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Market Outlook

Positives And Concerns About The Trump Presidency


I’m sure you’ve been inundated with opinions on domestic politics, which is not usually a subject of this investing group. But politics is likely to affect our investment decisions so a note highlighting its impact on business is important.

So far, at, 5,994 the S&P 500 is up 5% from the Nov 4th close of 5,713, and from the forecasts of the likes of Goldman Sachs – we should be crossing 6,300 easily in 2025. Other forecasts have higher targets and we are seeing some of the traditional post-election bounce, a lot of short covering, lower volatility, FOMO, and so on…. It is a good time to be invested now.

There are a few policy areas that will affect equities.

Taxes – A big positive: The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was due to expire on December 31, 2025. It lowered corporate and business income taxes, which was a big positive. The Biden administration was lining up a new set of “tax the rich” proposals, which are now dead. Given the proclivity of the new administration, we should see lower taxes.

Tariffs – A big negative: but could be mitigated: THESE WILL BE HIGHLY INFLATIONARY
The Trump administration could impose tariffs at will by executive order, which is disastrously high. As part of an overall policy to rebalance trade with nations such as China, the tariffs will try to level the playing field.
According to some of the administration’s policy papers, which are part of Project 2025, – granting MFN (Most Favored Nation) status seems to have resulted in chronic U.S. trade deficits with much of the rest of the world, at the expense of American manufacturing; an unfair practice with systemic trade imbalances serving as a brake on GDP growth and capping real wages in the American economy while encumbering the U.S. with significant foreign debt.
This administration will point out China’s quest for global dominance, via protectionism, dumping, and so on, which though debatable, will be the bedrock of its tariff policies. (Who doesn’t love China bashing) The US is on the back foot regarding manufacturing and regardless of whether it is even feasible to reverse overseas manufacturing – this administration will go after it with a vengeance and tariffs will be their biggest tool to get manufacturing jobs back in the US. Tariffs ranging as high as 60% on Chinese goods, a 20% blanket tariff on all imports, and a 100% tariff on automobiles made in Mexico are possible impositions. THESE WILL BE HIGHLY INFLATIONARY
Regardless of the eventual tariffs, they’re bad for some of America’s biggest companies such as Apple (AAPL), Nvidia (NVDA), and Microsoft (MSFT) that rely on Chinese manufacturing for hardware products.
When Trump first imposed tariffs on Chinese goods, he made exceptions for certain consumer goods such as smartphones. Whether that will happen again is unclear.
Besides, we have not even talked about retaliation from global competitors to whom America exports goods and services.
Even as I anticipate tariffs to be a big negative, I’m hoping that wiser counsel prevails or perhaps the stock markets will swoon, which is reportedly a huge factor in this administration’s decisions, and not something they can control. Ironically, a stock market swoon may be the biggest reason for keeping tariffs under control.

Export controls: Some of it is already happening and is unlikely to get worse.

US technology with military applications is already banned from export. But if all exports of US-designed and engineered semiconductors, even those for consumer applications are banned it would hurt Apple, Nvidia, and Microsoft. But it would also hurt the trade imbalance that the Trump administration seeks to correct. Very unlikely.

ASML’s (ASML) EUV lithography machines could be a target if the Dutch government complies with restricting sales to allied countries such as Korea, Taiwan, and Japan. Again, unlikely.

Antitrust regulation: Positive for the markets – Under Biden, the government had lurched left, even trying to emulate the EU’s Digital Markets Act. The new administration will likely curtail some of the regulatory excesses, but we’ll have to wait and see if they try to undo recent antitrust litigation against Google (GOOG) and Apple.

Environment, energy, and inflation: More domestic drilling could be a positive, as more domestic oil reduces the need for imports, lowers gas prices, and could result in lower inflation. Its too early to comment on environmental policies and I’ll update at a later date.

Mass DeportationHighly inflationary, when one finds it difficult to fill jobs that Americans are not willing to do. Again – I believe it to be more rhetoric and not likely to be administered en masse, I suspect this could be cosmetic.

For sure, we live in interesting times and the next 4 years should be a roller coaster.

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Market Outlook

July CPI Report 

CPI rises 0.2% M/M in July, as expected, core CPI increase also in line 

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  • July Consumer Price Index:  
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  • +0.2% M/M vs. +0.2% expected and -0.1% prior. 
  • +2.9% Y/Y vs. +3.0% expected and +0.3% prior. 
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  • Core CPI, which excludes food and energy:  
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  • +0.2% M/M vs. +0.2% expected and +0.1% in June. 
  • +3.2% Y/Y vs. +3.2% expected and +3.3% prior. 

The 10 Year is at 3.87%, up from 3.84, futures are flat. I suspect that after the benign PPI report yesterday, perhaps there were expectations of even lower CPI growth. 

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Market Outlook

Annual Earnings Forecast for Q2-2024

Analysts forecast that the S&P 500 index’s earnings will likely grow above 12% for the second quarter and about 11-12% for the year to 247.

Source: FactSet

This is way above the 8% average growth, mostly because of a weaker Q2-2023, when earnings actually declined 4% over the previous year. 

Besides, S&P 500 earnings have been stagnant at $220 for the past two years so 2024 had beat the average significantly just to catch up and revert to the mean. 

Here are past 5 years – basically smoothening out the effects of Covid. After the big pandemic fall of 14% in 2020, there was that massive jump of 48% in 2021, and then two years of indigestion and inflation, which now leads to the 12% expected jump in 2024.

FactSet estimates that over the past ten years, actual earnings reported by S&P 500 companies have exceeded estimated earnings by 6.8% on average – everybody sandbags, (under promises and over delivers). I wouldn’t be surprised if earnings actually close over $250 for 2024.

Great, earnings look good with the 11-12% increase, but what about valuations?

The bottom-up target price for the next 12 months for the S&P 500 is 6006.66, which is 7.6% above the closing price of 5,584.54. 

The Forward P/E Ratio is 21.4, which is above the 10-Year Average (17.9), and above the 5-year average of 19.3. 

The two main causes for the high P/E 

a) Out performance and AI expectations, from the Magnificent 7, which controls about 33% of the index.

b) Decline in inflation and expectations of interest rate cuts.

I believe there is exhaustion in the M-7 – there is over participation (everybody and their uncle own Nvidia) and over bought. We we saw it for a bit in the last 3 weeks with Nvidia slowing down, but Apple and Tesla picked up the slack – Tesla rose 40% and 7 days in a row! What looked like a possible correction in the middle of June, never really materialized.

Secondly, now the 10 year has finally come down to about 4.19% and two interest rate cuts are a certainly after benign inflation numbers (still high over 3% and above the Fed target of 2% but definitely in the right direction). I believe the 10 Year will be between 3.5% and 3.75% for the most of 2025, if not lower.

Strategy for the second half of 2024 and beyond. High valuations should keep the index in check, and even cause a 5-7% correction, which is actually a good thing in my opinion. Lower interest rates will keep a floor.

What should we do? In my opinion, 

  1. Lower expectations for sure, if we make a return of 8-10% a year + dividends, that’s great, thus with this target, we can lower risk as well. For most of the year, almost every stock I had recommended had expectation of at least 15% Returns.
  2.  You don’t have to necessarily move away from tech but a mixture of Growth At a Reasonable Price (the GARP strategy) and absolutely looking for and investing in bargains should be the cornerstone of investing for the next 12 months. In two cases recently, GitLabs (GTLB) and Samsara (IOT) waiting for bargain prices have worked very well. I started the first 5% purchase, higher and slowly worked my way down as they kept falling and in both cases the prices are 15- 20% higher than my average cost.
  3. Keep cash handy for corrections and drops – On June 19th, I had sold 15-20% of semi stocks as profit taking; I’m still holding onto about 10% cash, which at 4-5% in money market funds is safe and I won’t invest till I get an outstanding bargain.
  4. Rotation – This week I’ll identify and recommend some GARPS, some dividend picks, and cyclicals.
  1. I picked up Duolingo, consumer, which is expensive – about 40% invested but am adding in the 190 range.

I’ve been pyramiding in the two big pharma companies – Eli and Novo, which is the exact opposite of cost averaging, buying smaller quantities even as they get higher, simply this obesity craze will last, and they’re relatively inured with strong pipelines.

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Market Outlook

 Earnings season for Q2-2024

As usual, the first to report were the big banks. I always look at credit provisioning and charge offs as indicators of economic weakness. 

JP Morgan (JPM) confirmed guidance for the rest of the year for earnings and revenue; earnings growth will be less than 1%, while revenues will grow at a modest 5%. JPM did increase credit loss provisioning to $3.05Bn, higher than 2.8Bn earlier, this is also higher than 1.88Bn in Q1, and 2.9Bn in Q2. Charge offs (mainly on credit card delinquencies) were also higher by $820Mn at $2.2Bn. Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, was cautious as usual, JPM tends to over-provide for losses and has been doing it for years.

Wells Fargo (WFC) didn’t need to increase provisioning, but its charge offs were also higher – net loan charge-offs, as a percentage of average total loans, increased to 0.57% from 0.50% in Q1 and 0.32% in Q2 2023.  WFC’s bigger problem is net interest income, it now expects full-year 2024 net interest income to fall 8%-9% from 2023’s $52.4B, compared with its prior guidance of down 7%-9%.

Citi (C) was mixed with higher charge offs but lower provisioning, and also commentary from the CEO, that lower FICO score customers are pulling back on spending. In addition, he’s seeing signs that delinquencies may be bending back down.

These don’t set off any alarm bells but does confirm what we’ve been hearing for most of the year, that outside of tech, the economy is lackluster, and that inflation is stunting growth, especially for lower and middle income groups.

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Market Outlook

Savita Subramanian on the state of the markets

A Summary of Barron ’s interview with Savita Subramanian – head of U.S. equity and quantitative strategies at BofA Securities

Definitely one of the smarter strategists on Wall Street with a lot of prescient calls, especially being one of the first to raise the S&P 500 2024 target to 5,400, a level we passed yesterday.

https://www.barrons.com/articles/large-companies-value-stocks-market-rally-subramanian-21f7c4c2?mod=hp_LEADSUPP_1

“If I were going to buy one kind of investment for the next 12 to 24 months, it would be large-cap value. That’s where you’re going to get the most bang for your buck. That’s what will lead over the next few years, given the macro environment.” 

“At the beginning of the year, it was much easier to be bullish because there were a lot more bears. And at this point, I feel like a lot of the bears have capitulated.”

“I’m not worried about equities from a valuation perspective because these multiples are sustainable.”  “Inflation volatility has subsided. This is where clients probably disagree with me the most, but I feel that what the Fed does now is less important because it has already done the extreme process of hiking.”

I agree with this to a great extent – interest rate cuts, higher for longer, neutral interest rates have a marginal impact. Directionally, the 10 year is moving lower, and except for shelter inflation, which has a variable called “notional rent” (A computed number based on what you would pay if you were renting your home today), a majority of other indicators have been moving lower.

​​” Until we get to that moment where the Fed says we’re at peak rates, inflation is coming down, and we can be more accommodative, you want to hold inflation-protected sectors such as energy, materials, and financials. These are more cyclical than defensive sectors.”

“When we were in more of an inflationary environment, we wrote about how the best environment for equities was 2% to 4% inflation. That’s where we are right now. The best environment for equities is when real wage growth is positive and nominal sales growth is at reasonable levels.”

A somewhat Goldilocks scenario…

“But I am surprised by how narrow the market has become. I would have expected a broadening out to have happened earlier.” “The earnings of the mega cap tech cohort are so high that we are more likely to see a deceleration than an acceleration. Another reason to expect a broadening out is that we got positive guidance across the board, and not just from tech companies, during first-quarter earnings season.”

“I like a mix of companies that are generating strong free cash flow and enjoying the benefits of this tech revolution, but also companies that are potentially becoming more labor light. If you think about the areas that could benefit from generative artificial intelligence, it’s banks, legal services, and IT [information technology] services.”

“And if you think about cash flow, it isn’t just tech but also utilities, power, infrastructure, and energy companies that are generating substantial amounts of cash. Some are exciting, and some are boring. But they are mostly big. That’s where I differ from a lot of other bulls. I don’t think you want to buy all small-caps, because while some of them are economically sensitive and will benefit from better gross-domestic-product growth in the U.S., others are morphing into smaller-cap companies because they used to be large.”

So be selective, the devil is in the details – cash flow, operational performance are paramount regardless of small, big, value, boring, tech – BUY THE BUSINESS, Buffet style..

When asked about the election – “The fact that both candidates agree that they want to bring back manufacturing from China and other regions of the world to the U.S. has created more jobs. While these policies are protectionist and inflationary, they are also pro-growth.”

“Right now is the most interesting time to be a market strategist, in my opinion. We’re back to a more rational market. When we were in a zero-interest-rate, massive-stimulus-driven market, it was hard to forecast what would happen next. Events were in the hands of central bankers.” “The outlook depends less on central bankers, and more on corporations and consumers.”

Its a very practical approach, and its folks like Savita, who are instrumental in allocating investment capital – this is not a theoretical, economists top down approach, which at the end of day is much less influential/meaningful for investors.

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Market Outlook

 Payrolls Report For May 2024

US Payrolls Rose by 272,000 in May, smashing Estimates of 180,000

The wage gain is also strong, at 0.4%, double the pace of the average hourly earnings advance of the previous month.

The unemployment rate is up, though, that’s as the labor force participation rate fell — unfortunate news for the Fed.

  • May nonfarm payrolls: +272K vs. 182K expected and 165K prior (revised from +175K).
  • Unemployment rate: 4.0% vs. 3.9% expected and 3.9% prior.
  • Average hourly earnings rose 0.4% in May, accelerating from 0.2% in April and topping the 0.3% consensus. Y/Y, average hourly earnings increased 4.1%, compared with the +3.9% consensus and +4.0% in the prior month (revised from +3.9%).
  • Futures are down 0.4% and the 10 Year treasury yield has increased 13 points to 4.43%
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Market Outlook

Economic Update: April Core PCE Price Index and Personal Income

April Core PCE Price Index: In line with estimates.

  •  +0.2% M/M vs. +0.2% consensus and +0.3% in March. +2.8% Y/Y vs. +2.8% consensus and +2.8% prior.
  • PCE Price Index: +0.3% M/M vs. +0.3% expected and +0.3% prior. +2.7% Y/Y vs. +2.7% consensus and +2.7% in March.
  • Personal outlays: +0.2% M/M vs. +0.3% consensus and +0.8% prior.
  • Personal income: +0.3% M/M vs. +0.3% consensus and +0.5%.

Futures are up slightly by 0.3% and Treasury yields are lower at 4.53%

Categories
Stocks

April PMI Manufacturing Index Falls Below 50: Signs of Economic Contraction

U.S. PMI Manufacturing unexpectedly slips into negative territory in April

April PMI Manufacturing Index: 49.9 vs. 52.0 consensus and 51.9 in March. The services PMI did, too, slip to 50.9 (vs. 52.0 expected) from 51.7 a month ago, though it remained in positive territory, with the index still above 50.

The composite PMI (flash estimate) came in at 50.9, down from 52.1 in the previous month, signaling business activity in the U.S. expanded at a slower pace during the month, in the wake of signs of weaker demand.

The group’s measure of employment slid 3.2 points to 48, reflecting shrinking services payrolls and slower growth at manufacturers. The composite index of prices received, meanwhile, pulled back from a 10-month high.

“The more challenging business environment prompted companies to cut payroll numbers at a rate not seen since the global financial crisis if the early pandemic lockdown months are excluded,” Williamson said.

The decline in the employment measure suggests companies see current capacity as sufficient to handle demand. Order backlogs remained in contraction territory during the month.

New business at service providers shrank for the first time since October, with some firms indicating higher borrowing costs and still-elevated prices were limiting demand.

The overall index for services activity decreased to the lowest level in five months, while the manufacturing PMI showed a slight contraction.

“Further pace may be lost in the coming months, as April saw inflows of new business fall for the first time in six months and firms’ future output expectations slipped to a five-month low amid heightened concern about the outlook,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

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Market Outlook

Payrolls Report For March 2024

The much-awaited payrolls report is out

Strong numbers, up 303,000 much higher than consensus estimates of 212,000

Wage growth, 0.03 MoM, +4.1% annual, as estimated.

The unemployment rate inched down to 3.8% from 3.9%. Economists, on average, had expected the jobless rate to hold steady at 3.9%. Labor force participation rate of 62.7% vs. 62.6% consensus and 62.5% prior. This is a good sign.

Treasuries yields are at 4.37% up 7 basis points – expectations of rate cuts fade.

S&P Futures up 0.4%

Nasdaq Composite up 0.49%

The past few days there was a lot of consternation in the market, with reports about Fed cuts delayed or as one Fed Gov, Neal Kashkari suggested yesterday

The markets had fallen the last three days and looks stable at least for now. 

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Market Outlook

December 2023 Payroll Report: Job Gains Exceed Expectations Amid Rising Wages

Category – Market Outlook

Payroll Report for Dec 2023

Net job gains 216K, higher than the 175K expected.

Hourly wage gains 4.1%, higher than 3.9% expected.

The two-month payroll revision, though, shows a 71,000 reduction in gains.

The 10-year treasury is up 8 basis points to 4.07%, with hourly wage gain increase being the main culprit.

S&P Futures down 0.4%

Expectations of the Fed reducing rates at their March meeting are down to only 50% based on a good jobs report and the higher wage increase.