Sectors
The deeper we dig in the concentration of SPX returns the more worried we become. The top five stocks in the SPX (AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, GOOGL & FB) have added $4.82tn to the S&P 500 market cap since 2015, whereas the bottom 495 stocks have added $3.82tn. In percent return terms, these five tech titans’ market capitalization has gone up roughly four fold or 288% over the past 5 ½ years from $1.67tn to $6.49tn. In marked contrast, the S&P 495 market cap has gone nowhere rising a mere 23% (increasing from 16.57tn to $20.39tn) during the same time frame (top panel). If investors have not been in these tech titans, then they have not really participated in the SPX’s run up. The measly return since 2015 in the Value Arithmetic index and negative return in the Value Line Geometric index gauging the mean and median US stock, respectively, corroborate our analysis (not shown). Clearly, such a steep divergence is unsustainable and the longer these handful of stocks defy gravity the steeper their eventual fall will be (second panel). Bottom Line: We remain cautious on the near-term prospects of the S&P 500, until the election uncertainty lifts in November.
Highlights For financials and energy to produce a sustained rally, there must be no relapse in global growth during the autumn and winter of 2020/21. However, with the coronavirus still in play and the usual flu and virus season yet to come, a key hurdle to overcome will be the physical reopening of schools and childcare facilities this September. Hence, for the time being, remain overweight healthcare and technology versus financials and energy. This implies underweight European stocks versus US stocks, and overweight Germany, France, Netherlands and Switzerland within Europe. Play good news in Europe by remaining long EUR, CHF, and SEK versus USD, and long US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus German Bunds and French OATs. Fractal trade: Short silver. Feature Chart Of The WeekDenmark's OMX Is At An All-Time High, While The FTSE 100 Is Languishing. Why? Once upon a time, the stock market existed as a barometer of the economy. Or at least, a good representation of the size and composition of profits in the host economy. But that time is long gone. Today, a tiny handful of companies are driving the performance of supposedly broad indexes such as the FTSE 100 and the S&P 500. Indeed, we should more accurately call the FTSE 100 the FTSE ‘10’ ignoring the other 90. And we should call the S&P 500 the S&P ‘5’ ignoring the other 495. Meaning that stock markets are no longer stock ‘markets’. Yet many analysts still try and explain the stock market’s performance through traditional top-down macro drivers such as GDP growth, profit margins across the host economy, and so on. The trouble is that when the stock market is dominated by a tiny handful of companies, this 20th century approach is doomed to fail. Today, we must take a more granular approach based on the type of companies that are dominating each stock market. Sector Concentration Is Driving Stock Markets The handful of companies that dominate each stock market tend to be the leaders in their global sector. This means that each stock market is defined by a sector concentration, which has often evolved by chance, based on where companies chose to start up and list. This sector concentration usually has little or no connection with the host economy. For example, Denmark’s OMX index is dominated by Novo Nordisk, a global biotech company. The FTSE 100 is heavily weighted to the oil majors Royal Dutch and BP as well as global bank HSBC, which have only a limited exposure to the UK economy. On the other side of the Atlantic, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Google and Facebook are massively over-represented in the S&P 500 compared with their contribution to the US economy. A crucial defining feature of a stock market turns out to be its exposure to healthcare and technology – whose profits are in major structural uptrends – versus the exposure to financials and energy – whose profits are in major structural downtrends (Charts 2 - 5). Chart I-2Healthcare Profits Are In A Structural Uptrend Chart I-3Technology Profits Are In A Structural Uptrend Chart I-4Financial Profits Are In A Structural Downtrend Chart I-5Energy Profits Are In A Structural Downtrend The stock market capitalisation in healthcare and technology stands at 52 percent for Denmark and 40 percent for the US, compared with just 20 percent for Europe and 12 percent for the UK. The flip side is that the stock market capitalisation in financials and energy stands at just 8 percent for Denmark and 11 percent for the US, compared with 21 percent for Europe and 30 percent for the UK. This explains, for example, why Denmark’s OMX is hitting all-time highs while the FTSE 100 is languishing (Chart of the Week). That said, the price of the growing stream of healthcare and technology profits can still fall if it is at an unjustifiably high level. And the price of the shrinking stream of financial and energy profits can still rise if it is at an unjustifiably low level. Hence, the key question is: what determines the prices of these two groups of sectors, one whose profits are in a major uptrend, the other whose profits are in a major downtrend? Healthcare And Tech Performance Hinges On The Bond Yield The price of a rapidly growing profit stream is weighted to the values of the large distant cashflows, making it highly sensitive to the discount rate applied to those distant cashflows. Whereas the price of a rapidly shrinking profit stream is weighted to the values of the large immediate cashflows, making it much more sensitive to the near-term evolution of the economy (Box I-1). Box I-1Bond Yield Sensitivity Versus Economic Sensitivity The upshot is that for stocks and sectors whose profits are in a major uptrend, the key driver of the price is the direction of the bond yield. Whereas for stocks and sectors whose profits are in a major downtrend, the key driver is the near-term direction of the world economy (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6Exposure To Healthcare And Technology Determines Bond Yield Sensitivity Chart I-7Exposure To Financials And Energy Determines Economic Sensitivity Pulling all of this together, the rally in healthcare and technology stocks is extremely vulnerable to a sustained rise in the bond yield. But a sustained rise in the bond yield seems highly unlikely without a breakthrough vaccine or treatment for COVID-19. While the coronavirus is still in play, the long-term hollowing out and scarring in the jobs market will only become apparent in the coming months once furlough schemes and temporary relief programs end. This will force all central banks to remain ultra-dovish and where possible, become more dovish. Meanwhile, for financials and energy to produce a sustained rally, there must be no relapse in global growth during the autumn and winter of 2020/21. However, with the coronavirus still in play and the usual flu and virus season yet to come, a key hurdle to overcome will be the physical reopening of schools and childcare facilities this September. Hence, for the time being, remain overweight healthcare and technology versus financials and energy. This translates to underweight Europe versus the US. And overweight Germany, France, Netherlands and Switzerland within Europe. How To Play Good News In Europe Things have been going right in Europe. First, unlike in the US, the COVID-19 outbreak is subsiding, at least for now. New infections have been steadily declining through the warm summer months (Chart I-8). Chart I-8New Infections Declining In Europe, Rising In The US Second, the ECB has injected ample liquidity into the banking system which, combined with ultra-low interest rates, has permitted a strong expansion in bank lending. Though somewhat disappointingly, the bank lending surveys tell us that the loans are being used for emergency working capital requirements rather than investment. Third, the EU has approved a €750 billion Recovery Fund, over half of which will take the form of grants to the sectors and regions most stricken by the coronavirus crisis. Given that the fund will be financed by jointly issued EU bonds, this amounts to a fiscal transfer to the areas that need the most help. Hence, even if the amount of the stimulus may be smaller than in other parts of the word, it comprises a huge symbolic step towards greater unity in the EU and euro area. Still, despite this trifecta of good news, European stock markets have not outperformed (Chart I-9). This just emphasises that stock market relative performance has little connection with domestic economics and politics. To reiterate, stock market relative performance is almost always the result of the sector concentration of a handful of dominant stocks. Chart I-9Despite Good News In Europe, European Equities Are Not Outperforming Begging the question: how to play the continuation of good news in Europe? The answer is through the currency and fixed income markets, which have a much stronger connection with domestic economics and politics (Chart I-10 and Chart I-11). Chart I-10Play Good News In Europe Via European Currencies... Chart I-11...And Sovereign Yield Spread Tightening Remain long a basket of EUR, CHF, and SEK versus the USD. Our favourite cross out of these three is long CHF/USD given the haven character of the CHF in periods of market stress. To play bond yield convergence between the US and Europe and between core and periphery Europe, remain long US 30-year T-bonds and Spanish 30-year Bonos versus German 30-year bunds and French 30-year OATs. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System* The spectacular rally in silver is fractally fragile, and at a point which has signalled several trend reversals through the past five years. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is short silver, with the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss set at 12.5 percent. In other trades, long GBP/RUB achieved its profit target. Against this, short Germany versus UK and long bitcoin cash versus ethereum reached their stop-losses. Long nickel versus copper reached the end of its holding period in partial loss. The rolling 12-month win ratio now stands at 59 percent. When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Earnings season is in full swing, and rock bottom expectations for most sectors will prove once again a low bar to surpass. Earnings ultimately matter for stock returns. As a reminder the SPX drubbing in March predicted a collapse in 2020 EPS below $110, and the subsequent 1000 point S&P 500 rebound since the lows signals a return to EPS trend near $162 in 2021. The top panel of the chart shows that this is more or less what the Street expects. Our updated four-factor macro model corroborates this V-shaped rebound in profit growth and should continue to underpin stocks on a cyclical time horizon (bottom panel). In the near-term however, we would be cautious and not chase stocks higher. The steeper the short-term rise in the SPX, the steeper the eventual snapback will be. The risks we are monitoring are the high concentration of returns in a handful of tech titans, the Fed’s balance sheet leveling off, a potential fiscal cliff, and a “blue wave” risk that is not at all priced into equities as we recently posited. Bottom Line: While our cyclically sanguine broad equity market view remains intact, we are cautious in the short-term prospects of the S&P 500, until the election uncertainty lifts in November.
Two Friday’s ago we highlighted that the tech sector’s (plus FANG: FB, AMZN, NFLX & GOOGL) market cap weight in the SPX was high and rising to uncharted territory near 40%, and such narrowing breadth was a clear risk to the market rally. Today we compare the five tech titans’ market cap weight in the SPX with five GICS1 cyclical sectors (industrials, energy, materials, financials and real estate). The results are staggering: five tech stocks are worth as much as 224 deep and early cyclical stocks in the S&P 500 (top panel). Such high concentration is worrisome and represents a near-term risk to the equity market recovery run. While the drubbing in the 10-year US treasury yield is propelling the tech titans’ forward multiple to the stratosphere (bottom panel), we fear that gravity will sooner-rather-than-later push these stocks back down to earth. NFLX recent earnings fired a warning shot that uncharacteristically high expectations are being built into tech stocks, making them vulnerable to sizable pullbacks. Bottom Line: We remain cautious on the short-term prospects of the S&P 500, until the election uncertainty lifts in November.
BCA Research's US Investment Strategy service remains bullish on the SIFI banks despite the uncertainty surrounding their outlook. Second quarter earnings provided just that demonstration, at least away from WFC, which has a raft of intrinsic issues to…
Highlights The ultimate extent of credit losses in this cycle is unknown, … : Conventional models are ill-equipped to project the damage that the pandemic will inflict on the economy when monetary and fiscal policymakers are doing all they can to mitigate it. … but household borrowers have held up quite well so far and business borrowers have benefitted from a flood of liquidity: Generous transfer payments have kept household delinquencies in check, the capital markets have allowed bigger companies to pre-fund themselves, and a combination of forbearance and PPP loans has given smaller companies a lifeline. Cash hoards have protected households and businesses, but it is not yet clear when they’ll feel secure enough to spend them: Consumer spending had been on an upward trajectory before rising infection rates forced states to pause or reverse re-opening plans. We remain bullish on the SIFI banks, despite the uncertainty surrounding their outlook: The earnings power of the SIFIs’ franchises has allowed them to build up considerable loan-loss reserves without depleting their capital (ex-Wells Fargo). Stable book values make them too cheap to pass up in an otherwise pricey equity market. Clear As Mud The five largest banks reported their second quarter earnings last week. From the perspective of investing in the banks, the news wasn’t too bad. Excepting beleaguered Wells Fargo (WFC), the SIFI banks and U.S. Bancorp (USB) were able to maintain their per-share book values despite loan-loss reserve increases that exceeded the first quarter’s sizable builds. The results supported our investment thesis: as long as monetary and fiscal policy makers are able to limit the credit fallout from the pandemic, the earnings power of the SIFIs’ franchises can fully offset COVID-19 credit costs, preserving their book values and making their stocks compellingly cheap versus the broad market. Our current investment view aside, we monitor the banks’ calls for insight into the future direction of the economy. The largest banks are always well positioned to observe budding trends in consumption, borrowing and credit performance. They currently also offer a window into the success of policy measures intended to prevent the pandemic from catalyzing a negatively self-reinforcing default spiral. The economic picture the banks painted this quarter was murky, befitting the uncertainty surrounding the virus. They saw activity pick up as social distancing restrictions began to be eased in much of the country in May and June, but the virus’ resurgence (Chart 1) had them stressing that the immediate future is especially uncertain. The tone on this round of calls tended to be cautious, though the CEOs and CFOs acknowledged the potential for positive surprises and allowed that they may well be done building up loan-loss reserves. Chart 1US Daily New Infections The banks’ big-picture observations tended to reinforce each other. One view that they unanimously expressed in their first quarter calls was borne out in the second quarter: the March-April drawdown of corporate credit lines was indeed precautionary, as the draws were largely repaid at every bank once the corporate bond market was able to accommodate new issuance. Debit and credit card spending troughed at all the banks around mid-April and then rose steadily across May and June. Bank of America reported that its customers’ spending had increased on a year-over-year basis over the first two weeks of July. All the banks have been encouraged by the performance of consumer borrowers who have requested deferments or other forbearance measures. It is way too early for conclusions, but lenders have been pleasantly surprised by the sizable share of forbearance borrowers who have managed to keep making payments and the modest share who have requested additional deferments. Perhaps the consumer deferments are analogous to businesses’ drawdowns of credit lines in March and April – an emergency precaution unwound once other help, like aid from the CARES Act, arrived. All the banks set aside more money for future loan losses in the second quarter than they did in the first, and their aggregate reserve build rose by 50% quarter-on-quarter (Table 1). Vigorous reserving hurt this quarter’s earnings, but it will help gird the banks for a more protracted downturn than they foresaw on March 31st. Table 1Stacking Up The Loan Loss Reserve Sandbags The news was very good from an operational standpoint, though it may herald future softness for airlines, hotels and the owners of office and retail space. No bank reported any hiccups in transitioning to servicing their clients and customers remotely. Capital markets activity surged, even as trading floors were empty and million-mile-club investment bankers hunkered down at home. Pandemic shutdowns may point the way to a reduced-overhead future, as banks shrink their branch footprints, lease less office space, trim headcount and pare travel and entertainment budgets. 2Q20 Big Bank Beige Book Household Borrowing (Chart 2) And Spending (Chart 3) Chart 2Consumers Are Paying Down Their Debt Chart 3Whiplash Debit and credit sales volumes … consistently trended upward since the trough in the second week of April to down just 4% year-on-year in the last two weeks of June. T[ravel]&E[ntertainment] and restaurant spend continue to be down meaningfully. The most significant improvement … was in retail, with a strong recovery in credit card volume in the second half of the quarter and consistently strong growth in card-not-present1 volume throughout the quarter. (Piepszak, JPM CFO) [In April, our consumers’] spending was down 26% compared to April of 2019. However, for … June, that spending was relatively flat to 2019. [T]hrough the first couple weeks of July, we’re seeing … spending … above what it was last year. (Moynihan, BAC CEO) All big banks saw similar performance trends from participants in their consumer loan forbearance programs. It's too early to make conclusions, but the preliminary data are encouraging. April saw the lowest level of [auto] loan and lease originations since the financial crisis, but activity rebounded sharply in May and June, and … June [was] the best month for auto originations in our history. (Piepszak, JPM) [R]etail [mortgage] purchase applications … recover[ed] to well above pre-COVID levels in June due to a strong and broad market recovery. (Piepszak, JPM) [A]uto lending … [is] going to be a bright spot [in] the third quarter, but overall consumer lending is likely to be down simply because consumer spending has been down. (Dolan, USB CFO) Consumer credit card spend improved steadily starting in mid-April, but was still down approximately 10% from a year ago as of the end of June. (Shrewsberry, WFC CFO) Lower interest rates drove strong industry [mortgage] volume, with [the] second quarter estimated to [have] the largest origination … since the third quarter of 2003. (Shrewsberry, WFC) Consumer Forbearance Relative to peak levels … at the beginning of April, we’ve seen a significant decline in new [assistance] requests. … [A majority of borrowers requesting assistance] hav[e] made at least one payment while in the forbearance period. … [L]ess than 20% of [credit card] accounts [have] request[ed] additional assistance [after reaching the end of the initial 90-day deferral period]. (Piepszak, JPM) [F]irst-time enrollment volumes have come down significantly. … [R]e-enrollment … rates are running below expectation, … right around … the mid-teens. … [W]e’re seeing good signs of those rolling off [of forbearance] continuing to remain current. (Mason, C CFO) In the last few weeks, [loan deferral requests] have been … 98% below [the] peak [in the first week of April]. … More than 60% of the … card deferrals have made at least one payment[;] [o]ne-third have made every payment every month. (Donofrio, BAC CFO) 70% of customers [with credit card deferrals] have started to make normal payments after [the deferral periods end], … [and] about 20% [have] re-enroll[ed]. … So, so far, so good on the [card deferral] performance. (Runkel, USB Chief Credit Officer) Business (And Bank) Caution [Last quarter’s debt and equity issuance] is pre-funding. This is not capital. All this [cash] is not being raised to go spend. It’s being raised to sit [on] the balance sheet, so that you’re prepared for whatever comes next. And you’ve heard a lot of companies make statements [like] … we’ve got two years of cash, we’ve got three years of cash. [P]eople want to be prepared [for anything]. (Dimon, JPM CEO) [T]he commercial spend has been pretty cautious. It was down [around] … 30-35% in … April … , and it’s still down around somewhere between 25 and 30%. (Cecere, USB CEO) Commercial card spend remained significantly lower throughout the second quarter and was still down over 30% in the last full week of June compared to the same week a year ago, with declines across industry segments. (Scharf, WFC CEO) We’ve added $284 billion in deposits since year-end, [and] all of that has gone into cash, earning 10 basis points. [A]s we assess the future of this pandemic, as we … assess how much of [those deposits] is going to stick around, and we get a little bit more confident … , a portion of that … could be deployed into securities. (Moynihan, BAC) It’s Uncertain Out There [T]he extraordinary actions of the Fed and the Treasury leave … industry models kind of wanting for more insight, [because] we’ve never seen this type of action whether it’s the checks people receive, whether it’s … $500-plus billion [of the PPP], whether it’s the income tax payment holiday. (Corbat, C CEO) We cannot forecast the future. We don’t know. I think you’re going to have a much murkier economic environment going forward than you had in May in June, … which is why … the base case, an adverse case, an extreme adverse case … are all possible. And we’re just guessing the probabilities of those things. That’s what we’re doing. (Dimon, JPM) All the big banks reported that their business clients were proceeding cautiously; the banks themselves are, too, leaving their deposit windfalls in cash until they have a better sense of what's to come. [W]e go in feeling very well positioned against this. But we don’t want people leaving the call simply thinking that the world is a great place and it is a V-shaped recovery. … I don’t think anybody should leave any bank earnings call this quarter simply feeling like the worst is absolutely behind us and it’s a rosy path ahead. (Corbat, C) Buy The SIFIs As every SIFI management team stressed on last week’s calls, the environment is extremely uncertain. We are in unchartered waters and regression models can do no more than guess at how monetary accommodation, fiscal aid and lender forbearance will interact with COVID-19 transmission patterns, improved treatments and vaccine development efforts to influence credit performance. Investing in the SIFIs is by no means a slam dunk. The equity market is clearly skeptical about their prospects and our BCA colleagues are in no hurry to join us on the SIFI bandwagon. The group’s unpopularity, however, is precisely why it offers outsized prospective returns. As the longtime investment counselor for one of New York’s wealthiest families put it, “you can have cheap stocks or you can have good news, but you can’t have both.” The news is fraught right now, but we think a critical story line will take a turn for the better once Washington comes through with another major phase of fiscal aid. Given the hole left by consumption (Chart 4) and businesses’ suspended animation, government spending is the only way to keep the economy – and the administration’s faltering re-election prospects – afloat. Chart 4Plunging Consumption Has Left A Gaping Hole In The Economy We are well aware that investors are leery of the banks when low interest rates and a flat yield curve are depressing net interest income, but it’s far more of an issue for community banks that do nothing more than take deposits and make loans than it is for the SIFIs, which generate gobs of fee income and match the duration of their assets and liabilities to the first decimal place. Even the narrow relationship between bank net interest margins and the yield curve is greatly exaggerated (Chart 5), and relative equity returns have had no relationship with the yield curve since the crisis (Chart 6). Banks do not need a major rise in the 10-year yield to outperform; they just need to demonstrate that the earnings power of their franchises is enough to overcome the drag from projected credit losses. Chart 5Little Fundamental Relationship ... Chart 6... And No Market Relationship From our perspective, second quarter earnings provided just that demonstration, at least away from woebegone WFC, which has a raft of intrinsic issues to overcome. Despite two quarters of huge loan-loss reserve builds, the SIFI banks’ book values have emerged unscathed (Table 2). Pre-provision net revenue (PPNR) has been up to the task of absorbing massive write-downs so far this year (Table 3). If the base-case scenarios hold (unemployment doesn’t move materially higher and GDP has begun slowly recovering), the SIFI banks as a group have already accomplished the bulk of their reserve2 building and their per-share book values will grow at a healthy clip for as long as buybacks remain suspended. Table 2SIFI Book Values Table 3Taking The Reserve Builds In Stride Additional credit costs are a legitimate concern, but the banks can earn enough to keep from having to eat into their equity capital. The banks trade off of their book values, and book value gains should feed higher stock prices given that their multiples are already at bombed-out levels. It is unusual to have the chance to buy sound banks at or around their book value, and we expect that investors who buy them now and hold them for at least a year will be amply rewarded in relative performance terms. The SIFIs’ soundness will not be in doubt if Congress delivers a meaningful fourth phase of aid by early August. We believe Citi’s CEO had it right on its first-quarter call in mid-April, and we think his conclusion applies to all the SIFIs, even WFC: [T]his isn’t a financial crisis, it’s a public health crisis with severe economic ramifications. … [W]e entered [it] in a very strong position from [a] capital, liquidity and balance sheet perspective. We have the resources we need to serve our clients without jeopardizing our safety and soundness. … I feel confident in our ability to manage through whatever scenario comes to pass. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 A transaction in which the purchaser does not present his/her card to the merchant, typically conducted over the phone or the internet. 2 We are confident that policy makers will be able to continue propping up consumer borrowers, but the business borrower outlook is considerably more uncertain. However, the banks’ earnings calls contained a detail that may suggest that their aggregate loans to businesses got stronger last quarter. Bank loans are typically senior to bonds, and to the extent that last quarter’s massive issuance was aimed at proactively addressing future funding needs, rather than plugging a leak, it made obligations senior to the new bonds better credits. Bank loans to large investment-grade borrowers may be worth a little more than they were at the end of the first quarter.
The drubbing in the US/EMU sovereign bond spread is cause for concern for the SPX’s slingshot recovery off the March 23 lows, especially given the tight positive correlation of these two series over the past three decades (top panel). Typically, higher relative yields attract capital to US shores and vice versa, and some of that capital inevitably leaks into US stocks. Moreover, theory would suggest that relative yields move with the ebb and flow of relative return on capital. Indeed, the bottom panel of the chart highlights such an empirical relationship. Currently, euro area return on assets is narrowing the gap with the US which usually happens in recessions. The persistent unresponsiveness in the 10-year UST yield near the zero line which stands closer to the ECB’s NIRP, likely spells short-term trouble for the SPX. Bottom Line: We remain cautious on the near-term prospects of the S&P 500 until the election uncertainty lifts in November.
Table 1 Online political betting markets are still not fully pricing our sister BCA Geopolitical Strategy’s 55% odds for the "Blue Wave" scenario. Therefore, it pays to examine what will be the likely impact of a blue wave on the US stock market. Specifically, Biden is planning to increase the US corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%, and possibly even higher. In our most recent Special Report, we have conducted a similar exercise to the one we did in late-2017, when we calculated a one time boost to S&P 500 EPS due to Trump’s tax cut. This time, however, we reversed the calculation to compute by how much S&P 500 EPS are likely to fall should Biden raise the corporate tax rate. Table 1 reveals that the hardest hit GICS1 sectors are real estate, tech and health care, and the ones faring the best are consumer staples, industrials and energy. For more information, please refer to our most recent Special Report discussing Biden and his policies’ likely effects on the US stock market.
Following our recent downgrade in the S&P banks index, we were also compelled to downgrade the S&P investment banks & brokerage (IBB) index to a benchmark allocation as it has a similar investment profile. The COVID-19 accelerated recession has not only mothballed potential industry M&A deals that were in the works, but also a number of previously announced deals have been canceled (second panel), which will weigh on the sector’s profit prospects. While “Robinhood” (retail investor) trading stories abound, margin debt remains moribund and continues to contract, despite the V-shaped recovery in all major US stock markets since the March 23 lows (third panel), spelling trouble for commission-related revenues. As a result we deem the collapse in the relative price-to-book ratio to represent a value trap rather than a value opportunity (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We are neutral the S&P IBB index. Please refer to the following Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the index are: BLBG: S5INBK – GS, MS, SCHW, ETFC, RJF.
Neutral We have recently downgraded the S&P banks index to neutral as yellow flags are waving on all three key bank profit drivers, namely the price of credit, loan growth and credit quality. More specifically on credit quality, delinquency and charge-off rates are all but certain to spike in the coming months. The third panel highlights that historically all these credit quality gauges are lagging. However, the near vertical climb in the unemployment rate recently, and persistently high continuing unemployment benefit claims near 18mn signal that non-performing loans (NPLs) are slated to soar in the back half of 2020 (bottom panel). True, the recent $2tn+ fiscal package is acting as a Band-Aid solution by putting money in unemployed consumers’ pockets, but when the money runs out on July 31, the going will get tough especially if Congress does not pass a new fiscal package. Bottom Line: We are neutral the S&P banks index. For more details on the other two key bank profit drivers, please refer to the following Weekly Report. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the index are: BLBG: S5BANKX – JPM, BAC, C, WFC, USB, TFC, PNC, FRC, FITB, MTB, KEY, SIVB, RF, CFG, HBAN, ZION, CMA, PBCT.