John P. Swift, CFA, CPA Chief Investment Officer
312-259-9595 or [email protected]
Summary
Growth scare
On Monday, Japanese stocks set the stage with a 12.4% drop, and European stocks fell to a lesser extent, closing 2.2% lower. US markets tumbled, and the VIX volatility index briefly spiked above 60.3. What prompted this plunge, what should investors do now, and what indicators are we watching next?
The Fed held rates steady, and US economic data showed weakness
The US Federal Reserve (Fed) kept interest rates at current levels at its meeting on July 31st, and declined to make a firm commitment to cut rates in September – although it left the door wide open to a rate cut. Markets took the news in stride on Wednesday, only to react negatively on Thursday and even more negatively on Friday in the face of some high-profile earnings misses and data indicating a weakening US economy:
Initial jobless claims were worse than expected.
The Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for July fell to 46.8, which was below expectations, and the employment sub-index experienced a large drop to 43.4 from 49.3 in June.
The US employment situation report for July showed non-farm payroll gains were significantly lower than anticipated at 114,000 versus 175,000 expected. Payrolls for the previous two months were revised downward by 29,000. In addition, there was a significant increase in unemployment – from 4.1% to 4.3%. That means that we’re now extremely close to the triggering of a recession indicator called the Sahm rule. The Sahm rule says that the early stages of a recession are signaled when the three-month moving average of the US unemployment rate is half a percentage point or more above the lowest three-month moving average unemployment rate over the previous 12 months. Technically it hasn’t happened yet because the actual unemployment rate is 4.253%, which has been rounded up to 4.3%, but we are close to triggering this rule of thumb.
The Bank of Japan and Bank of England acted
Unlike the Fed, other central banks acted last week. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) made two important monetary policy decisions. First, it raised its key policy rate. Second, it decided to reduce its purchases of long-term Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) by about 400 billion yen every quarter until March 2026 – which constitutes an implementation of a quantitative tightening (QT) policy. It’s important to note that the BOJ will conduct an interim assessment of the purchase plan and may modify the purchase amount if necessary.
Swayed by easing inflation data, the Bank of England (BOE) cut its policy rate by 25 basis points to 5.0%, its first rate cut since the pandemic and the first of this rate cycle. This should be a gradual easing cycle; the market is pricing a total of two rate cuts by the BOE this year. It’s important to note that while Consumer Price Index inflation has fallen to the BOE’s target of 2%, inflation forecasts from the BOE’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) were revised higher into year-end (to 2.7%) to account for base effects of last year’s relative decline in energy prices. The BOE notes it expects second-round effects from domestic prices and wages to persist, but there is not a consensus on the duration of this within the members of the MPC.
Recent History Repeating Itself?
The graph below shows the S&P 500 percentage performance from July 1, 2023 thru August 31, 2023 (Top) and July 1, 2024 thru August 6, 2024 (bottom). Look similar? Last summer if you look at the headlines we were all worried about lagging growth until Nvidia (NVDA) reported its earnings in August and sent shockwaves around the globe eliminating any lingering growth concerns. Will recent history repeat itself? Nobody know, of course, but Nvidia reports on August 28th, and unlike last year, we are looking at the real prospect of the Federal Reserve beginning their interest rate easing at their next Open Market Committee Meeting on September 17-18. The Fed Chairman Powell will also provide the keynote address at the Fed’s summer conference in Wyoming later this month where he will provide information on their rate cutting plans.
The market sell-off: What can investors do now?
This all brings us to August 5. The double-digit drop in Japanese stocks does not come as a complete surprise, given that the Japanese yen has strengthened so much. There is a distinct risk that a strengthening yen will weaken Japanese stocks, as it has done over recent weeks and historically in the last several decades.
On the other hand, I was surprised to see the VIX even briefly spiked above 60. To me, that suggests an overreaction.
So, what is an investor to do?
First and foremost, stay calm. We must remember that market corrections are not uncommon. They happen in most years and tend to come out of nowhere. The question is whether something larger is happening – i.e., a recession.
We think markets are overly worried about recession.
While we do believe that the Fed has increased recession risks by not cutting in July, we still believe the US job market is in relatively good shape and employers appear reluctant to cut employees. Having said that, markets have had a strong rally this year, suggesting very positive news is priced in, and so it makes sense that we are experiencing a meaningful correction given recent developments: a Fed that is more hawkish than expected, growing instability in the Middle East, some tech earnings disappointment, and increased uncertainty about the US presidential election. And of course, markets are thinly traded in August as traders are getting in one last family trip in before they tuck the kiddos back in school.
But we also believe there are compelling reasons to be constructive about this sell-off:
Reasons for investors to be positive
Positive earnings surprises. Despite some high-profile misses, earnings season has been relatively positive. Of the 75% of S&P 500 companies that have reported actual earnings results, 78% of them have reported a positive earnings per share (EPS) surprise and 59% of them have reported a positive revenue surprise.
Third-quarter forecasts. More importantly, forecasts for earnings in the third quarter have not been downwardly revised beyond what is typical in the first month of the quarter. The bottom-up EPS estimate for the third quarter (which is an aggregate of median EPS estimates for all the companies in the S&P 500 index) decreased by 1.8% from June 30 to July 31. This decline is equal to the 5-year average, the 10-year average, and the 20-year average for S&P 500 companies; in all three of those time periods, earnings estimate were downwardly revised on average by 1.8%. And contributions to earnings growth have been broadening, with forward earnings projections indicating more contribution from non-Magnificent 7 companies.
Recession indicators have not been triggered.
We don’t think risks of a recession have risen significantly. If you think about the key hallmarks of a recession, they have not been triggered:
Valuations
One key benefit of the sell-off is that valuations, which were admittedly very high, have already become more attractive. And there is a very significant amount of cash sitting on sidelines that investors are likely to deploy as bargains appear.
For those with a time horizon longer than a few months, I think it’s important to be patient. This sell-off is a very emotional market reaction that is overestimating the potential for recession, in my view. We anticipate rate cuts are on the horizon, and we know the US economy is in relatively good shape.
Our base case is that it is not too late for the Fed to begin to cut. If the Fed does start to ease soon, we believe it will likely be able to avoid a recession, and the US economy would likely experience a re-acceleration in growth in late 2024/early 2025.
Outlook
I wouldn’t be surprised to experience a volatile and challenging market environment in coming weeks. However, I still worry that the biggest mistake long-term investors could make is getting spooked and moving out of markets. I have seen this emotional investor reaction occur in significant sell-offs over the years, and it is perhaps the most damaging decision investors can make. Rather, I am optimistic this sell-off could represent an opportunity for those patient investors with a significant overweighting to cash to consider reducing that exposure.
Warm regards,
John P. Swift, CFA, CPA