The Fed

Rates and Rates

Rates and Rates

The 10-year U.S. Treasury touched 5% earlier this week, the first time since 2007. By the end of the week, yields had settled at 4.9%, representing a significant increase from the rates of 3.7% on January 1. In the world of “bond math,” bond values fall when rates rise. Therefore, bond returns, as measured by the Bloomberg Aggregate Index, are down over 3% this year.

Better Late Than Never

Better Late Than Never

On Wednesday, days before the U.S. is projected to run out of money to pay its bills, the House passed the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 in a bipartisan effort. The final vote of 314- 177 received support from 149 Republicans and 165 Democrats. With both sides making concessions, it’s not surprising to see members of each party voicing their displeasure with the deal.

Investment Outlook Video Q1 2020: Age Is Just a Number

Investment Outlook Video Q1 2020: Age Is Just a Number

George Hosfield, CFA, chief investment officer for Ferguson Wellman and West Bearing Investments, shares the firm’s outlook for 2020.

The Economy: Growing but Slowing

The Economy: Growing but Slowing

It’s the tail-end of the first quarter of 2019 earnings reporting season and the results have been better than expected. While corporate earnings growth was up 22 percent in 2018 due in part to tax cuts, this year those same cuts will provide limited benefits and corporate earnings growth is expected to only be up around 5 percent for the full-year 2019.

Growth Gain, Stock Pain

Growth Gain, Stock Pain

Global markets sold off sharply on Wednesday and Thursday as investors continued to wrestle with a diverse set of risks.

Fovinci Quoted in Forbes

Fovinci Quoted in Forbes

A White House in Turmoil, The Fed Shifting Policy: Treasuries Are Actually Calm About It

For all the turmoil roiling Washington, D.C. from the Federal Reserve to the White House, and Treasury bonds, typically a go-to segment of the financial markets when you’re looking for a pessimistic take on the day’s affairs, appear unusually placid.

Rubber Hits the Road

Rubber Hits the Road

First quarter earnings season kicked into high gear this week and investors were treated to a smorgasbord of blue-chip results across a range of industries. As they typically do, numbers for most companies have exceeded Wall Street expectations, but with almost 20 percent of the S&P 500 now having reported, the .75:1 ratio of “beats” is modestly better than where it has been over the last several quarters.

Are the Dog Days Over?

Are the Dog Days Over?

Stocks finished the week up over one percent as the Fed held steady on rates but provided positive commentary on the U.S. economy. With the lack of Fed action, the 10-year Treasury yield fell 0.06 percent to close the week at 1.63 percent.

 

May the Odds Be Ever in Your Favor

May the Odds Be Ever in Your Favor

The markets were quiet this week investors awaited Janet Yellen’s commentary on the Fed’s annual Jackson Hole summit. As the week came to a close, the S&P 500 sold off slightly, finishing the week down 0.6 percent. Healthcare stocks fared far worse, selling off 2.2 percent following Hillary Clinton’s statements regarding the price increase of EpiPen®, a Mylan

When Yellen Speaks, the World Listen

When Yellen Speaks, the World Listen

Stocks finished the week off by only 0.80 percent, recovering some of the losses suffered Thursday after the Fed voted to keep interest rates unchanged. Similarly, the Bank of Japan and Bank of England are also maintaining their monetary

Market Resilience: Don't Stop Believin'

Market Resilience: Don't Stop Believin'

The resilience of the equity markets has been quite impressive. At the time of the February lows, pessimism was rampant. Faith in the Chinese economy was shaken, gold was on the rise and there were faint whispers of imminent recession. Fast forward six weeks and the S&P 500 has rallied

Take Your Time

by Ralph Cole, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Take Your Time

Greece and Euro Area finance ministers reached a tentative agreement Friday to buy time for Greece to get their financial house in order. The EU has agreed to provide liquidity for up to four additional months if Greece provides a sufficient list of measures they are willing to undertake.1

Greece will have a primary budget surplus in 2015 which means they will have a budget surplus - if you don’t count debt payments. While this may seem unrealistic, it does mean the Greek government could continue to operate if they stop paying their creditors. However, this would not be in the best interest of anyone. Greek bonds would drop in value, as would some of the bonds of other peripheral countries. This situation is known as financial contagion. Greece in and of itself is not a huge economy (it is approximately the size of Indiana), but the world is trying to judge the effectiveness the European Union. Can they hold it together?

We believe that the EU can indeed keep it together in the near-term. In the future, it may be in the best interest of some countries, Greece as one example, to move out of the Eurozone. If a country finds itself politically unable to work within the confines of the European Union, they may want to exit the agreement in order to control their own budgets and currency. The EU would rather have this happen during a time of strength, rather than at a time of ongoing economic stress.

Waiting on a Friend (Fed)

The Federal Reserve board meeting minutes were released Wednesday and markets deemed them to be dovish; meaning that the Fed is afraid of raising rates too soon and choking off a fragile recovery. The surprise to us is that people continue to refer to this as a recovery. Both U.S. GDP and the S&P 500 are at all-time highs and the U.S. passed through recovery territory years ago. While nothing is a foregone conclusion, we believe the Fed will raise rates later this year. There will be a lot of hand wringing over the first Fed rate hike (there always is), but we believe the economy is on very sound footing and can handle higher rates. While it could happen in June, it will most likely happen in the second half of the year. This topic will be discussed ad nauseam throughout the year, but we view tightening as a positive. A rate hike will be a signal to the markets that the financial crisis is officially behind us and extraordinary measures of liquidity are no longer needed.

Takeaways for the Week:

  • The Greek debt story is not over, but they do have more time
  • We expect the Fed to raise rates later this year

1 Source: Bloomberg

Disclosures

Here Comes Santa Claus

by Ralph Cole, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

The Federal Reserve delivered some early Christmas cheer with a new policy statement on Wednesday, and by Thursday afternoon the Dow average had advanced 700 points. Please excuse us for being frustrated by the constant attention to the Fed and the parsing of every statement they utter. This tends to happen during any Fed tightening cycle. The chart below shows the average S&P 500 performance around the last five Fed tightening cycles. As you can see, about six months before the Fed starts raising rates the market goes through a correction of 5–7 percent and volatility rises.

Tightening Cycles

The U.S. economy continues to hum along, and there is no lack of positive economic indicators. We believe that the Fed will be raising short-term interest rates in the middle of next year and they are doing their best to signal that move to the markets well in advance. The most recent examples last week were jobless claims, which dropped to a six-week low, consumer comfort climbing to a seven-year high, leading economic indicators rising an additional .6 percent and retail sales increasing by the most they have in eight months. In short, there is plenty of good economic news to go around, and enough momentum for the Fed to justify raising rates next year.

Wind of Change

While oil prices fell modestly this week, energy stocks began to rally. Since the peak in oil prices in June, the S&P energy sector fell 25 percent. This week oil prices are down another 2 percent, but oil stocks in the S&P were up 7 percent. We can’t say that we are surprised. Whenever you get such a dramatic drop in prices, it tends to produce bargains. Financial buyers aren’t necessarily brave enough to step into these situations, but strategic buyers are. This week Repsol, a Spanish oil company, made an offer to buy Talisman Energy for $12.9 billion. Talisman’s share price was as low as $3.96 on December 8, and now trades for just over $9.00 per share. We made the case last week that the sell-off in oil was overdone, and it appears others are coming to the same conclusion.

Our Takeaways from the Week

  • The stock market will continue to experience increased volatility in the coming months as the Fed communicates its tightening plans
  • The sell-off in oil stocks is overdone, and there is value in the sector
  • Our warmest wishes for a happy holiday season!

Disclosures

A Pleasant Shade of Gray

by Jason Norris, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Headline sales numbers from Black Friday looked disappointing with revenues falling 11 percent in 2014, which follows a negative year in 2013 as well. However, when we dig into the data, we see that sales have spread out over the entire week. Many stores have been starting their promotions earlier in the Thanksgiving week, meaning Black Friday is not the seminal event it once was. Coupled with an increasing amount of shoppers going online, the post-holiday shopathon is not the signal to the markets it once was.

Data from the entire weekend looked fine with sales rising approximately four percent, with a 15 percent clip coming from online sales. In forecasting the entire holiday season, industry analysts still expect low to mid-single digit growth. In light of gasoline prices down 35 percent from last year, we are comfortable with that growth forecast. In fact, this led us to increase our allocation to the consumer discretionary sector recently.

Quantitative Speaking

With the Fed wrapping up its quantitative easing last month, the European Central Bank has upped their rhetoric. This week, ECB president Mario Drahgi was more adamant that the ECB will be in the markets buying bonds. This put a small bid on the Euro; however, we are still waiting for the ECB to actually make meaningful purchases. Since 2012 when Drahgi stated the bank would do "whatever it takes" to prop up the Euro economy, there has been a lot of speaking, with little actual easing.

The economic data points coming out of Europe have been neutral at best. While the old adage of "don't fight the Fed" may be appropriate for the ECB and European equities, we would rather focus on large cap U.S. stocks due to a strong economy, falling commodity prices and low interest rates. One potential headwind for multinationals is going to be the strength of the U.S. dollar. The dollar has rallied 10 percent the past few months and this will start effecting overseas results this quarter. Due to this, recent portfolio additions have focused on the domestic economy, rather than the global economy.

Our Takeaways for the Week: 

  • Falling gas prices and an improving U.S. economy keeps us bullish on U.S. stocks
  • Continued dollar strengthening will benefit U.S. stocks and bonds, while pressuring commodity prices, thus keeping inflation low

Disclosures

Motion Simulating Progress

RalphCole_032_web_ by Ralph Cole, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Talk, Talk, Talk

It seems that every time you turn around, the Fed is trying to communicate information to the capital markets or to Congress. This week, Janet Yellen made a trip to Congress to speak to the Joint Economic Committee where she gave a very balanced view of the economy and of possible future Fed actions.

Chairwoman Yellen said that the U.S. economy paused in the first quarter, but appeared to be gaining steam in the current quarter. This view dovetails perfectly with our own views at Ferguson Wellman. The questions from Congressional members centered on job growth, unemployment and the labor participation rate. As we watch testimony of this type, it is interesting to observe the new Fed Chair sidestep the clearly partisan questions and get to the heart of what the Fed is tasked to do and what duties are tasked to Congress. This inculcation occurs every time the Fed Chair is invited to give testimony. The Fed has a dual mandate ― maximum employment and stable prices. This slower than usual recovery has placed an increased focus on employment, and what the definition of “full” employment actually is. Congress and the markets want to identify the exact unemployment rate at which the Fed will begin raising rates, which we think is foolhardy. The Fed Chairwoman explained the importance of not reading too much into any one data series, and any one data point. Rather, it will depend on a number of factors.

Here in our office we are turning our focus toward wage-related inflation. Increasing wages are often a precursor to overall inflation for the economy, and just like the Fed, we will be looking for acceleration at the margin for a number of indicators, not any one indicator.

What’s Going On

What has surprised us has been the movement of rates going lower in the face of better growth. Many explanations have been floating around and we suspect it is a combination of slower growth in the first quarter of the year and low rates around the world, making the yield on the 10-Year U.S. Treasury look appealing. We continue to believe that an improving labor market and positive GDP growth will move rates higher in the coming months.

Our Takeaways from the Week

  • While Chairwoman Yellen is adept at dealing with Congress, we hope that the Fed can reduce their commentary in the future which we believe will reduce overall volatility in the fixed income markets
  • Strong first quarter earnings for the S&P 500 continue to support higher stock prices in the future

Disclosures