Communications Services
Underweight (High-Conviction) When we lowered our recommendation to underweight and added the S&P interactive media & services index to the high-conviction underweight list for 2019,1 we noted that one of our key themes for the year ahead would be increasing regulatory efforts on technology. This theme has accelerated in recent weeks as Facebook has faced a new government lawsuit and negative headlines with respect to sharing user data, while Alphabet (Google) has been called to testify before Congress. The much harsher environment has filtered through to forward earnings growth that has plummeted to roughly half the level of the broad market (second panel). Still, amidst the recent market turmoil, the S&P interactive media & services index has been an outperformer. This is somewhat surprising, considering the 40% valuation premium the index maintains relative to the broad market (bottom panel). We think it’s only a matter of time until the valuation catches up with earnings to the downside; stay underweight the S&P interactive media & services index. The ticker symbols in the stocks in this index are: S5INMS – GOOGL, GOOG, FB, TWTR and TRIP. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “2019 Key Views: High-Conviction Calls,” dated December 3, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Regulation Is Coming
Regulation Is Coming
Underweight (High-Conviction) In our initiation of coverage on the S&P interactive media & services index,1 we highlighted a renewed regulatory focus as a key risk that offset the revenue & profit growth vigor of this group, comprised almost entirely of Alphabet (Google) and Facebook. Tack on the inverse correlation these growth stocks have with interest rates (top panel) and that caused us to lower our recommendation on Monday. Increasing regulatory efforts on technology will be a key theme next year, one we explored this past summer. Our conclusion was that both antitrust (particularly in the case of Alphabet) and privacy regulation (particularly in the case of Facebook) added significant risk to these near monopolies; calls for legislating both have dramatically amplified. This communication services sub-index is particularly prone to such a risk when it already trades at close to a 40% valuation premium to the broad market (middle panel). Adding insult to injury is the PEG ratio that is trading at a 60% premium to the broad market (bottom panel). In the face of the Fed’s sustained tightening cycle these extreme growth stocks are vulnerable to massive gravitational pull. Net, we have downgraded our recommendation to underweight and include this index in the high-conviction underweight list for 2019; please see Monday’s Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols in the stocks in this index are: S5INMS – GOOGL, GOOG, FB, TWTR and TRIP. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, “New Lines Of Communication,” dated October 1, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Logging Off Interactive Media And Services
Logging Off Interactive Media And Services
Underweight In early-2018, some green shoots appeared for telecom services that an end was in sight for the nearly two years of pricing deflation hitting industry profits as some year-on-year pricing gains were eked out. However, as shown in the second panel of the chart, those year-on-year gains have petered out and, in fact, pricing is in deflation again on a three-month rate of change basis. At the same time, industry wages have fully reversed their declines and have accelerated for the past year (third panel). The combination implies increasing margin pressure, which is reflected in sell-side earnings growth estimates continuing to underperform the broad market (bottom panel). Tack on the tight inverse correlation between the high dividend yielding telecom services stocks and the 10-year yield, paired with BCA's expectation for rising yields, and the ingredients are all in place to remain bearish; stay underweight the S&P telecom services index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5TELSX - T, VZ, CTL.
Pricing Power Weighs On Telcos
Pricing Power Weighs On Telcos
Despite a stellar Q3 earnings print, the S&P 500 had a terrible October as EPS continues to do the hard work in lifting the market (Chart 1). Chart 1EPS Doing The Heavy Lifting
EPS Doing The Heavy Lifting
EPS Doing The Heavy Lifting
We bought the dip,1 consistent with our view of deploying longer term oriented capital were a 10% pullback to occur, given our view of no recession for the next 9 to 12 months.2 Financials and industrials should lead the next leg up and we believe a rotation into these beaten up stocks is going to materialize in the coming months. On the flip side, as volatility is making a comeback and the fed is on a path to lift rates to 3% by June of next year, fixed income proxies and consumer discretionary stocks should be avoided and a preference for large caps over small caps should be maintained (Chart 2). Chart 2The Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party
The Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party
The Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party
Further, a valuation reset has taken hold, pushed by the surprising rise of the equity risk premium over the course of the past two years, representing a surge in negative sentiment from investors, despite the usually tight inverse correlation with the ISM, the core sentiment indicator of the manufacturing economy (Chart 3). Chart 3ERP And The Economy Are Inversely Correlated
ERP And The Economy Are Inversely Correlated
ERP And The Economy Are Inversely Correlated
Nevertheless, while everyone is focusing on the euphoric above trend growth of the U.S. economy, a risk lurking beneath the surface is a domestic economic soft patch.3 We have likely stolen demand from the future and brought consumption forward especially with the stock market related fiscal easing that is front loaded to 2018 and less so for next year. On that front our Economic Impulse Indicator is warning that the U.S. economy cannot grow at such a pace, unless a bipartisan divide can be crossed to deliver enough firepower to rekindle GDP growth (Chart 4). Chart 4Economic Impulse Yellow Flag
Economic Impulse Yellow Flag
Economic Impulse Yellow Flag
Further, at least part of the blame for higher volatility rests with increasing trade uncertainty as the Trump administration has pursued an aggressive trade policy. Still, the evidence so far indicates that any trade weakness has been borne disproportionately by the rest of the world, to the U.S.' benefit (Charts 5 & 6). Chart 5U.S. Is Winning The Trade War
U.S. Is Winning The Trade War
U.S. Is Winning The Trade War
Chart 6U.S. Has The Upper Hand
U.S. Has The Upper Hand
U.S. Has The Upper Hand
We remain cognizant of a few key risks to our sanguine U.S. equity view. Principal among these is the rising U.S. dollar and its eventual infiltration into S&P 500 earnings, which has thus far been muted (Chart 7). Chart 7Watch The U.S. Dollar
Watch The U.S. Dollar
Watch The U.S. Dollar
Further, a softening housing market bodes ill for U.S. economic growth. This is the first time since the GFC that residential investment's contribution to real GDP growth turned negative for three consecutive quarters (Chart 8). Chart 8Peak Housing
Peak Housing
Peak Housing
Chris Bowes, Associate Editor chrisb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Daily Insight, "Time To Bargain Hunt," dated October 26, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "The "FIT" Market," dated October 9, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Critical Reset," dated October 29, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. S&P Financials (Overweight) Unchanged from its trajectory when we updated our cyclical indicators earlier this year, the S&P financials CMI has continued to accelerate. A historically low unemployment rate, combined with unusually resilient economic growth, underpin the surge in the CMI to its highest levels post-GFC. Further goosing the indicator, particularly with respect to the core banks sub-sector, is the recent rise in Treasury yields and a modest steepening in the yield curve both of which bode well for bank profits. However, financials have not responded to this exceptionally bullish data the way we expected, with worries over future loan growth fully offsetting the positive backdrop; financials have been falling throughout 2018. Still, inflation is threatening to rise (albeit gradually) and a selloff looms in the bond market. We highlighted earlier this fall that sectors who benefit from rising interest rates while serving as inflation hedges should outperform against this backdrop. Cue the return of S&P financials. As shown in Chart 10, the S&P financials index has shown a historically strong positive correlation with interest rates and inflation expectations and we expect the recent divergence to be closed via a catch-up in the former. As noted above, bearishness has reigned in 2018 and the result has been a steep fall in our valuation indicator (VI) to more than one standard deviation below normal while our technical indicator (TI) is deep in oversold territory. Chart 9S&P Financials (Overweight)
S&P Financials (Overweight)
S&P Financials (Overweight)
Chart 10Financials Are Trailing Rates
Financials Are Trailing Rates
Financials Are Trailing Rates
S&P Industrials (Overweight) S&P industrials, much like their cyclical brethren S&P financials, benefit from higher interest rates and also serve as hedges against rising inflation. As we have noted in recent research, industrials are levered to the commodity cycle and thus represent an indirect inflation hedge. This hedge only becomes problematic when industrials stocks are unable to pass these rising commodity costs through to the consumer. As shown in Chart 12, pricing power is not yet an issue for these deep cyclicals. Given the positive macro backdrop for S&P industrials, the CMI has risen to new cyclical highs. Despite the forgoing, fears over trade wars and tariff-driven higher input costs, combined with slowing global demand for capital goods, have weighed on the index. The result is that S&P industrials remain deeply oversold on a technical basis while hovering around the neutral line from a valuation perspective. We reiterate our overweight recommendation. Chart 11S&P Industrials (Overweight)
S&P Industrials (Overweight)
S&P Industrials (Overweight)
Cjart 12Resilient Industrials Pricing Power
Resilient Industrials Pricing Power
Resilient Industrials Pricing Power
S&P Energy (Overweight, High-Conviction) Our energy CMI has moved horizontally since our last update of the cyclical macro indicators. However, this followed a snap-back recovery from the extremely depressed levels of 2016 and 2017. Nevertheless, the S&P energy index has moved sideways in line with the CMI. Energy stocks have significantly trailed crude oil prices since the latter broke out roughly a year ago (Chart 14). Disbelief in the longevity of the increase in oil prices is the likely culprit weighing on the index, along with a bottleneck-induced steep shale oil price discount to WTI. There are high odds that a catch up phase looms, especially if BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service's view of a looming oil price spike materializes, and we reiterate our overweight recommendation. Our VI has been hovering at one standard deviation below fair value, while our TI trending into oversold territory. Chart 13S&P Energy (Overweight, High-Conviction)
S&P Energy (Overweight, High-Conviction)
S&P Energy (Overweight, High-Conviction)
Chart 14Crude Prices Are Still Leading The Way
Crude Prices Are Still Leading The Way
Crude Prices Are Still Leading The Way
S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight) Unchanged from our previous update, our consumer staples CMI has moved sideways, near a depressed level. However, share prices have finally been staging the recovery we have anticipated for several years on the back of firm consumer data, solid sector profitability and an overall cyclical rotation into staples. Despite the recent outperformance, both from an earnings and market perspective, consumer staples remain a deeply unloved sector. With respect to the former, earnings growth has outstripped the market's reaction by a wide margin. This is reflected on our VI which only recently rose from one standard deviation below fair value while our TI has only just begun a retreat from oversold territory. Staples' share of retail sales have arrested their steep declines from 2014-2016, which we view as a precursor to a rebound in weak industry sales (top panel, Chart 16). Exports of consumer staples have already been staging a comeback, despite the strengthening of the U.S. dollar which has historically presaged a relative earnings outperformance (middle panel, Chart 16). Considering the already-strong industry return on equity, any relative earnings gains should result in a valuation rerating (third panel, Chart 16). We reiterate our outperform rating on this cyclically defensive index. Chart 15S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight)
S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight)
S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight)
Chart 16Staples Are Making A Comback
Staples Are Making A Comback
Staples Are Making A Comback
S&P Health Care (Neutral) In a mid-summer report , we upgraded the S&P pharma and biotech indexes to neutral which, considering their ~50% weight of the S&P health care index, took our overall recommendation on S&P health care to neutral. In the report, we proffered five reasons why the S&P pharma and biotech indexes were set for a rebound following their precipitous decline from 2016 onwards. These were: firming operating metrics, late cycle dynamics, likelihood of pricing power regulatory relief, the rising U.S. dollar and investor and analyst capitulation. Our timing has proved prescient as the S&P pharma index has been dramatically outperforming since the upgrade (top panel, Chart 18). With respect to pharma's operating metrics, our pharma productivity proxy (industrial production / employment) has been soaring, implying that earnings should surge (second panel, Chart 18). This seems particularly likely as the pace of improvement in drug shipments exceeds inventory growth by a fairly wide margin (third and bottom panels, Chart 18). Despite the upbeat backdrop for pharma, our health care CMI has declined modestly, though remains at a neutral level relative to history. Further, the pharma recovery has taken our VI from undervalued to a neutral position, a reading which is echoed by our TI. Chart 17S&P Health Care (Neutral)
S&P Health Care (Neutral)
S&P Health Care (Neutral)
Chart 18Pharma Strength Is Lifting Health Care
Pharma Strength Is Lifting Health Care
Pharma Strength Is Lifting Health Care
S&P Technology (Neutral) The stratospheric rise of tech profits, particularly in the past two years, have done most of the heavy lifting in pulling the S&P 500's profit margin ever higher (second panel, Chart 20) as well as pushing the index itself to new all-time highs in September. The San Francisco Fed's tech pulse index - an index of coincident indicators of technology sector activity - suggests more profit growth is in the offing (third panel, Chart 20), an intimation repeated by our technology CMI. However, we remain cognizant of three material risks to bullishness in tech. First, the tech sector garners 60% of its revenues from abroad and thus the appreciating U.S. dollar is a significant profit headwind (bottom panel, Chart 20). Second, a rising U.S. inflation backdrop along with the related looming selloff in the bond market should knock the wind out of the tech sector's sails. Third, leading indicators of emerging Asian demand are souring rapidly and were the trade war to re-escalate, EM economic data would retrench further. Lastly, neither our VI nor our TI send particularly compelling messages, as both are on the expensive side of neutral, despite the recent tech selloff. We sustain a barbell portfolio within the sector by recommending an overweight position in the late-cyclical and capex-driven technology hardware, storage & peripherals and software indexes while recommending an underweight position in the early-cyclical semi and semi equipment indexes. Chart 19S&P Technology (Neutral)
S&P Technology (Neutral)
S&P Technology (Neutral)
Chart 20Tech Is King But Beware The U.S. Dollar
Tech Is King But Beware The U.S. Dollar
Tech Is King But Beware The U.S. Dollar
S&P Materials (Neutral) Our materials CMI has recently plumbed new lows, a result of tightening monetary policy and the accompanying selloff in the bond market. As a reminder, the heavyweight chemicals component of the materials index typically sees earnings (and hence stock prices) underperform as real interest rates are moving higher. Despite this negative backdrop, chemicals fundamentals have remained surprisingly resilient. Pricing power has stayed in its multi-year uptrend (second panel, Chart 22) while productivity gains have accelerated, coinciding with an erosion of sell-side bearishness (third panel, Chart 22). Still, chemical production has clearly rolled over (bottom panel, Chart 22) which could lead to a quick reversal of the gains in our productivity proxy and a faltering in rebounding EPS estimates. Combined with BCA's view of rising real interest rates for the next year, this is enough to keep us on the fence. Our VI too shows a neutral reading, though our TI has declined steeply into an oversold position. Chart 21S&P Materials (Neutral)
S&P Materials (Neutral)
S&P Materials (Neutral)
Chart 22Fundamentals In Chemicals Have Improved
Fundamentals In Chemicals Have Improved
Fundamentals In Chemicals Have Improved
S&P Utilities (Underweight) Our utilities CMI is at a 25-year low, driven down by the ongoing backup in interest rates. Such a move is predictable, given that utilities stocks are the closest to perfect fixed income proxies in the equity space. The S&P utilities sector has been enjoying a relative resurgence recently, driven by spiking natural gas prices and a supportive electricity demand backdrop from a roaring economy (ISM survey shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 24) and, more than anything, a general market retreat into safe haven assets. We recently trimmed our exposure to the sector from neutral to underweight because the S&P utilities sector was yielding 3.5% and the competing risk free asset was near 3.2% and investors would prefer to shed, at the margin, riskier high-yielding equities and park the proceeds in U.S. Treasurys (top panel, Chart 24). Since the run up in S&P utilities without a corresponding decline in Treasury yields, that spread has narrowed. Neither our VI nor our TI send compelling messages as both are in neutral territory, though our bearish thesis on utilities has less to do with their valuation relative to themselves or other equities than to bonds. Chart 23S&P Utilities (Underweight)
S&P Utilities (Underweight)
S&P Utilities (Underweight)
Chart 24Utilities Should Still Be Avoided
Utilities Should Still Be Avoided
Utilities Should Still Be Avoided
S&P Real Estate (Underweight) Our real estate CMI has reversed a recent recovery to set a new decade low; the only time it has shown a lower reading was during the Great Financial Crisis. Excluding the inflating of the property bubble in advance of the GFC, REITs have had a very tight inverse correlation with UST yields; the resulting downward pressure on the S&P REITs index is thus very predictable (top panel, Chart 26). Much like the S&P utilities sector in the previous section, and in the context of BCA's higher interest rate view, we continue to avoid this sector. The rate-driven downward pressure could be overlooked if all was well on an operating basis but this is not the case. Non-residential construction continues to rise (albeit more slowly than last year) in the face of higher borrowing rates (second panel, Chart 26). Further, demand looks slack as occupancy rates clearly crested at the beginning of last year (bottom panel, Chart 26). As well, on the residential front, multi-family housing starts remain elevated which should prove deflationary to rents. Our VI suggests that REITs are fairly valued, which is somewhat surprising given the negative backdrop, while our TI echoes a neutral view. Chart 25S&P Real Estate (Underweight)
S&P Real Estate (Underweight)
S&P Real Estate (Underweight)
Chart 26A Bearish Backdrop For REITs
A Bearish Backdrop For REITs
A Bearish Backdrop For REITs
S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight) While we remain constructive on financials that benefit from higher rates, we continue to recommend investors avoid the consumer discretionary sector - the other early cyclical - that suffers when interest rates rise. The second panel of Chart 28 depicts this inverse correlation consumer discretionary equities have with interest rates, especially the fed funds rate. Most discretionary equites are levered off of floating rates and thus any increase in the fed funds rates gets reflected immediately in banks' prime lending rate. Also, most consumer debt is floating rate debt and thus tighter monetary conditions, at the margin, dampen consumer debt uptake and as a knock off on effect, weigh on discretionary consumer outlays. Not only are higher interest rates anchoring consumer discretionary stocks but rising energy prices are also dealing a blow to this sector. We show our Consumer Drag Indicator (CDI, comprising mortgage rates and energy prices) in the bottom panel of Chart 28. Historically, our CDI has been an excellent leading indicator of relative share price momentum. Currently, the message is clear: the sinking CDI signals that a bear market in consumer discretionary stocks has likely commenced. All of this is captured by our CMI which has been sinking since the beginning of the year. Meanwhile, our VI has broken out to nearly its highest level ever which we believe is largely a function of the decreasing diversification of the S&P consumer discretionary index as AMZN now represents more than 30% of its market value following the redistribution of the media indexed to the new S&P communication services index. Our TI has been falling from overbought territory recently and now sends a neutral message. Chart 27S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight)
S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight)
S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight)
Chart 28Higher Rates Spell Declines For Consumer Discretionary
Higher Rates Spell Declines For Consumer Discretionary
Higher Rates Spell Declines For Consumer Discretionary
S&P Communication Services (Underweight) As the newly-minted communication services has little more than a month of existence, we do not have adequate history to create a cyclical macro indicator. However, we have created Chart 29 below with a number of valuation indicators, though we caution that they too are less reliable than the other indicators presented in the preceding pages, owing to a dearth of history. Rather, we refer readers to our still-fresh initiation of coverage on the sector and look forward to being able to deliver something more substantive in the future. Chart 29S&P Communication Services (Underweight)
S&P Communication Services (Underweight)
S&P Communication Services (Underweight)
Size Indicator (Favor Large Vs. Small Caps) Our size CMI has been hovering near the boom/bust line, as it has for most of the last two years. Despite the neutral CMI reading, we downgraded small caps earlier this year , and moved to a large cap preference, based on the diverging (and unsustainable) debt levels of small caps vs. their large cap peers (top and second panels, Chart 31). We expect the divergence in leverage and stock price to be rationalized as it usually has: via a fall in the latter. Considering the dramatic valuation gap that has opened between large and small caps, particularly on a Shiller P/E (or cyclically adjusted P/E, CAPE) basis (bottom panel, Chart 31), no space remains for any small cap profit mishaps. Our VI is trending towards small caps being undervalued, though without conviction while our TI is hovering in the neutral zone. Chart 30Size Indicator (Favor Large Vs. Small Caps)
Size Indicator (Favor Large Vs. Small Caps)
Size Indicator (Favor Large Vs. Small Caps)
Chart 31Too Much Debt And High Valuations Should Hurt Small Caps
Too Much Debt And High Valuations Should Hurt Small Caps
Too Much Debt And High Valuations Should Hurt Small Caps
Neutral The brand new S&P interactive media & services (IMS) index that we initiated coverage on last month1 has been experiencing extreme pain, being caught up in the global sell-off of former high-flying (and highly valued) tech stocks (top panel). As a reminder, the IMS index is dominated by Google & Facebook. The outlook appears to have brightened significantly, following Facebook's positive earnings results Tuesday which showed well-managed revenue deceleration and less margin contraction than had been feared following Q2's disastrous report; both FB and GOOG/GOOGL bounced following the report. Nevertheless, the three key risks that we highlighted in our initiation continue to keep us on the sidelines: a renewed regulatory focus, rapid unpredictable changes in tastes & technology and an appreciating U.S. dollar that threatens to sap growth in the key foreign segments. Further, while forward earnings multiples have declined significantly (second panel), the S&P IMS index remains richly valued relative to the market, which has also been going through a derating phase (bottom panel). Stay neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5INMS - GOOG, GOOGL, FB, TWTR, TRIP. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "New Lines Of Communication," dated October 1, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
The Social Network Shines
The Social Network Shines
Underweight In our previous Insight, we highlighted the S&P REITs index’s tight inverse correlation with UST yields, but it is far from the only group with this trait. The S&P telecom services index (now a subsector within the S&P communication services index, please see our recent Special Report1), with its predictable earnings stream and dividend payout, trades on the same basis. The spike in yields is thus a negative omen for telco stock prices. It is worth noting that the S&P telecom services index has been bucking its inverse correlation with UST yields since hitting their nadir in mid-2017 (second panel). We expect the beaten-up sector to reestablish the correlation, particularly since telecom’s share of the consumer’s wallet is at a decade low with momentum to continue lower. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the telecom services index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5TELSX - T, VZ, CTL.
Yields Are Causing Static For Telecoms
Yields Are Causing Static For Telecoms
1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, “New Lines Of Communication” dated October 1, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Neutral As part of this week's Special Report analyzing the rebadging of the S&P communication services index, we initiated coverage on the new S&P interactive media & services sector. Not doing so would leave a significant gap as the new index (comprised almost entirely of Alphabet & Facebook) makes up half of the market cap weight of the renamed GICS1 sector. We have not overcomplicated our thesis on interactive media & services: we expect that as long as everyone who wants a job has a job, consumer confidence will remain at record highs. This should ensure the flow of advertising dollars that dominate the revenues of the constituent firms, meaning profit growth, and hence stock performance, outpaces the broad market. Still, three risks keep us on the fence: a renewed regulatory focus, rapid unpredictable changes in tastes & technology and the threat of an appreciating U.S. dollar that threatens to sap growth in the key foreign segments. Bottom Line: We are initiating coverage with a neutral rating; please see Monday's Special Report for more details. The tickers in this index are BLBG: S5INMS - GOOG, GOOGL, FB, TWTR, TRIP.
Social Network Neutrality
Social Network Neutrality
Interactive Media & Services - Breaking Out?
…
The reshuffling dilutes what until recently was a pure-play safe haven index. Previously, telecommunications services was an ultra-low beta, high-dividend, zero currency-exposure prototypical defensive index. Communication services will be dominated by…
Underweight At the market's close last Friday, investors welcomed a new (rather, a renamed) GICS1 sector to the industry taxonomy: the S&P communication services sector. The change had long been overdue as the progenitor sector, telecommunication services, had been hollowed down to three companies and represented approximately 2% of the S&P 500. Further, finding homes for various new media and technology companies had left a hodgepodge of consumer discretionary and information technology subsectors that bore little resemblance to their respective peers. In short, we welcome the new taxonomy. That said, we are not changing our recommendations on the sub-sectors that are changing or moving in to the new GICS1 sector (with the exception of the new S&P interactive media & services index that we initiated coverage on yesterday with a neutral rating ). Accordingly, telecom services remains an underweight subsector under the new banner. We are moving four indexes from consumer discretionary to communication services: advertising (overweight), cable & satellite (neutral), movies & entertainment (neutral) and publishing (neutral). Though the new sector has one overweight subsector (advertising) and one underweight subsector (telecom services), the much greater weight of the latter subsector biases our recommendation on the communication services sector to underweight. Bottom Line: Our initial recommendation for the new S&P communication services sector is underweight. For investors seeking tech exposure we continue to recommend the S&P software and S&P tech hardware, storage & peripherals tech sub-indexes that are high-conviction overweights. Please see yesterday's Special Report for more details, including our initiation of coverage on the new S&P interactive media & services.
New Lines Of Communication
New Lines Of Communication