Is Big Tech Back in the Driver’s Seat?

Do you remember when big tech was the ONLY place to invest?

Let’s rewind to the days before half the world closed its doors. From the end of 2018 to the pre-pandemic peak, the S&P 500 Information Technology Sector rose 65%. The Communication Services Sector, which sported 20% weights to both Alphabet and Facebook, jumped 40%. The S&P 500 itself climbed 35%. Not a bad year for investors, right? So long as they had their money in the right place, that is.

Over that 13 month period, every other sector underperformed the index.

Every market historian knows that the bulk of historical index returns are generated by a handful of names (that’s why we focus so much on identifying relative strength). Rarely, though, has that phenomenon been so readily apparent as it was that year, when more than 80% of sectors lagged the index.

COVID wasn’t the end of that story. In fact, forcing millions of people and their employers to embrace a digital transition was just gasoline on the fire. In the first 8 months of 2020, the Russell 1000 Growth index surged 45% relative to its Value counterpart.

Then came September 2020.

In just 3 days at the start of the month, growth stocks dropped 10%. Value fell only 4%. We couldn’t have known it at the time, but that day would mark the end of growth’s dominance. Value oriented stocks – especially in the Energy and Industrials sectors – have been in the driver’s seat ever since.

Big tech’s trouble couldn’t have started at a more logical place – the same place trouble began more than 20 years ago. Tech’s relative strength peaked exactly at the monthly highs from the internet bubble. Last time, it resulted in an 80% collapse for the sector, and a run of lackluster performance that didn’t reverse until the financial crisis. The question is, will history repeat itself?

The answer may rest on the path of interest rates. Financial assets have benefited from 40 years of falling interest rates since the early 1980s. Not only have lower rates reduced borrowing costs and helped drive economic expansion, they’ve also forced investors out the risk spectrum. An investor that once was happy with a risk-free Treasury yielding 6% hasn’t had that option since the turn of the century. Instead, they’ve had to allocate funds towards riskier asset classes – high yield bonds, real estate, stocks, etc. And because interest rates are a primary component of the discount rate used to estimate the value of most assets, stocks with higher long-term growth expectations have disproportionately benefited.

That 40-year run for rates may be at an end, though. With inflation far above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, they’ve raised short-term borrowing costs at 9 consecutive meetings since last March. Interest rates across the curve have risen to levels not seen since the Financial Crisis.

Growth stocks felt the consequences in 2022. Information Technology, Communication Services, and Consumer Discretionary (dominated by Amazon and Tesla) were all leaders on the downside. Value and risk-off sectors, meanwhile, held up significantly better.

In 2023, though, the narrative has reversed. Tech, Communications, and Discretionary are each up double digits, while everyone else is in the red.

Interest rates again are largely to blame. The 10-Year Treasury yield has retreated from last year’s highs and is threatening to fall below support. If it does, big tech is set to remain in the driver’s seat.

Besides a resurgence in yields, what’s the biggest risk to this narrative? The ‘why’ of interest rates breaking down.

In the first few months of the year, economists and investors began to believe the Federal Reserve was close to achieving a so-called ‘soft landing’, i.e. controlling inflation without causing a recession. If so, rate hikes would soon be at an end, and investors could be more confident in valuing a growing company’s prospects.

With the failure of Silicon Valley and Signature Bank, though, that soft landing scenario seems unlikely. Deposits are flowing out of banks across the country and into money-market funds, and banks will almost certainly respond by pulling back on credit issuance. Those types of credit crunches often lead to recession.

Markets have responded by pricing in a series of rate cuts by the Fed in the back half of this year, and the prospect of lower rates brings with it all those growth stock tailwinds of the 2010s. While Financials, Industrials, Energy, and Materials sectors have all dropped since SVB’s collapse, Tech, Communications, and Discretionary are doing just fine.

The question is, will Powell & Co. play along? Powell isn’t forecasting cuts this year, and neither are his colleagues. But they don’t sound too confident in a soft landing either. Instead, they continue to point towards the risks of removing restrictive policy too early, lest they repeat the mistakes of the 1970s. Their mandate is to maintain price stability and full employment, and they can’t achieve the latter without first ensuring the former. In other words, Powell’s Fed may not offer the same monetary support that we’ve grown accustomed to during recent recessions.

If that’s the case, it may not matter which sectors are showing relative strength – they’ll all be facing some serious pressure. Bear markets that coincide with recessions often take years to find a bottom. And you’d be hard-pressed to find one that’s bottomed before the recession even began. That’s the crux of the bear case for stocks.

Here’s one final chart to chew on: Tech is back above those monthly, internet bubble highs, and it’s set to challenge the weekly level.

If Information Technology, the biggest sector in the index, is setting new all-time relative highs… well, good luck defending that bear case.

Mid-Month Market Update: March 2023

Technical Trends

US large cap stocks erased their hot start to the year, declining more than 5% over the past month. The S&P 500 Index has dropped back below a falling 200-day average. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down just 2.4% over the last year, but it’s been the laggard so far in 2023. The NASDAQ Composite, meanwhile, has been the best performing major index over the last month and quarter.

Bond prices continue have risen dramatically over the past week, after turbulence in the banking sector spooked investors. Still, the 10-Year Treasury note remains below a falling 200-day moving average – clear evidence that a downtrend still exists. While yields are down from their October peak, the threat of continued policy tightening by the Federal Reserve remains a risk for fixed income investors.

Continue reading “Mid-Month Market Update: March 2023”

The Weekly Wrap: March 13, 2023

Week in Review

The stock selloff that began in February has continued into March. Each the S&P 500 Index, the NASDAQ Composite, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined more than 4% last week. The S&P 500 is now up less than 1% on the year. The Dow, meanwhile, has fallen nearly 4%, while the NASDAQ is still up more than 6%. Crude oil dropped 3.8%, and Bitcoin fell 7.8%. Gold managed to shake off a weak Monday and Tuesday to end the week 0.6% higher, while the Dollar was mostly unchanged. Interest rates declined.

Any attempt to summarize last week’s market action will fail to do it justice. Things got off to a hot start, when Fed Chair Jerome Powell sat before the Senate Banking Panel and testified that recent economic data would likely require a higher terminal Federal Funds Rate and could force the committee to reaccelerate the pace of interest rate hikes. Financial markets responded in no uncertain terms – stock prices cratered, the Dollar index jumped to its highest level in 4 months, and short-term interest rates moved to new 15-year highs. Powell attempted to walk back those remarks somewhat on Wednesday when he appeared before the House, saying no decisions had been made about the upcoming FOMC meeting. All of that was overshadowed by what happened after the market closed. Silicon Valley Bank, one of the country’s largest regional banks, announced plans to raise capital on Wednesday evening. By Friday morning, the bank was placed into receivership with the FDIC. It’s the largest bank failure since 2008. Expect those 48 hours to be the basis of a collection of books.

Monitoring Macroeconomics

GDP grew at a healthy pace in the final quarter of 2022, helped by a surge in inventories and strong net exports. Economists widely believe that a recession will hit the United States sometime in the latter half of this year, as the Federal Reserve’s battle with inflation heats up and financial conditions tighten. The odds of a ‘soft landing’ – a scenario where the Fed successfully contains prices without creating widespread economic hardship – declined after February data showed the US economy continues to run hot.

Measures of inflation remain well above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, but CPI has decelerated for 7 straight months, and measures of core price changes have dropped below 5%. Unemployment, meanwhile, remains near 50 year lows, and job creation to start 2023 has been well above the level needed to keep pace with population growth.

What’s Ahead

The SVB saga will continue to dominate the headlines on Monday, as investors grapple with the risk of contagion spreading across the financial system. On Tuesday, though, the narrative and focus could shift, when the BLS unveils its consumer price index for February. We’ll get additional inflation data on Wednesday with the producer price index, along with retail sales, business inventories, and the NAHB housing market index. On Thursday, look for updates on housing starts and import and export prices. The latest University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey results are scheduled for Friday, and so is industrial production. Additional business surveys are scattered throughout the week, including NFIB’s Small Business Optimism, the Philadelphia Fed’s Business Outlook, and the New York Fed’s Services activity.

The Weekly Wrap: March 6, 2023

Week in Review

Stock prices rose last week on the back of continued leadership from the NASDAQ Composite, which climbed 2.6% to push its year-to-date gains to 11.7%. The S&P 500 Index rose 1.9%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has lagged so far in 2023, rose 1.75%. Crude oil volatility continued, as it jumped 4.4%. For the year, it’s relatively unchanged. Gold rose into positive territory for the year, while Bitcoin dropped 5.4%. Interest rates rose, and the US Dollar Index declined.

Layoff announcements have filled the newswires of late, but that hasn’t seemed to dampen the US labor market. In fact, jobs growth during January surged to more than 500,000, the highest level in six months. We’ll see whether that strength continued in February. The Bureau of Labor Statistics will release their latest payrolls data on Friday, where investors will be watching for signs that the Federal Reserve’s war on inflation is starting to take effect. Another strong report would likely raise the odds of a 0.50% hike at the Fed’s March meeting. Today, markets are pricing in expectations of a more mild quarter-point hike instead.

Earnings Expectations and Valuation

The equity selloff in 2022 was not driven by a deterioration in corporate earnings. Though stock prices dropped well over 20% from their peak to trough, expected future earnings remained stubbornly high. That divergence pushed the S&P 500 forward price-to-earnings ratio from more than 20x (a level previously seen only during the late-1990s) to 15x (a level in-line with historical averages).

So far, 2023 has been the opposite experience: stock prices are rising, but earnings are not. In fact, consensus expectations for future earnings are falling. At the beginning of the year, analysts expected 7% EPS growth in 2023. Now they expect earnings to decline. The result is that valuations are elevated once again. The S&P 500 currently trades at a forward multiple of more than 18x.

What’s Ahead

The labor market will be in focus this week, with the BLS announcing February jobs data on Friday. ADP’s estimate of jobs growth arrives on Wednesday morning before the opening bell, followed by January job openings a few hours later. The final estimate for January durable goods orders is released on Monday morning. On Tuesday and Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell will have ample opportunity to reshape expectations for the upcoming FOMC meeting, when he testifies in front of the Senate Banking Panel and the House Financial Services Committee.

Mid-Month Market Update: February 2023

Technical Trends

US large cap stocks have jumped more than 7% to start the year and continue to erase last year’s decline. The S&P 500 Index is further above its 200-day average than at any point in the last 12 months, as stocks attempt to enter a new bull market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down just 1.4% over the last year, while the NASDAQ Composite has been the best performing major index over the last month and quarter.

Bond prices continue to fall as interest rates rise. The 10-Year Treasury note is stuck below a falling 200-day moving average – clear evidence that a downtrend still exists. While yields are down from their October peak, continued policy tightening by the Federal Reserve poses a threat to fixed income investors over the coming months.

Continue reading “Mid-Month Market Update: February 2023”

Inflation Matters to Mr. Market

Whether we like it or not, economic data matters to the markets. Not every report will move prices, but each one has its place in building the macroeconomic puzzle. This week’s inflation update could be particularly important. Equity prices for the last year have mirrored changes in interest rates and foreign exchange rates. Rates and currencies are being impacted by central bank policy. And central banks are being forced to act in response to high inflation. Let’s break it all down.

Those who’ve followed this blog know that interest rates and currencies were the big drivers of equity price action in 2022. Check out how closely the three moved together:

Those relationships seem natural – a stronger dollar negatively impacts corporate earnings, and higher interest rates increase the cost of capital and decrease the present value of future cash flows. Still, the correlations typically aren’t that strong. Last year was nearly unprecedented.

So if interest rates and currencies are what’s driving the stock market, what’s driving interest rates and currencies? The most obvious answer is central bank policy. The US Federal Reserve began using forward guidance to tighten financial conditions in the summer of 2021, and then began hiking short-term rates last March.

Continue reading “Inflation Matters to Mr. Market”

The Weekly Wrap: February 13, 2023

Week in Review

Stocks suffered their worst week of the year, with the NASDAQ Composite failing to closing higher for the first time since December. Despite its, 2.4% decline, the NASDAQ is still outpacing other US equity indexes year-to-date, with a 12% gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was flat, and the S&P 500 Index fell 1%. Crude oil is going nowhere fast – in 6 of the last 10 weeks, oil prices have moved 7% or more. From start to finish, though, the total change has been only 0.3%. Gold prices were flat for the week, despite a strengthening Dollar, and Bitcoin dropped 7.7%.

These days, inflation readings are the most important piece of the economic puzzle. Measures of price increases have steadily declined for the past few months, giving rise to the belief that Federal Reserve rate hikes will soon be at an end. Tuesday’s CPI report for the month of January could reinforce that narrative, or topple it. December’s reading dropped sharply, aided by declines in food, energy, other commodities, and autos. If some of those declines reverse and services inflation remains elevated, markets may respond by pricing in more action from the Fed.

Monitoring Macroeconomics

GDP grew at a healthy pace in the final quarter of 2022, helped by a surge in inventories and strong net exports. Economists widely believe that a recession will hit the United States sometime in the latter half of this year, as the Federal Reserve’s battle with inflation heats up and financial conditions tighten. Recent positive surprises in economic data, though, have increased the odds of a ‘soft landing’ – a scenario where the Fed successfully contains prices without creating widespread economic hardship.

Measures of inflation remain well above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, but CPI has decelerated for 3 straight months, and measures of core price changes dropped below 5%. Unemployment, meanwhile, dropped to its lowest level in almost 70 years in January.

What’s Ahead

All eyes are on Tuesday’s CPI report, where forecasters expect to see inflation decelerate for the seventh straight month. The following day, we’ll see how consumer spending bounced back after a weaker December retail sales report. We’ll also get the January read on industrial production and the Empire State Manufacturing Index. On Thursday, we’ll be watching producer prices, as well as a housing data dump including housing starts, building permits, and the NAHB Housing Market Index. Fourth quarter earnings season also continues.

The Weekly Wrap: February 6, 2023

Week in Review

The NASDAQ Composite rose another 3.3% last week, bringing its year-to-date rise to 14.7%. The S&P 500 index rose 1.6%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has less exposure to the high-flying tech stocks that led the markets this year, fell slightly. The Dollar index rose 1%, putting pressure on commodity prices. Gold dropped 3.3%, and crude oil prices fell 7.9%. Interest rates rose modestly, pushing bond prices lower. Bitcoin continued its strong start to 2023 by climbing another 2%.

The Federal Reserve hiked interest rates another 0.25% last Wednesday, taking their targeted overnight lending rate to a range of 4.50% to 4.75%. That’s the highest their policy rate has been since 2007. At his post-meeting press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell reinforced previous guidance for continued hikes and a terminal rate above 5%. He’s encouraged by recent inflation data and the resiliency of the labor market, but said it’s premature to declare victory. When confronted with the reality that markets are pricing in rate cuts in the latter half of the year, Powell repeated that rates will likely need to remain elevated for ‘some time’ in order to achieve the Fed’s mandate of price stability.

Earnings Expectations and Valuation

The equity selloff in 2022 was not driven by a deterioration in corporate earnings. Though stock prices dropped well over 20% from their peak to trough, expected future earnings remained stubbornly high. That divergence pushed the S&P 500 forward price-to-earnings ratio from more than 20x ( a level previously seen only during the late-1990s) to 15x (a level in-line with historical averages).

So far, 2023 has been the opposite experience: stock prices are rising, but earnings are not. In fact, consensus expectations for future earnings are falling. At the beginning of the year, analysts expected 7% EPS growth in 2023. Now they expect earnings to be flat. The result is that valuations are elevated once again. The S&P 500 currently trades at a forward multiple of more than 18x.

What’s Ahead

The Q4 reporting period continues this week. About half of S&P 500 constituents have reported so far, and nearly 100 more will released results for the quarter in the week ahead. The economic calendar is virtually empty – aside from NFIB Small Business Optimism on Tuesday, the only top-tier release will come on Friday when the University of Michigan updates its consumer sentiment index. The void will be filled by Fed-speak. Jerome Powell talks at a conference in Washington on Tuesday, and most other FOMC participants will update the markets on their own views throughout the week.

A Changing of the Guard? Growth vs. Value

2022 was the year that Value made a comeback. For more than a decade, ‘Value Investor’ was synonymous with ‘Serial Underperformer’. From the lows in 2007 to the highs in 2021, the S&P 500 Growth Index outgained its Value counterpart by a whopping 170%. Last year, it gave up a third of those relative gains.

Now the S&P 500 Growth/Value ratio is nearing a pretty important level: the internet bubble highs. I’ve spoken at length on this blog about the significance of historical turning points, even ones from 20 years ago. Wouldn’t it make sense to see prices react as we approach those former peaks? If they do, that’ll pave the way for growth to outperform over the near and intermediate term.

It’s not just the S&P 500 flavor of growth/value that’s at a key level.

Continue reading “A Changing of the Guard? Growth vs. Value”

Mid-Month Market Update: January 2023

Technical Trends

US stocks have rallied over the last several months, a welcome reprieve from the persistent downward pressure that punished investors for most of 2022. The S&P 500 has returned to its 200-day moving average for just the second time since last spring, threatening to put an end to its technical downtrend. The Dow Jones Industrial Average continues to be the outperformer among the major US indices, rising more than 15% over the last quarter. It’s now down only 5% over the last year. The NASDAQ Composite, meanwhile, would need to rally more than 40% to return to all-time highs.

Bond prices are still in a clear technical downtrend, as the 10-Year Treasury note is stuck below a falling 200-day moving average. Still, the benchmark yield has fallen to 3.5%, well below the 15-year highs seen in October.

Continue reading “Mid-Month Market Update: January 2023”