Summary
- The outlook for the market and the economy that we laid out in our last quarterly note remains unchanged.
- A dancing bear is still a bear, and we think lowering portfolio beta exposure below benchmark is key to navigating this recessionary bear market successfully.
- We think the Fed is extremely unlikely to deviate from its said course in any meaningful way as it battles to bring inflation down to the 2% range.
- It is not too late to consider lowering portfolio beta exposure and switching to more defensive choices within equities.
By Raheel Siddiqui, Senior Research Analyst, Global Equity Research
We put out a cautious Equity Market Outlook three months ago, and after a quarter of worsening economic data and inflation trends we are now even more focused on low beta and high earnings quality.
The outlook for the market and the economy that we laid out in our last quarterly note remains unchanged, and yet consensus narrative regarding whether we are in a bull or bear market has been as volatile as the market itself. Contrarians and bullish investors felt vindicated for a while, and offered base-case scenarios vastly at odds with our own: Inflation has peaked and is declining; that reduces the need for the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) to continue tightening; therefore the U.S. should avoid a recession; and therefore June marked the cycle trough in the S&P 500 Index, which could reach a new all-time high by year-end.
The problem we find with this logic is that it leaves investors at the mercy of the most recent market moves to seed the narrative, likely leading to reflexive volatility. We think our framework-oriented approach can act more like an antiemetic on the rough and bendy road to recession by describing a wider context for intermittent market rallies. In this quarter’s Equity Market Outlook, we will revisit our framework, address why it leads us to disagree with the cheerier suggestions, and discuss positioning ideas for portfolios when traveling south.
The outlook for the market and the economy that we laid out in our last quarterly note remains unchanged. Based on the trends we see in growth and inflation, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s recent remarks, we now have higher conviction in the view.
To recap, our current base-case scenario is:
- A greater than 90% probability of a U.S. recession in the next 12 months
- A recession of moderate intensity: a greater economic contraction than the mild recessions of 1980, 1990 and 2000 (which is where the consensus is), but a lesser one than the severe recessions of 1973, 2008 and 2020
- The U.S. unemployment rate to increase by three to four percentage points; economic growth to continue to decline into mid-2023; Real GDP to contract by two to three percentage points and nominal GDP growth to fall by more than six percentage points
- The S&P 500 Index to trough below 3,000 and next 12 months (NTM) S&P 500 earnings per share ((EPS)) consensus expectations to trough at $180
- Low-beta portfolios to continue to outperform while the economy decelerates, as they have thus far this year
Given the cheerier outlooks that have emerged in market commentary over the past quarter, let’s revisit our framework to understand why we disagree with them, and why our conviction has grown.
A Rallying, Dancing Bear—But a Bear, Nonetheless
The current bear market, including the countertrend rallies, has closely followed patterns seen in the bear markets of 1973 – 74, 1981 – 82, 2000 – 01 and 2007 – 09. Multi-week rallies are a feature of extended bear markets, especially those associated with recessions. We expect a few more before the ongoing bear market ends.
The Recent S&P 500 Rally Of Yore
Equity Markets Appear Tethered To The Real Economy
In June, the S&P 500 Index had fallen by approximately 600 points below its modeled value, as suggested by the level of the ISM Index. The ISM Index, though it had been steadily declining for 17 months, was at 53, a robust reading consistent with industrial expansion. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 had fallen to a level consistent with an ISM Index level of 42, a reading we have seen almost exclusively during recessions. The market then rallied to its fair value relative to the prevailing ISM reading.
The S&P 500 Index may try again to climb back up to 4,250, which we think is its current ISM-modeled fair value. But we expect the ISM, and by extension the S&P 500 fair value, to decline through the middle of 2023. We think the actual value of the market will ultimately gyrate down with it.
When might we see the true trough, after all these ups and downs? That usually comes when extremes in investor sentiment accompany large and lumpy outflows from equities. While investor sentiment did get quite bearish in June, equity inflows have totaled $166 billion so far this year, with no net outflow since March. This is neither capitulation nor a bear market trough, which we believe lies ahead of us in 2023. Our current analysis suggests that the S&P 500 Index could then be trading below 3,000, or another 23% down from its current level.
This dance around a fair value that’s declining has been an integral part of the investor experience during many bear markets: a dancing bear is still a bear, and we think lowering portfolio beta exposure below benchmark is key to navigating this recessionary bear market successfully. That is our overarching theme for this quarter—as it has been so far this year, and as we anticipate it will be for at least another nine to 12 months.
Low-Beta And Minimum-Volatility Stocks Have Outperformed So Far This Year
The Fed and the Commentators
Widespread inflation of a magnitude not seen since the 1970s has been testing the Fed’s resolve to deliver on its price stability mandate. The U.S. Consumer Price Index ((CPI)) has been rising at a rate well above the 2% widely regarded as consistent with price stability, so it’s no surprise to us that economic commentators have busied themselves guessing and second-guessing the extent of the Fed Chair’s resolve to fight inflation.
Between the last Federal Open Market Committee ((FOMC)) meeting in July and Fed Chair Powell’s speech in Jackson Hole in August, the central bank has, in our view, been remarkably clear and consistent about its action plan for inflation. There should be little doubt about its steadfastness. Yet, the median investor appears unconvinced, questioning the Fed Chair’s determination to fight inflation, speculating that Powell will stop monetary tightening as soon as job losses start, and assuming that he will be content with a 3 – 5% inflation rate to avoid a political backlash. It is crucial, therefore, to comb through his Jackson Hole speech and unpack its important policy statements.
Powell Is Talking, Why Aren't We Listening?
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For the Fed, credibility equals effectiveness in our view. When we see messaging this clear, we think to waver or go back on it would likely be very damaging to that credibility. We think the Fed is extremely unlikely to deviate from its said course in any meaningful way as it battles to bring inflation down to the 2% range.
How Did Investors Get August Inflation So Wrong?
But isn’t inflation cooling off already? That appeared to be the market’s optimistic view leading up to the release of U.S. CPI data for August, on September 13. That data was hotter than expected and caused a violent sell-off. The optimism appeared to be based on the decline in Headline U.S. CPI between June and July.
Inflation is cooling in some CPI components, but not in others. The Atlanta Fed’s disaggregated “Sticky-Price” and “Flexible-Price” CPIs, sometimes seen as the “new and improved” versions of the traditional Core and Non-Core CPIs, are helpful in understanding where the inflation is happening and what it means for the longer term.
Flexible-Price components constitute 30% of the CPI basket by weight. Consumer goods dominate this category. Their prices are quick to adjust to supply-and-demand imbalances in the goods markets and as such they do not reflect longer-term inflation expectations or supply and demand in the labor market. Sticky-Price components make up the other 70% of the CPI. They are dominated by services, many of which are contractual (such as rents and home insurance) or have low price elasticity (such as education and medical care services). We believe this services tilt means they more accurately reflect the supply-and-demand imbalances of the labor market, and because they are “stickier,” their current rate of inflation tends to embed itself into consumers’ expectations for longer-term inflation.
The Flexible-Price CPI is mostly noise as far as Fed policy is concerned, then, and because it is six times more volatile than the Sticky-Price CPI, it can drown out the true signal from the Headline CPI. That’s why we think the Sticky-Price CPI can help us get a much better understanding of the probable extent and duration of the Fed’s response than the Headline measure. Until Sticky-Price CPI begins to move down convincingly toward 2%, we think the Fed is unlikely to stop tightening, whether or not Headline CPI has peaked.
When data in the report released on August 10 showed a drop in the U.S. Headline CPI inflation rate in July, many investors and commentators took it as a positive sign. As the table below suggests, however, that decline was due mostly to falling prices of Flexible-Price items, linked to the declining oil price.
The Decline In U.S. Inflation In July Came Mostly From Volatile, Flexible-Price Items
Categories in the CPI basket for which the month-over-month change in inflation was negative
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The services-heavy, labor market-sensitive Sticky-Price items are much more relevant to Fed policy, and their prices continued to rise rapidly. Data from the latest inflation report, out on September 13, showed average year-over-year Sticky-Price inflation running at 6.1%. The timelier one-month and three-month annualized rates are higher still, at 7.7% and 7.1%, respectively.
While Flexible-Price Inflation Has Been Declining, Sticky-Price Inflation Appears Strong
As the label suggests, this inflation tends to be sticky, so the Fed is unlikely to find cause to ease off on monetary tightening soon. Realistically, it could get even more aggressive, because we think the inflation peak that matters for policy is likely ahead of us.
Data in the table above shows shelter (owner-equivalent rent, or OER) is 24% of the CPI. Some commentators have suggested that rental inflation will moderate now that home price inflation is slowing, and that this could make a big contribution to a decline in Headline inflation. We think that’s simplistic and potentially misleading. Rents have been rising, but with the U.S. house price-to-rent ratio sitting at an all-time high, according to the OECD, and homes less affordable now than at any time since the 1980s, renting is more attractive relative to owning than it has been for at least 50 years. It’s no surprise that Millennials, whose demand for housing remains strong, are now more likely to rent than own.
While cooling home prices may begin to show up with a lag in the OER component of CPI, we see little prospect of rental deflation, and without it we believe more monetary tightening, a recession and sustained net job losses are likely to be required to bring down inflation expectations and achieve the 2% target.
There’s one final point that’s worth making for equity market investors. In our view, the Fed will not only need to destroy jobs to beat inflation—it will need to destroy some stock market and housing wealth, too.
A great bifurcation exists today between the recessionary spending patterns of lower-income U.S. consumers and the strong spending patterns of wealthier consumers. The former depend on (shrinking) real incomes to spend and save, whereas wealthier consumers tend to take their spending cues from the value of their assets. Thanks largely to pandemic-era stimuli, stock market and housing booms have made those wealthier U.S. consumers some $15 trillion richer today than they would have been otherwise, with $2 trillion of that in excess, readily spendable cash. They are in a spending boom which started in goods, has moved to services, and is still ongoing.
We think moderating that boom will require a hit to wealth. We estimate that in order to bring the ratio of household net worth to GDP back to its pre-pandemic level, consistent with labor market equilibrium and no wealth or spending excess, the S&P 500 Index needs to drop below 3,000.
COVID Stimulus Knocked U.S. Wealth Out Of Whack With The Economy, And Stock Markets May Need To Fall To Correct It
We Can’t Stop the Rain, But We Can Suggest an Umbrella
Since our last Outlook , some readers have described us as “very bearish”—even relative to the more bearish scenarios of the consensus outlook. We don’t feel “very bearish” ourselves, however. We regard our view as merely realistic, given the economic, inflationary, policy and market dynamics at play.
Since last quarter, the data most significant in shaping our economic and market outlook has worsened. The U.S. Leading Economic Index has now declined five months in a row, and the OECD Global Leading Indicator has declined for 13 months. Goldman Sachs’ Current Activity Index (CAI), a composite aggregate of all U.S. economic activity, has been negative three months in a row. Global corporate earnings downgrades have outpaced upgrades for six consecutive months and NTM S&P 500 EPS expectations have declined for two months. These developments are consistent with an economy sliding toward recession and none is conducive to taking or adding to equity portfolio risk, in our view.
While we can’t stop the rain, we can provide ideas that can serve as an umbrella. It is not too late to consider lowering portfolio beta exposure and switching to more defensive choices within equities.
Historically, investors have tended to reward accounting conservatism when recessions are on the horizon. When the business outlook disappoints, stocks with low earnings quality have tended to fall much more than can be explained by lower earnings guidance alone. This is often because these companies have made aggressive use of accruals in their accounting—revenues or liabilities that have yet to be realized as cash flows. When growth slows, accrued revenues can quickly lose a lot of their value, if not all of it, causing a rapid deflation of future earnings estimates. By contrast, conservative accounting with less use of accruals keeps future earnings estimates aligned more closely with cash flows, in both the good times and the bad times, reducing the likelihood of unpleasant surprises.
Unfortunately, the use of accounting accruals relative to assets in the S&P 500 Index is higher than it has been in at least 30 years. Based upon the historical relationship between accruals and the ISM Manufacturing Index, the tide could be about to turn, potentially leading to a collapse in the value of accrued revenues and rising earnings disappointments. In our view this underscores the importance of minimizing exposure to stocks with poor earnings quality more than ever.
S&P 500 Earnings Quality Appears To Be At A Generational Low And May Be Due A Correction
We have seen that the stocks that have tended to outperform during recessions have been larger and more defensive, with strong balance sheets and conservative accounting, a beta to the market of less than 1.0, and high-quality, very visible earnings that are less sensitive to the economic cycle. They represent only a narrow slice of the equity market—and given today’s earnings quality, they are likely to be an even narrower slice during the current slowdown.
Investment Themes and Views 1
Overweight View on: | Underweight View on: | Neutral View on: |
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Factors and Styles: Low betaHigh qualityLarge capsMomentumHigh earnings visibilityU.S. stocks Industry Groups: Household & Personal ProductsTelecom ServicesFood & Staples RetailingHealth CareUtilitiesFood Beverage & TobaccoEquity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) | Factors and Styles: High betaLow qualitySmall capsLow earnings visibilitySpeculative growthEx-U.S. stocks Industry Groups: Automobiles & ComponentsEnergyBanksConsumer Durables & ApparelTransportationSemiconductors & Semiconductor EquipmentTechnology Hardware & EquipmentCapital Goods | ValueGrowth |
1 For illustrative and discussion purposes only. This material is general in nature and is not directed to any category of investors and should not be regarded as individualized, a recommendation, investment advice or a suggestion to engage in or refrain from any investment-related course of action. The firm and its portfolio managers may take positions contrary to any views and themes expressed.
Index Definitions
The S&P 500 Index consists of 500 U.S. stocks chosen for market size, liquidity and industry group representation. It is a market value-weighted index (stock price times number of shares outstanding), with each stock’s weight in the Index proportionate to its market value.
The MSCI USA Minimum Volatility Index aims to reflect the performance characteristics of a minimum variance strategy applied to the large and mid cap USA equity universe. The index is calculated by optimizing the MSCI USA Index, its parent index, in USD for the lowest absolute risk (within a given set of constraints). Historically, the index has shown lower beta and volatility characteristics relative to the MSCI USA Index.
The S&P Global Beta Low Beta Factor Index tracks the components of the S&P 50 Index with the lowest beta to the S&P 500 Index.
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Economic And Market Review: Key Considerations For Equity Investors - Q4 2022