United States
Over the past few weeks, we have received numerous questions on the interplay between the S&P 500 earnings and the forward P/E multiple. The clients are asking how much earnings need to grow for the S&P 500 forward multiple to come down from the hefty 21.5x towards a historical average of 18x. To answer this question, we have created a matrix that summarizes permutations of changes in the index price and earnings growth and their effects on the resulting forward multiple. If we assume that the price of the S&P 500 does not budge, and investors get a 0% return over the next 12 months, earnings will have to grow by about 30% over the next 12 months for the multiple to come down to 18x – hardly a realistic scenario. If the S&P 500 returns 5%, then 30% earnings growth will result in the 19.6x multiple. The sell-side analysts currently expect a 10% earnings growth over the next twelve months: With no change in the price of the index, the resulting multiple will be 21.5x. If the S&P 500 returns 5%, the multiple will move to 23.2x. Bottom Line: Strong earnings growth does not justify elevated valuations, and re-rating is hardly in the cards.
Dear Client, The next two BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy reports will be jointly published with other BCA services, which will impact the publishing dates. Our next report will be a joint Special Report on Australia, published with our colleagues at Foreign Exchange Strategy, which you will receive this Friday, November 19. The following report will be a joint Special Report published with European Investment Strategy, which you will receive on November 29. -Rob Robis Highlights High realized inflation rates are pushing up longer-term inflation expectations toward all-time highs, while also weighing on consumer confidence, in the US and the UK. The inflation overshoot has not been as severe in the euro area, but consumer confidence appears to be rolling over there too. Over the next year, central banks will have to manage around the communications challenges posed by a rise in inflation that is perceived to be more supply-driven than demand-driven and, hence, beyond the full control of monetary policy. Public opinion surveys are showing eroding satisfaction with the Fed and Bank of England, while similar surveys in the euro area show public trust in the ECB remains strong despite higher euro area inflation. We continue to favor overweights in euro area government bonds (both core and periphery) versus US Treasuries and UK Gilts, given the far greater likelihood of multiple rate hikes in the UK and US in 2022/23, compared to the euro area, in order to restore central bank credibility. Feature Rapidly accelerating inflation has become front-page news around the world. It is also increasingly becoming a political issue and not just an economic one. After the release of the October US consumer price index (CPI) report, where headline inflation came in at a 30-year high of 6.2%, US President Joe Biden had to issue a formal White House statement acknowledging that inflation “hurts Americans’ pocketbooks, and reversing this trend is a top priority for me.” Biden also pulled off the neat trick of both committing to, and subtly challenging, the Fed’s independence when he noted that “I want to reemphasize my commitment to the independence of the Federal Reserve to monitor inflation, and take necessary steps to combat it.” The Great Inflation Of 2021 (and 2022?) has raised a new risk for both politicians and investors. As long as the high inflation persists, and for as long as central banks seem unwilling or unable to respond to try and bring down inflation with tighter monetary policy, consumer confidence will be negatively impacted – even if job growth remains reasonably healthy. Confidence & Inflation: A Matter Of Trust Chart of the WeekHigh Inflation Weighing On Consumer Confidence The preliminary read on US consumer confidence for November from the University of Michigan survey showed sentiment hitting a ten-year low, largely on worries about the impact of rising inflation on household spending power. This effect of high inflation eroding consumer confidence is not just a US phenomenon (Chart of the Week). UK consumer sentiment is also falling due to what has been described as “a potential cost of living crisis” by consumer research firm GfK. In the euro area, however, consumer sentiment is still relatively elevated, but is starting to roll over as headline inflation reaches a 13-year high of 4.1% in October. From the point of view of financial markets, surging inflation is still expected to be a short-lived phenomenon, although conviction on that view is starting to wane. Market-based inflation expectations curves for the US, UK and euro area are all currently inverted, with shorter-maturity expectations above longer-maturity ones (Chart 2). Yet the upward momentum of those measures across all maturity points is showing little sign of ebbing, especially in the US. The 2-year TIPS breakeven rate now sits at a 16-year high of 3.51%, the 5-year breakeven is at an all-time high of 3.22%, while the 10-year breakeven of 2.77% is now just a single basis point below its all-time high reached in 2005. The story is similar in the UK, where RPI swap rates for the 2-year, 5-year and 10-year maturities are 5.3%, 4.8% and 4.3%, respectively – all hovering near all-time highs (as are breakevens on index-linked Gilts). Euro area inflation expectations are not so historically elevated, and the inflation curve is not as inverted, but the 2-year euro CPI swap rate is still at a 15-year high of 2.4% compared to a 9-year high of 2.0% - right at the ECB’s inflation target - for the 10-year CPI swap rate. In the US, the survey-based measures of inflation expectations are telling a similar story. The New York Fed’s Consumer Survey shows that median 3-year expectations are now at 4.2% with 1-year expectations even higher at 5.7% (Chart 3). Meanwhile, the early November read on inflation expectations from the University of Michigan survey showed that 1-year-ahead expectations climbed to a 13-year high of 4.9%, while the longer-term 5-10 year inflation expectations were unchanged from the October reading of 2.9%. Chart 2Rising Inflation Expectations, Both Short- & Long-Term Chart 3A Broad-Based Surge In US Inflation The latter figure may provide some comfort to the Fed, with surging shorter-term expectations not fully leaking through into longer-term expectations. However, the longer the inflation upturn persists, the more likely it will be that US consumers begin to factor in a higher rate of longer-term inflation, just as TIPS traders are doing. After all, the Michigan 5-10 year measure has still climbed by 0.7 percentage points from the pre-COVID low. Even more worrying from the Fed’s perspective is that inflation expectations are rising for essentially all Americans. The New York Fed Consumer Survey shows that 3-year-ahead inflation expectations are rising across all levels of education (Chart 4) and income cohorts (Chart 5). Chart 4US Inflation Expectations Are Rising For All Education Levels... Chart 5...And Income Levels The New York Fed also compiles a measure of consumer inflation uncertainty (bottom panels of both charts on page 5). Survey participants are asked to provide probabilities of inflation falling within certain ranges, with the gap between the top and bottom quartiles of those expected inflation outcomes representing the “uncertainty” over future US inflation. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the dispersion of inflation forecasts is typically much wider for those earning lower incomes and with less education. Yet even highly educated, high earning Americans are reporting wider gaps in possible inflation outcomes, in sharp contrast to the pre-COVID years where their expectations were low and stable. Americans Are Having Second Thoughts About The Fed Any way you cut it – TIPS breakevens or survey-based measures - US inflation uncertainty and volatility have increased. This appears to be starting to erode public confidence with the Fed. Along with its consumer confidence surveys, the University of Michigan also publishes a periodic survey of Confidence In Financial Institutions like commercial banks, asset managers and, most importantly, the Fed. The last survey was just conducted for the September/October 2021 period and showed that 43% of respondents reported a loss of confidence in the Fed compared to five years ago (Chart 6). That is up from 36% reporting a loss of confidence in the last such survey conducted in 2019, and is approaching the +50% levels seen in 2008 (the Financial Crisis) and in 2011 (the Taper Tantrum) – episodes where the Fed had difficulty maintaining economic and financial stability. The University of Michigan also noted that reported consumer confidence was much lower for those claiming to have less confidence in the Fed, and vice versa (Chart 7). Taken at face value, this survey shows that the Great Inflation of 2021 has shaken the public’s faith in the Fed’s ability to maintain economic stability. Combined with the message from the New York Fed Consumer Survey on the growing instability of American inflation expectations, this shows that the Fed may be facing an uphill climb to restore some of the credibility it has lost this year. Much like all aspects of American life these days, political partisanship must be factored in the analysis of US confidence data. The regular monthly University of Michigan sentiment survey for November noted that various measures of US confidence were consistently higher for respondents who reported to be Democrats compared to Republicans since President Biden took office (Chart 8). This is a mirror image of the years under President Trump (pre-pandemic), where Republicans consistently reported greater optimism than Democrats. Chart 9Americans Can Agree On One Thing - High Inflation Is Bad The University of Michigan Confidence in Financial Institutions survey also noted that less trust in the Fed was reported more frequently by Republicans (67%) than Democrats (27%) in 2021, the first year under Biden. This compares to 2017, the first year of the Trump Administration, where more Democrats (41%) reported less trust with the Fed compared to Republicans (30%). The Michigan survey described this “partisan identification” as being a “significant correlate of consumer assessments of the Federal Reserve, treating the Fed as part of the administration rather than an independent body.” Consumer confidence among reported Democrats has been falling since April of this year, although there is still room to catch up to the complete collapse of sentiment seen among Republican consumers (Chart 9, top panel). High US inflation is hitting everyone hard. The surge in inflation expectations is overwhelming income expectations for the next year, according to the New York Fed Consumer Survey (middle panel). High realized inflation has also eroded real spending power, with real average hourly earnings having contracted in year-over-year terms since April of this year (bottom panel). Even with that fall in real income growth perceptions, the plunge in the University of Michigan US consumer confidence has not been matched by other measures like the Conference Board US consumer confidence index, which remains well above pandemic era lows. Even more importantly, US consumer spending has held up well, with nominal retail sales expanding by +1.7% in October following a +0.8% gain in September. Some of those increases were due to rising prices, but were still significantly above inflation in both months, suggesting a solid pace of real consumer spending (the headline US CPI index rose +0.9% and +0.4% in October and September, respectively). For the Fed, the case is building to begin preparing Americans for higher interest rates in 2022. This is true both from an economic perspective – the US economy is likely to continue growing above trend next year, further tightening the US labor market – and in response to the high inflation that has caused some damage to the Fed’s credibility. What About The UK And Euro Area? Looking across the Atlantic, survey-based measures of inflation expectations have also climbed steadily higher (Chart 10). The YouGov/Citigroup survey of UK consumer inflation expectations is now at 4.4% for the 1-year-ahead measure and 3.7% for the longer-run 5-10 year ahead measure, both well above the BoE’s 2% inflation target. The European Commission surveys show a rapidly rising share of European Union businesses and consumers expect higher prices in the coming months. Yet while inflation expectations are rising in both the UK and Europe, only the UK shows the sort of deterioration in central bank confidence that is evident in the US. 48% of Europeans expressed confidence in the ECB, according to the Eurobarometer public opinion surveys – the highest share since 2007 and well above the 36% level seen after the Global Financial Crisis and European Debt Crisis (Chart 11). Some of that improvement in perceptions of the ECB mirrors better sentiment over the euro currency itself, as evidenced by that fact that both Germans and Italians now express similar levels of ECB confidence. Chart 10High Inflation Is Also A Problem Outside The US Chart 11Europeans Have Not Lost Confidence In The ECB High levels of public trust in the ECB play an important role in anchoring European inflation expectations. The ECB introduced its own Consumer Expectations Survey as a pilot project last year, and the latest reading from October 2021 shows that 1-year-ahead inflation expectations are now at 3% and 3-year-ahead expectations are at 2%. Both measures were at 2% a year earlier, and have generally stayed close to ECB’s 2% inflation target since the survey began. Chart 12High Inflation Is Worsening Public Satisfaction With The BoE A recent research report from the Bank of Finland concluded that European consumers who have high trust in the ECB adjust their medium-term inflation expectations more slowly than those with low trust. The high public confidence in the ECB seen in the Eurobarometer surveys, combined with the stability of medium-term inflation expectations (both survey-based and market-based) around the ECB’s 2% target – even with realized euro area inflation now at 3.4% - fits with the conclusions of that report. We read this as a sign that the ECB is not under the same growing pressure to tighten policy in the face of rising inflation as the Fed, which is facing an erosion of public confidence that is showing up in steadily rising inflation expectations. In the UK, the Bank of England (BoE) is facing a situation more akin to that of the Fed. The BoE’s Inflation Attitudes Survey has been showing a steady erosion of UK consumers reporting satisfaction with how the BoE has been setting policy to fight inflation (Chart 12). The “net satisfied” index fell to +18% in the last survey published in September – similarly low levels of BoE satisfaction coincided with major spikes in longer-term UK inflation expectations in 2008 and 2011 (bottom panel). Our conclusion from the UK consumer surveys, along with measures of inflation expectations that are well above the BoE medium-term target, is similar to that in the US. The UK public is losing faith in the BoE’s ability, or willingness, to tackle the high inflation “problem” – even if much of the inflation is caused by high energy prices and global supply chain disruptions that are beyond the immediate control of monetary policy. The BoE will likely need to follow through on the rate hikes markets expect in 2022 to help restore public trust and credibility, even if realized inflation slows from current elevated levels. This is especially true after the debacle of the November 4 BoE meeting where a widely-signaled rate hike did not occur. If the BoE continues to delay the start of tightening while inflation expectations are accelerating, this will only put more pressure on the central bank to tighten faster, and by more than expected, in a bid to stabilize inflation expectations. Investment Conclusions Chart 13Favor European Government Bonds Over US & UK Equivalents Our read of the various surveys shows that public trust in central banks has deteriorated in the US and UK, but not in Europe, because of surging inflation in 2021. This compounds the existing trends of tightening labor markets and accelerating wage growth in the US and UK that are more traditional reasons to tighten monetary policy. We continue to favor strategic overweights in euro area government bonds (both core and periphery) versus US Treasuries and UK Gilts, given the far greater likelihood of multiple rate hikes in the UK and US in 2022/23 in order to restore public trust in the Fed and BoE (Chart 13). The ECB can continue to be patient on responding to higher euro area inflation, given more stable euro area inflation expectations and with limited evidence that higher realized inflation is boosting European wage growth. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
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Highlights Despite strong economic activity throughout most of 2021, economic surprises have decreased considerably. This helped the US equity market outperform Europe. It also significantly contributed to the euro’s depreciation versus the dollar. Even though growth will slow in 2022, economic surprises should increase. Growth expectations are much lower than they were entering 2021, and some key headwinds will fade. This picture is not without risks. China’s credit slowdown and the US’s elevated inflation represent the greatest threats. Based on the outlook for economic surprises, the euro will stage a rebound next year and small-cap stocks are attractive. Feature Global economic activity has been exceptionally robust this year, boosted by the re-opening of the world economy, as well as by the considerable fiscal and monetary stimuli injected globally over the past 20 months. However, market participants also anticipated such a rebound; as a result, global economic surprises peaked in September 2020, and they are now in negative territory. Unanticipated developments have a substantial effect on market prices. Under this lens, the deterioration in economic surprises has had a strong impact on financial markets. It helps explain why the defensive US market has outperformed, why the dollar has been strong, and why bond yields have been flat since March 2021, even though inflation has risen, growth has been high by historical standards, and many major central banks have been eschewing their accommodative biases. Going forward, the evolution of economic surprises will remain crucial to market trends. While we anticipate global economic activity will decelerate in 2022, it will likely remain above trend and surprise to the upside, which will allow global economic surprises to recover. There are significant risks to this view, with large unanswered questions about the Chinese economy and the outlook for inflation in the US. In this context, despite near-term risks, we continue to expect EUR/USD to appreciate in 2022 and European small-cap stocks to outperform large-cap equities. Deteriorating Surprises Matter This year, the underperformance of global equities (both EM and Europe) relative to the US, the weakness in the euro, and the limited increase in yields have all caught investors off guard. At the beginning of 2021, investors were massively short the greenback and duration, while surveys showed a large preference for non-US equities. These views grew out of the expectation that global growth would be strong. Global growth turned out to be strong but began to disappoint expectations by the middle of the year. Expectations had become extremely lofty, suggesting that the bar had been set too high. Additionally, the tightening credit conditions in China and the growing supply constraints around the world caused growth to decelerate somewhat. The deterioration in short-term economic momentum and in surprises harmed European equities relative to the US. As Chart 1 highlights, the relative performance of European stocks is greatly affected by the earnings revision ratio of cyclicals stocks vis-à-vis defensive ones. This relationship reflects the greater pro-cyclicality of European equities compared to those of the US. Moreover, the earnings revision ratio of cyclical stocks relative to that of defensive equities mimics the fluctuations in economic surprises (Chart 1, bottom panel), as weaker-than-expected growth invites analysts to lower their relative earning expectations. The dynamics in the economic surprise index also weighed heavily on the FX market. The dollar is a highly counter-cyclical currency; therefore, it performs poorly when growth is not only increasing, but also doing so at a rate faster than anticipated. However, economic surprises did the exact opposite this year, which boosted the dollar’s appeal and pushed EUR/USD lower (Chart 2). While the strength in the dollar was accentuated by the increasingly aggressive pricing of Fed hikes in the OIS curve, relative interest rate expectations between the US and the Euro Area are also influenced by global economic activity because of the European economy’s greater cyclicality than that of the US. Chart 1Where Surprises Go, European Stocks Follow Chart 2Surprises Matter For The Dollar And The Euro Bottom Line: Global growth has been very strong in 2021, but it has begun to decelerate. Moreover, economic surprises are now in negative territory. The evolution of economic surprises this year was a key component of the strength in the dollar, the weakness of the euro, and the underperformance of European equities. Improving Surprises In 2022? We anticipate economic surprises to pick up in 2022. First, investors and analysts around the world rightfully expect a slowdown in global growth next year. This means that the bar for the economy to generate positive surprises is lower than it was in 2021. Second, we are already seeing signs that global economic surprises are trying to stabilize. A GDP-weighted aggregate of 48 countries is forming a trough at a low level, which historically precedes a pick-up in broader aggregate measures (Chart 3). Third, economic surprises move closely with the global PMI diffusion index. The diffusion index has fallen to levels historically associated with a rebound (Chart 4). Moreover, the share of countries whose Leading Economic Indicator is rising is still very depressed for a mid-cycle slowdown (Chart 4, bottom panel). As vaccination rates are improving around the world, including those in emerging markets, and as the global economy continues to re-open, we anticipate both the PMI and LEI diffusion indexes to improve next year, which will boost economic surprises. Chart 3A Budding Rebound? Chart 4The dispersion Of Growth Matters or Surprises Fourth, the global capex outlook remains very positive. Capex intentions in the US and in the Euro Area are highly elevated and cash flows are strengthening. Moreover, US and European credit standards are very loose (Chart 5). This combination suggests that companies have the desire and the wherewithal to increase their investments next year, especially as capacity constraints limit their ability to meet final demand. Additionally, companies around the world need to rebuild inventory levels, which are depressed relative to sales, while customer inventories are still woefully low (Chart 6). Chart 5Capex Tailwinds Chart 6Not Enough Inventories Chart 7Households Are Rich Fifth, households globally also have ample firepower to support their spending, despite some weakness in real income caused by rising inflation. As Chart 7 shows, household net worth in the US is up by 128% of GDP since December 2019. Additionally, the accumulated stocks of household excess savings have reached USD2.4 trillion in the US, EUR150 billion in German, EUR130 billion in France and GBP180 billion in the UK. With respect to the Eurozone specifically, fiscal and monetary policy will remain very accommodative. The fiscal thrust in 2022 will be negative 2.1%, which is significantly less onerous than the US’s -5.9% of GDP. Moreover, economies like Italy and Spain may have a negligible fiscal thrust because of the NGEU program’s disbursements. In addition, while the fiscal thrust will be slightly negative next year, government deficits will remain wide, which indicates that fiscal policy in Europe continues to support demand. Meanwhile, monetary policy still generates deeply negative interest rates on the continent, which sustains demand further. This view is not without risks. The first threat stems from the Chinese credit slowdown. BCA’s China strategists expect credit flows to bottom out by the second quarter of 2022, which implies that Chinese domestic activity should accelerate meaningfully in the second half of the year. Already, we are seeing tentative signs that authorities in China are trying to curb the credit slowdown. For example, Beijing cut the reserve requirement ratio last summer and excess reserves in the banking system are moving back up as liquidity injections grow (Chart 8). The problem is that, so far, Chinese credit demand is not responding to these small measures designed to ease policy. More will be needed as the tightening in financial conditions for real estate developers points to significant downside ahead in construction activity (Chart 9). For now, it is difficult for Beijing to ease policy much more than it has done so far: PPI has reached a 25-year high at 13.5%. Chart 8Not Enough... Chart 9... Especially With Such A Drag These Chinese inflationary pressures are likely to decline in the first months of 2022, which will allow Beijing to become more aggressive in its support to economic activity. First, Chinese demand is weak, unlike demand in the US. Second, the surge in the PPI is mostly driven by a 17% increase in the energy PPI and a 66% surge in the mining component. These jumps are unlikely to repeat themselves, which will reduce overall inflationary numbers in that economy. The second major risk is global inflation, which is hurting real wages. As a case in point, US real wages are contracting at a 3.2% annual rate, or their deepest cut in six decades. In Europe too, real wages are weak because of the increase in inflation. While these inflationary pressures have had limited effect on European consumer confidence so far, US consumer confidence is breaking down (Chart 10), driven by a collapse in the willingness to buy. If this trend continues, we might see a significant deceleration in global real consumer spending. Chart 10Not All Is Dark On The Inflation Front We still expect the European inflationary risk to start dissipating in the first half of 2022. Unlike in the US, the spike in core CPI mostly reflects an increase in VAT and remains narrow, with trimmed-mean CPI lingering near record lows. Moreover, the 24-month rate of change of core CPI remains within the historical norm, which is not the case in the US. The US situation is more tenuous. Last week’s inflation data showed a broadening of inflationary pressures across major sectors of the economy unaffected by the pandemic, with shelter inflation being of particular concern. However, there are positives. Long-term inflation expectations, as approximated by the 5-year/5-year forward inflation breakeven rate, are still below the levels that prevailed before the oil price crash of 2014 (Chart 11, top panel). Additionally, shipping costs have started to ebb, with global container freight rates losing steam and the Baltic Dry index collapsing by 50% since beginning of October (Chart 11, bottom panel). Moreover, as health restrictions are being relaxed in Asia, Asian PMI’s are improving, while the production of semiconductors is rising again in the region (Chart 12). As a result, although there is still significant inflation risk over the next five years, 2022 is likely to witness a temporary pullback in CPI growth. Chart 11Not All Is Dark On The Inflation Front Chart 12Semiconductor Production Is Picking Up Bottom Line: Global investors are right to anticipate a decline in global growth next year. However, even if growth slows, it will remain above trend. Moreover, the considerable stimuli in the global economy and the decreased expectations of investors improve the odds that global economic surprises will increase in 2022. China’s domestic weakness and the rise in US inflation constitute the two greatest risks to this view. Investment Implications The level of the global economic surprise index as well as its evolution have important implications for many key European assets. Table 1 highlights the performance of various financial markets at three months, six months, and a year following various ranges of readings of the surprise index (the categories are based on one standard-deviation intervals from the mean). We highlight this methodology, because there remains significant uncertainty about the near-term outlook of the surprise index. Table 1Level Of Surprises And Subsequent Returns Currently, the global economic surprise index stands at -20, or between its -1-sigma and its historical average. This level offers limited clear results for investors when it comes to the performance of the Eurozone benchmark relative to the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI), and no clear results in terms of the performance of value stocks relative to growth. However, the current reading of the surprise index is consistent with an outperformance of growth stocks relative to momentum over both the three- and six-month horizons. It is also showing a 74% probability of small-cap equities beating large-cap ones over a 12-month basis. Table 2 shows the performance of the same assets over the same windows, following three consecutive months or more of an improving global economic surprise index. This is consistent with our main hypothesis that global economic surprises are set to increase by early next year. Table 2Surprise Upticks And Subsequent Returns Using this method again shows no strong call for the Euro Area equity benchmark relative to the ACWI. There is a small improvement in performance, but Europe on average still underperforms, which reflects the thirteen years of a relative bear market in European equities. Similarly, results for European value stocks compared to growth equities are limited, as the sample is dominated by the structurally poor performance of value equities. However, this method highlights that the euro is likely to appreciate against the USD on both the three- and six-month investment horizon. This message is consistent with that of our Intermediate-Term Timing Model. Finally, this approach once again underscores the attractiveness of European small-cap equities on a three-, six-, and twelve-month investment horizon. Consequently, we maintain our buy recommendation on the euro. As we wrote three weeks ago, the near-term outlook for the common currency is fraught with risks and the low readings of the global economic surprise index confirm this reality. Moreover, markets might enter a phase when they aggressively discount Fed rates hikes next year, which would further hurt the euro. However, the outlook for global growth will ultimately put a floor under EUR/USD. Chart 13Small-Caps: Almost There We also view European small-cap stocks as the premier equity vehicle in Europe over the coming 18 months because of their heightened pro-cyclicality. However, the timing around shifting toward overweighing small-cap remains risky in the near-term, as they have not fully worked out the overbought conditions we flagged four weeks ago (Chart 13). Thus, we maintain small-cap equities on an upgrade alert, and we are looking to pull the trigger very soon. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Tactical Recommendations Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Trades Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Equity Performance
Concerns about inflation are continuing to dent US consumer confidence. The University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey’s headline index fell nearly 5 points in November to a decade low of 66.8, disappointing expectations of a minor improvement. The…