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Sectors

Confirming indicators still do not validate the oversold rally. Fade the materials sector bounce, by selling steel down to underweight.

Special Report

The benefit of including alternative assets in a traditional portfolio is almost at an all-time high, due mostly to increased return enhancement. This is despite the growing popularity of the alternatives industry and the larger number of entrants, which have reduced alpha opportunities.

Cutting through the hype that will surround policy initiatives today, the ECB is caught between a rock and a hard place. We explain why, and what it means for investors.

In recent travel, our clients remain focused on downside risks to today's range-bound markets. And for good reason. Uncertainty regarding Chinese reaction function is the biggest source of political risk in today's markets. We discuss it in detail in this month's report, along with an update on our views of Brazil, Russia, and Turkey. In addition, we examine the potential casualties of the European immigration crisis and the likelihood of Donald Trump becoming the president of the United States.

While high-beta equity areas have rebounded smartly in recent trading sessions, we remain skeptical that earnings-follow through will be forthcoming. Instead, our portfolio remains defensively-geared, where profit support is strongest. For instance, the latest manufacturing data showed that pharmaceutical shipments continue to boom, underscoring that top-line momentum has started on a strong foot in the first quarter. That bodes well for pharmaceutical relative performance. Elsewhere, beverage shipments have also soared on a growth rate basis, sending a similar upbeat message for the S&P soft drink index. Importantly, pricing power remains solid in both industries, underscoring that the surge in manufacturer shipments likely remains demand-driven. We reiterate our overweight position in both indexes.

Fed policymakers will soon shift their focus toward the strong employment and inflation data and stress that further rate hikes this year are likely. This will stem the rally in risk assets and cap the upside in long-dated yields.

In yesterday's Weekly Report, we outlined our top ten reasons to underweight the technology sector, an out of consensus call based on the sector's resilience during the past few months' of broad market turmoil. At the root of our concern is that tech sector productivity growth is eroding at the same time that previously bulletproof balance sheets are slowly deteriorating. Declining sector productivity can be remedied through increased capital spending, but the chart shows that tech has underinvested as a share of sales for the better part of a decade. While the latter is slowly creeping higher, it will take time before it feeds into increased efficiency and faster earnings growth. Worse, our overall capital spending model is sinking steadily (bottom panel). In particular, the financial and public sectors have traditionally been large technology spenders. Despite ultra-low borrowing costs, government spending is still politically constrained and thus on a tight leash. Meanwhile, the financial sector has already ramped up its capital spending significantly (middle panel), without a corresponding positive impact on new order growth, signaling that weakness from other end markets has been a large drag. If the financial sector pulls in its horns as overall credit quality sours, it will remove a support for tech capital spending. We are bearish on relative performance prospects, and recommend underweight positions. Please refer to yesterday's report for more details.

As confidence in the sustainability of corporate sector profitability declines, the multiple accorded to equities should recede. Ten reasons to stay underweight the tech sector. Initiate an overweight position in gold shares.

A stunning 9.9 million-barrel build in U.S. oil inventories this week failed to arrest the upward climb in prices.