Home / News / Life for equities after the ‘three Ps’

Life for equities after the ‘three Ps’

Even with the market-shaking events of 2022 mostly in the rearview and most of the valuation pressure now played out, equities won't be moving much higher unless something big changes.
News

Life after what American Century Investments (ACI) calls the three Ps – the pandemic, Putin and Powell – hasn’t gotten any easier for equities managers, even as a new FOMO rally creates the illusion of a global economy in rude health.

“Technology has regained its leadership and energy is at the bottom of the board,” Brent Puff (pictured), senior portfolio manager at ACI, told media on Wednesday. “You can see a real reversal in leadership, which caught us pretty by surprise. Another hallmark of the market, which is more a US phenomenon, is the narrowness of the rally in the S&P500.

“If you look at the per centage of stocks in the S&P500 that are outperforming the index year-to-date it’s at a 20 to 25-year low. Through the middle of June the five best performing stocks in the S&P500 contributed 80 per cent of the index’s return.”

The performance differential between the equal-weighted and cap-weighted indices is “unusually large” and it’s American Century’s view is that it’s going to be difficult for the market to move meaningfully higher so long as inflation stays above central bank targets, like it is in much of the developed world, and as the global economy continues to decelerate.

“Recession or no recession, it’s our judgement that the rate of economic activity moving forward is likely to continue to slow,” Puff said. “We’re more worried about the trajectory of economic activity than the impact of higher inflation and higher interest rates. In our opinion equity markets have already absorbed most of the headwind associated with higher interest rates and higher cost of capital.”

“If you look at equity valuations in the United States for example which were by global standards more stretched than most through the Covid period, in a period of about eighteen months the overall market multiple unwound nearly the entirety of what was a two standard deviation Covid spike… Equity valuations still by historical standards look pretty reasonable.”

But the overall environment in which companies are operating is going to be dominated by slower economic activity, and that’s going to make for a more challenging backdrop for companies to grow their earnings and value. It’s not the “most rosy, optimistic outlook”, Puff says, even if most of the valuation pressure has played out.

“We’ve had a lot of tightening over a short period and in our opinion the impact on the real economy is only really starting to play out today,” Puff said. “That’s what we’re worried about; we, like many people, have been surprised by the resilience of the US economy in spite of these headwinds.

“A good description of what it feels like is happening is we’re slow walking into a recession or a period of time where growth is going to continue to lose altitude. The consumer has been the glue that’s held the US economy so far and if you look at the consumer today you’re seeing a bifurcation; low end consumers are clearly struggling, and retailers that serve them are generally struggling. But overall consumer spending has been stronger and more resilient than expected.”

Lachlan Maddock

  • Lachlan is editor of Investor Strategy News and has extensive experience covering institutional investment.




    Print Article

    Related
    Tech market concentration a repeat of dot com bubble: Pzena

    The big technology companies are probably good companies, but the disconnect is in their valuations. For Pzena Investment Management, it’s 2000 all over again.

    Tahn Sharpe | 10th May 2024 | More
    TelstraSuper looks for a merger partner

    The $26 billion TelstraSuper has become the latest corporate super fund to weigh its merger options in the face of increasing competition and scale issues in the rapidly consolidating industry.

    Lachlan Maddock | 8th May 2024 | More
    ‘One plus one equals three’ in Mine/TWUSUPER Team-up

    The $13 billion Mine Super is headed for a merger with TWUSUPER that will diversify both funds’ member bases into new sectors, plug gaps in their portfolios and prepare it for a world where bigger is (allegedly) better.

    Lachlan Maddock | 3rd May 2024 | More
    Popular