economic growth

The Labor Market Holds the Key

The Labor Market Holds the Key

The lead story from the stock market this year may well be the outperformance of a narrow and select group of technology companies, however the leading economic story this year may be the surprising resilience of the U.S. economy in the face of the Federal Reserve’s concerted effort to rein in growth via higher interest rates.

Patience Pays Off

Patience Pays Off

Our initial U.S. economic outlook has generally played out as expected this year: continued (albeit slower) economic growth, persistent inflation, interest rate hikes and increased market volatility. However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was an unexpected significant development that further elevated market volatility and dampened the global economic outlook.

Turbulent Times

Turbulent Times

On October 29, 2018, Indonesia’s Lion Air Flight 610 crashed 13 minutes after takeoff. Months later in March of this year, Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 suffered a similar fate. Both flights were flown using Boeing’s much heralded new airplane, the 737-MAX or “MAX.”

One More Time

Stocks finished the last week of December relatively flat resulting in a 20+ percent total return for the S&P 500 for 2017. Interest rates were steady with the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury ending the year at 2.41 percent, down slightly from a year ago.

Changing of the Guard

Changing of the Guard

The S&P 500 was up nearly 1 percent again this week as economic data continues to confirm a growing economy. An underwhelming jobs report on Friday took yields on 10-year U.S. Treasuries to a new low on the year of 2.15 percent.

Getting Ahead of Ourselves

Getting Ahead of Ourselves

After rallying into the end of the year, both interest rates and the market took a little breather this week. The S&P 500 finished the week basically flat, while the yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury finished at 2.40 percent. A quiet week as we head into earnings season.

Unemployment: State by State

Unemployment: State by State

Ralph Cole, CFA, shares Bloomberg data regarding unemployment by state. 

Summertime Blues

Jason Norris of Ferguson Wellman by Jason Norris, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Recent weakness in the S&P 500 has led to a lot of chatter regarding the inevitable pullback in equities. While the last few weeks have exhibited some weakness, stocks are still up close to 5 percent, year-to-date. While the United States continues to show improving growth, as seen in recent jobless claims and the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), global political affairs have wound the markets tight. Russia continues to make noise in the Ukraine while the Middle East is demonstrating that nothing has (nor will) changed for decades. This uncertainty coupled with growth concerns in both China and Europe has led to a rally in bonds as well as a minor sell-off in equities.

The 10-year Treasury now yields just above 2.4 percent, which is the lowest in over a year, as global investors flock to the U.S. dollar and park cash in “risk free” assets. This flow of funds has resulted in weakness in equities. U.S. equities are down close to 4 percent from recent highs which have led to some talking heads focusing on an impending sell-off. However, these 2 to 5 percent pullbacks are normal in bull markets. For instance, over the last 30 months, we have seen nine 2+ percent pullbacks, but the S&P 500 is up over 60 percent in that period. What we continue to watch is improvement in the U.S. economy, growing corporate revenues and reasonable valuation. The current environment is favorable for all of those.

Messin’ with a Hurricane

This week brought the first hurricane to the Hawaiian Islands in 22 years, as well as a “storm of headlines” regarding U.S. companies relocating offshore. The equity market was not too happy with Walgreens’ decision earlier this week not to seek a “tax inversion” with its pending acquisition of Alliance Boots in Switzerland. While domiciling in Switzerland would have saved Walgreens billions of dollars in tax expenses, the company decided stay committed to the state of Illinois. There is speculation that the Obama administration’s use of the bully pulpit was a key factor in management’s decision to continue to pay higher taxes. We believe that an inversion would be more difficult for Walgreens to pull off since most of their revenues are generated in the U.S., thus no offshore cash to repatriate. On the other hand, companies like Abbvie and Medtronic have meaningful amounts of international business, thus their “inversion” acquisitions (Shire and Covidian, respectively) would be easier to justify.

What this recent trend highlights is the need to restructure the U.S. tax code so companies can be more competitive globally. While many of these deals may still be pursued, the tax savings is a key attribute in the overall structure. What can’t get lost in the noise is that although U.S. companies may change their mailing address, they will still bring their offshore cash back to the U.S. and reinvest domestically. With a mid-term election this year, major tax reform may not happen at least until 2015, and possibly not until after the 2016 presidential election.

Too High to Fly

A few weeks ago, the state of Washington started selling recreational marijuana which coincided with the cracking of the high-yield bubble. High-yield bonds have been a strong performer over the last several years; however, like stocks, the month of July hasn’t been friendly to the high-yield market. Spreads have started to increase in the face of lower Treasury yields. This culminated with over $7 billion exiting high-yield funds last week. We don’t believe this is a “canary in the coal mine” with respect to corporate America; however, we are watching it closely. High-yield bonds are trading at historically tight levels, just over 3 percent above Treasury yields, as investors seek income. The long-term average spread has been close to 6 percent higher than Treasuries. Therefore, we would not be surprised if that market continues to show poor performance as we revert back to the mean. While, there are times we may venture into lower rated bonds, we believe that the market as a whole is a bit rich and would wait for spreads to widen further before we allocate additional capital.

Our Takeaways for the Week

  • Minor equity pullbacks are common and investors need to stay focuses on the fundamentals
  • While July saw a “risk-off” market, we still believe equities will outperform bonds for the rest of 2014

Disclosures

Take Me to the Top

Jason Norris of Ferguson Wellman by Jason Norris, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Take Me to the Top

The most common question we have been getting as of late is when is the market pullback going to occur? Stocks are up over to 200 percent from the March 2009 bottom and 75 percent from the most recent market correction (of 15 percent) in October 2011. While it has been almost three years since a major correction, history has shown this trend can continue for quite a bit longer. To that point, Cornerstone Macro Research gathered some data on previous market pullbacks which are highlighted in the chart below.

Chart

History shows that there have been numerous periods of much longer durations when stocks have climbed without a major pullback. If you simply look at the fundamentals of the stock market, an argument can be made that the S&P 500 can continue to move higher without a meaningful pullback. First, U.S. economic growth is improving and global GDP should continue to trend in the mid-single digits, resulting in continued earnings growth. Second, with low inflation and low interest rates, the valuation of the equity market is still attractive and the Price-to-Earnings multiple of the S&P 500 still has room for upside from 15.6x at present. While there will always be unforeseen shocks, the risks in the system are not as predominate as we saw in 2011 (Europe debt crisis, U.S. debt downgrade, Fiscal austerity) or 2000 (stretched valuation, falling consumer sentiment, manufacturing data weakening). However, risks that investors should be cognizant of are a spike in oil prices due to Middle East tensions, China’s economic growth slowing meaningfully, and an adverse reaction to Federal interest rate hikes in 2015.

What Do You Do For Money?

Earnings kicked off this week with mixed results from large cap technology. Specifically, there was divergence within the internet ad space, with Google growing and Yahoo stagnant. One wonders how long the Yahoo board will give CEO Marissa Mayer to achieve the turnaround. Intel delivered a strong quarter due to PC upgrades primarily from businesses as Microsoft sunsets its client support for Windows XP. This strength is allowing the company to return cash to shareholders through an announced $20 billion repurchase plan. While Intel stock reacted very favorably to the announcement, it was disconcerting that their mobile business continues to underachieve. This division lost over $1 billion while grossing a mere $51 million in revenue (down from $292 million a year ago). Intel’s move into this area looks to have been a failure which leads us to speculate where they will have to make an acquisition in order to penetrate the market.

Takeaways for the Week

  • The start of the earnings season has resulted in no major market moving results
  • Tensions in the Middle East and Ukraine may have a minor effect on U.S. markets, and unless we see a spike in oil, they should not hinder economic growth

 Disclosures