such a backdrop, the economy will suffer a relapse, and stocks another drawdown. Bottom Line: We continue recommend investors remain patient and not deploy fresh capital just yet. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report.
Overweight We have been offside on the S&P industrials sector, but now is not the time to throw in the towel. In contrast we are doubling down on our overweight stance as the ongoing rotation should see some tech sector outflows find their way to under-owned capital goods producers. Over in the currency market, the recent debasing of the US dollar should underpin industrials stocks via the export relief valve (third panel). A depreciating greenback also lifts the commodity complex and hence industrials equities that are levered to the extraction of commodities and other derivative activities (top panel). Historically, an appreciating USD has been synonymous with a multiple contraction phase and vice versa. Looking ahead, the industrials sector relative 12-month forward P/E multiple should continue to expand smartly (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation in the S&P industrials sector. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report. Chart 1
In this Monday’s Weekly Report we reiterated our overweight stance in the S&P machinery index owing to a healthy macro backdrop. Starting from overseas, China is providing a large enough stimulus, which is on a par with the early-2016 numbers. On the currency front, the US dollar has entered a bear market, and we expect it to resume once the recent election uncertainty retracement phase fully plays out. The weakening US dollar is a material tailwind for machinery stocks as they derive a significant portion of their revenues from abroad. Domestically, manufacturing surveys are in a V-shaped recovery across the board which will further underpin the machinery stock rally. All of these dynamics are well filtered through our macro sales and earnings models that emit a positive signal (see chart). Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P machinery index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5MACH– CAT, DE, PH, ITW, IR, CMI, PCAR, FTV, OTIS, SWK, DOV, XYL, WAB, IEX, SNA, PNR, FLS.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy We recommend investors participate in the equity market rotation during the ongoing correction and position portfolios for next year’s bull market resumption by preferring unloved and undervalued deep cyclical laggards. Ultra-loose Chinese fiscal policy, rising global demand and firming domestic operating conditions, all signal that the S&P machinery recovery has legs. Vibrant emerging markets and a recuperating China, a softening US dollar rekindling the commodity complex, the nascent recovery in domestic conditions and washed out technicals, all suggest that a significant re-rating looms for severely neglected industrials equities. Recent Changes Our trailing stop got triggered and we downgraded the S&P internet retail index to neutral for a gain of 20% since the mid-April inception. This move also pushed our S&P consumer discretionary sector weighting to a benchmark allocation for a gain of 15% since inception. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 broke below the important 50-day moving average last week, but managed to bounce off the early-June 3233 level – also a level where the SPX started the year – that could serve as temporary support (Chart 1). We first highlighted that investors were turning a blind eye to (geo)political risks on June 8, and failure to pass a new fiscal package before the election will continue to weigh on the economy and on stocks risking a further 10% drawdown near the SPX 3000 level. Chart 1Critical Support Levels The Fed is now “out of the loop” i.e. a bystander on the sidelines, gently moving the foot off the accelerator as we illustrated last week. The FOMC’s, at the margin, less dovish monetary policy setting exerts enormous pressure on fiscal authorities to act as fiscal policy takes center stage. Our sense is that we have entered a Fiscal Policy Loop (FPL) where stalemate in Congress will cause a classic BCA riot point that in turn will force politicians’ hand to act in order to avoid a meltdown, and set in motion the next stage of the FPL (Figure 1). Keep in mind that the 2020s have ignited a paradigm shift from the Washington Consensus to the Buenos Aires Consensus1 and this is episode one of the FPL, more are sure to follow. Figure 1The Fiscal Policy Loop It is no surprise that the Citi economic surprise index took off when the IRS started making direct payments to households in mid-April and leveled off toward the end of July when the stimulus money coffers ran dry (Chart 2). Chart 2In Dire Need Of Fiscal Stimulus If Congress fails to pass a new fiscal package by October 16, the latest now that the Ruth Bader Ginsburg SCOTUS replacement seems to have become the number one priority, we doubt a fiscal package can pass during a contested election. Thus, realistically a fresh stimulus bill is likely only after the new president’s inauguration. Under such a backdrop, the economy will suffer a relapse despite households drawing down their replenished savings (middle panel, Chart 3). This is eerily reminiscent of the October 2008 and October 2018 fiscal policy and monetary policy mistakes, respectively, that resulted in a market riot. Similar to today, markets were down 10% and on a precipice and the policy errors pushed them off the cliff leading to another 10% gap down in a heartbeat. With regard to equity market specifics during the current FPL iteration, banks are most at risk as they are levered to the economic recovery, and commercial real estate ails remain a big headache. Absent a fiscal package bank executives will have to further provision for loan losses when they kick off Q3 earnings season in late-October as CEOs will err on the side of caution. Tack on the recent news on laundering money – including by US banks – and the Fed’s new stringent stress tests, and the risk/reward tradeoff remains poor for the banking sector (bottom panel, Chart 3). Odds are high that volatility will remain elevated heading into the election, therefore this phase represents an opportunity for investors to reshuffle portfolios and prepare for an eventual resumption of the bull market in early-2021. We continue to recommend investors avoid our “COVID-19 winners” basket and prefer our “back-to work” equity basket that we initiated on September 8. Similarly, this pullback is serving as a catalyst to shift some capital out of the fully valued tech titans and into other beaten down parts of the deep cyclical universe. Chart 3Show Me The Money We doubt this correction is over as positioning in the NASDAQ 100 derivative markets is still lopsided; stale bulls are caught net long as NQ futures are deflating, thus a flush out looms (Chart 4). Chart 4Flush Out The easy money has likely been made in the tech titans that near the peak on September 2, AAPL, MSFT and AMZN each commanded an almost $2tn market capitalization. Thus, booking some of these tech gains and redeploying capital in other unloved deep cyclical sectors would go a long way, especially if our thesis that the economic recovery will gain steam into 2021 pans out. Using a concrete rebalancing example to illustrate such a rotation is instructive.2 The tech titans’ (top 5 stocks) market cap weight in the SPX is 22%. Were an investor to take 10% of this weight or 220bps and redeploy it to the materials sector, which commands a 2.7% market cap weight in the SPX, would effectively double the exposure on this deep cyclical sector. The same would apply to the energy sector that comprises a mere 2.2% of the SPX, while industrials with an 8.4% market cap weight would get a sizable 26% lift (Chart 5). As a reminder our portfolio has an above benchmark allocation in all three deep cyclical sectors, and this week we reiterate our overweight stance on both the industrials sector and on a key subgroup. Chart 5Rotation Rotation Rotation Buy The Machinery Breakout Were we not already overweight the S&P machinery index, would we upgrade today? The short answer is yes. Aggressive loosening in Chinese financial conditions have underpinned the economic recovery (second & third panels, Chart 6). Infrastructure projects are making a comeback and absorbing the slack in machinery demand caused by COVID-19. As a result, Chinese excavator sales have soared in the past quarter which bodes well for US machinery profit prospects (bottom panel, Chart 6). Beyond China, emerging markets demand for machinery equipment is robust as the commodity complex is recovering smartly (second panel Chart 7). The US dollar bear market is also bolstering global trade growth, despite the greenback’s recent technical bounce, and should continue to underpin machinery net export growth and therefore profit growth for US machinery manufacturers (third & bottom panels, Chart 7). Chart 6Enticing Chinese Backdrop Chart 7Dollar The Great Reflator The domestic machinery demand backdrop is also conducive to a renormalization of top line growth to a higher run-rate. The ISM manufacturing new orders sub-component is shooting the lights out, heralding a jump in machinery orders in the coming months (second panel, Chart 8). Simultaneously, a quick inventory check is revealing: both in the manufacturing and wholesale channels cupboards are bare which means that the risk of a liquidation phase in non-existent (third panel, Chart 8). Encouragingly, an inventory buildup phase is looming in order to satisfy firming demand. The tick up in machinery industrial production growth, the V-shaped recovery in the utilization rate and newly expanding backlog orders, all suggest that domestic demand conditions are on the mend (Chart 9). Tack on still prudent payrolls management that is keeping the machinery industry’s wage bill at bay (bottom panel, Chart 8), and a profit margin expansion phase is a high probability outcome. Chart 8What’s Not… Chart 9…To Like Our resurgent S&P machinery revenue growth model and climbing profit growth model do an excellent job in encapsulating all the industry’s moving parts and suggest that the path of least resistance is higher for relative share prices in the New Year (Chart 10). Finally, relative valuations have also recovered from the depth of the recession, but are only back to the neutral zone leaving enough room for a multiple expansion phase (Chart 11). Chart 10Models Say Buy Chart 11Compelling Entry Point In sum, ultra-loose Chinese fiscal policy, rising global demand and firming domestic operating conditions, all signal that the S&P machinery recovery has legs. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P machinery index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5MACH– CAT, DE, PH, ITW, IR, CMI, PCAR, FTV, OTIS, SWK, DOV, XYL, WAB, IEX, SNA, PNR, FLS. Industrials Are Jumpstarting Their Engines We have been offside on the S&P industrials sector, but now is not the time to throw in the towel. In contrast we are doubling down on our overweight stance as the ongoing rotation should see some tech sector outflows find their way to under-owned capital goods producers. Industrials equities have been on the selling block and suffered a wholesale liquidation during the dark days of the COVID-19 pandemic, and have yet to regain their footing (top panel, Chart 12). The GE and Boeing sagas have dealt a big blow to this deep cyclical sector, but now this market cap weighted sector has filtered these stocks out as neither of these “fallen angels” is occupying a spot in the top 5 weight ranks. Relative valuations are washed out, and relative technicals are still deep in oversold territory (second & third panels Chart 12). Sell-side analysts are the most pessimistic they have been on record with regard to the long-term EPS growth rate that is penciled in to trail the broad market by almost 800bps (bottom panel, Chart 12)! All this bearishness is contrarily positive as a little bit of good news can go a long way. Already, relative EPS breadth is stealthily coming back, and net earnings revisions are rocketing higher (Chart 13). Chart 12Liquidation Phase… Chart 13…Is Over One reason behind this optimism rests with the domestic recovery. Capex intentions are firming and CEO confidence is upbeat for the coming six months. The ISM manufacturing new orders-to-inventories ratio is corroborating the budding recovery in the soft data. Green shoots are also evident in hard data releases. Durable goods orders are on the verge of expanding anew (Chart 14). Emerging markets (EM) and China represent another source of industrials sector buoyancy. The EM manufacturing PMI clocking in at 52.5 hit an all-time high. China’s PMIs are also on a similar trajectory, and the Chinese Citi economic surprise index has swung a whopping 300 points from -240 to above +60 over the past six months. The upshot is that US industrials stocks should outperform when China and the EM are vibrant (Chart 15). Chart 14Domestic And … Chart 15… EM Green Shoots Are Bullish Peering over to the currency market, the debasing of the US dollar should also underpin industrials stocks via the export relief valve (third panel, Chart 16). A depreciating greenback also lifts the commodity complex and hence industrials equities that are levered to the extraction of commodities and other derivative activities (top panel, Chart 16). Historically, an appreciating USD has been synonymous with a multiple contraction phase and vice versa. Looking ahead, the industrials sector relative 12-month forward P/E multiple should continue to expand smartly (bottom panel, Chart 16). The US Equity Strategy’s macro based EPS growth model captures all the different earnings drivers and signals that an earnings-led recovery is in the offing (Chart 17). Chart 16The Greenback Holds The Key Chart 17Models Flashing Green Adding it all up, vibrant emerging markets and a recuperating China, a softening US dollar rekindling the commodity complex, the nascent recovery in domestic conditions and washed out technicals, all suggest that a significant re-rating looms for severely neglected industrials equities. Bottom Line: We continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation in the S&P industrials sector. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The Washington Consensus – a catchall term for fiscal prudence, laissez-faire economics, free trade, and unfettered capital flows – is being replaced by economic populism, by a Buenos Aires Consensus. Buenos Aires Consensus is our catchall term for everything that is opposite of the Washington Consensus: less globalization, fiscal stimulus as far as the eyes can see, erosion of central bank independence, and a dirigiste (as opposed to laissez-faire) approach to economics that seeks to protect “state champions,” stifles innovation, and ultimately curbs productivity growth. 2 Our example assumes benchmark allocation in all sectors for illustrative purposes. Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives April 28, 2020 Stay neutral large over small caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
We first highlighted that investors were turning a blind eye to (geo)political risks on June 8, and failure to pass a new fiscal package before the election will continue to weigh on the economy and on stocks risking a further 10% drawdown near the SPX 3000 level. Figure 1The Fiscal Policy Loop The Fed is now “out of the loop” i.e. a bystander on the sidelines, gently moving the foot off the accelerator as we illustrated on Monday. The FOMC’s, at the margin, less dovish monetary policy setting exerts enormous pressure on fiscal authorities to act as fiscal policy takes center stage. Our sense is that we have entered a Fiscal Policy Loop (FPL) where stalemate in Congress will cause a classic BCA riot point that in turn will force politicians’ hand to act in order to avoid a meltdown, and set in motion the next stage of the FPL (Figure 1). Keep in mind that the 2020s have ignited a paradigm shift from the Washington Consensus to the Buenos Aires Consensus1 and this is episode one of the FPL, more are sure to follow. This is eerily reminiscent of the October 2008 and October 2018 fiscal policy and monetary policy mistakes, respectively, that resulted in a market riot. Similar to today, markets were down 10% and on a precipice and the policy errors pushed them off the cliff leading to another 10% gap down in a heartbeat. Bottom Line: The odds of a fiscal policy mistake are rising quickly and risk an equity market riot point. We remain cautious on the short-term prospects of the equity market and recommend investors keep their powder dry as a better entry point will likely materialize in the coming months. Footnotes 1 The Washington Consensus – a catchall term for fiscal prudence, laissez-faire economics, free trade, and unfettered capital flows – is being replaced by economic populism, by a Buenos Aires Consensus. Buenos Aires Consensus is our catchall term for everything that is opposite of the Washington Consensus: less globalization, fiscal stimulus as far as the eyes can see, erosion of central bank independence, and a dirigiste (as opposed to laissez-faire) approach to economics that seeks to protect “state champions,” stifles innovation, and ultimately curbs productivity growth.
The market bounced off the 3233 support level this week and while volatility has retrenched, we continue to caution investors not to deploy fresh capital just yet as a better entry point will likely materialize in the coming months. Looking across three key asset classes – fixed income, commodities, and currencies – reveals that equities will have a hard time breaking out of their recent funk. First, and most importantly, the corporate bond market has been discontent with equities’ behavior since early-August, warning that investors have to allow ample time for this drawdown to fully play out (top panel). Second, in the commodity universe, silver had been diverging from equities as it topped out in early-August and led the broad equity market peak. Now “poor man’s gold” – that fell another 5% yesterday alone – is weighing heavily on the SPX (middle panel). Finally, the ultimate risk-on/off currency cross AUD/CHF peaked in early June alongside a slew of other hypersensitive sectors like banks/financials, representing yet another yellow flag for the near-term prospects of the overall equity market (bottom panel). Bottom Line: Stay patient and refrain from deploying fresh capital in the broad equity market. A better entry point will likely materialize between now and the end of the year.
Underweight We are currently underweight the S&P semi equipment index in line with our broader strategy of preferring defensive software & services tech stocks at the expense of the more aggressive hardware & equipment tech stocks. Recent news of the Trump administration’s potential tightening of the noose on Chinese chip company SMIC (the country’s largest foundry) was a net negative for US semi cap names. It also was a wake up call for investors with regard to the sector’s vulnerability to a flare up in the US/China trade tensions, especially given the sell-side’s extremely optimistic sales and earnings projections (see chart). Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P semiconductor equipment index. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5SEEQ – AMAT, KLAC, LRCX.
Neutral In mid-April we moved the S&P consumer discretionary sector to the overweight column via upgrading the internet and home improvement retail sub-sectors. While the home improvement retailers hit our stop earlier this month resulting into 15% relative gains, last Friday internet retailers followed suit. We are obeying our previously instituted stop in the S&P internet retail index and crystalizing gains at the 20% relative return mark and downgrade to neutral. This move also pushes the overall S&P consumer discretionary sector to a benchmark allocation, locking in profits of 15% in excess of the broad market over the past five months. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P internet retail index to neutral which also pushes our S&P consumer discretionary sector allocation to benchmark for 20% and 15% relative gains, respectively, since the mid-April inception.