After an unusually long spell of low volatility, stocks and bonds sold off in tandem to end a week that was previously on the quiet side following the Labor Day holiday. Coming into Friday, stocks had essentially earned out the high single-digit returns we foresaw for 2016. Low levels of economic growth globally should renew profit growth in future quarters, but neither stocks nor bonds are cheap at this point.
Slowdown?
by Jason Norris, CFA
Executive Vice President of Research
The first couple weeks of trading in October have been volatile, primarily on the downside. While the U.S. economy continues to print positive data points, most other regions around the globe seem to be experiencing some headwinds. We continue to see deteriorating economic data coming out of the Eurozone. Germany had been stronger; however, recent data is pointing to the country possibly entering into recession. Industrial production and manufacturing orders came in weak, and this concern has pushed the yield on the 10-year German Bund to 0.84 percent.
China is a wildcard as well. Growth has been slowing moderately; however, Thursday evening technology investors were greeted with bad news from a key component supplier. Microchip Semiconductor, a supplier of chips that go into a broad array of consumer, household and industrial products, issued a warning citing weakness in China. The company believes this is a short-term issue, but demand just three months ago was strong. This resulted in a drubbing of the Philadelphia Semiconductor index and caused the industry to be down over 5 percent on Friday. Even though there may be some general hiccups in demand, we continue to play the semiconductor space through specific technologies and applications, primarily in the wireless space.
We don’t anticipate a slowdown here in the states. The U.S. economy should continue to exhibit solid growth and decouple itself from the rest of the globe. The most recent positive development has been the decline in energy prices over the last couple weeks, which will result in a nice increase of discretionary income for U.S. consumers.
When Doves Cry
The Fed released its meeting minutes earlier this week and the capital markets were pleasantly surprised. There had been some concern that the Fed may become more hawkish and looking to tighten. However, contents of the minutes showed the Fed to be focused on the data. They highlighted benign inflation, a strengthening U.S. dollar (which is positive for low inflation) as well as increased risks of a global slowdown due to Europe’s stalling growth. We still believe that the Fed will be looking to raise the funds rate in the second quarter of 2015. Even though inflation remains low, U.S. economic growth will support the beginning of a rate hike cycle.
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi also signaled his dovish intentions for the ECB earlier this week. At a speaking engagement in Washington D.C., he stated that the bank was willing and able to alter its current bond buying program which may eventually move from just asset-backed securities to actual sovereign debt. We believe the ECB will be active in the market and will attempt to push growth higher to fight any possibility of deflation.
Our Takeaways for the Week:
- While the Eurozone looks to be slowing, U.S. economic growth remains healthy which is positive for both the U.S. dollar and equities
- The Fed will remain data dependent when determining when to increase rates, which probably won’t happen for another 6-9 months
The Last Days of Summer
by Ralph Cole, CFA
Executive Vice President of Research
Stronger The U.S. economy was indeed stronger than first reported in the second quarter as estimates were revised higher this week when the commerce department reported that the U.S. economy grew 4.2 percent during the quarter. This pace fits with our narrative that the U.S. economy is truly getting healthier, particularly in the aftermath of a very harsh winter.
In fact, there was a lot to like about most of the economic reports this week. For example, durable goods orders grew 22 percent, led by airplanes; unemployment claims came in again under the 300,000 mark - yet another example of vitality in the labor markets; auto sales for the month of July were robust at over a 16 million annual rate of sales. In summary, current economic statistics suggest a sustainable expansion with moderate inflation.
Witchcraft Black magic may be the only explanation for ultra-low interest rates in the face of sound economic numbers. Our industry heuristic states that strong economic growth ultimately must translate into higher interest rates. Not so fast my friend. While the U.S. economy is growing quite nicely, Europe is suffering from falling growth rates, and plunging inflation which has contributed to record lows in interest rates throughout the Eurozone. For example, Germany’s 10-year bund fell to a .88 percent yield while 10-year debt yields touched 1.24 percent in France and hit a 2.22 percent in Italy. With European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi’s most recent speech in Jackson Hole last week, he essentially took perceived credit risk off the table for the Eurozone. With a compelling endorsement of U.S. style quantitative easing on the horizon, investors clearly are (for the time being) comfortable holding European debt.
Lower rates throughout the Eurozone have effectively put a bid under U.S. bonds. In the global market for debt, savers view U.S. debt as a good deal at these levels and continue to buy. Studies estimate that the downward pressure on U.S. rates from lower European rates is anywhere from 20–30 basis points. As you can see from the chart below, U.S. 10-year yields are at their outer-bounds relative to the yield on the 10-year German bund.
Our Takeaways for the Week
- The U.S. economic expansion has taken hold, and looks to be sustainable throughout the second half of 2014
- Lower interest rates around the world and continued quantitative easing by the Fed has kept a lid on interest rates … for now
- The end of summer brings the anticipation of football season, and the end to QE infinity