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Equities

The reflation trade will continue for a few more months on Chinese fiscal/monetary stimulus and a more dovish Fed. Despite a slightly better-than-expected start to the earnings season, Q1 S&P 500 profits are set to fall for a fourth consecutive yoy decline. Ex-energy, things aren't so bleak. Domestically-focused companies will experience flat earnings and modestly-positive revenue growth in Q1. Although margins have almost certainly peaked, their decline will be drawn-out. Remain overweight Europe/Japan/China versus the S&P 500 (currency-hedged).

While technology sector profits are disappointing on the back of the paucity of volume growth and deflation (i.e. INTC, IBM), the same is not true for health care companies. Several large cap health care firms have reported robust earnings results (i.e. JNJ, UNH), reflecting steady non-cyclical demand growth and burgeoning pricing power. Indeed, managed care companies are successfully lifting premiums, while pharmaceutical firms continue to enjoy nearly unprecedented pricing power (bottom panel). While the latter is a point of political contention in the U.S., history shows that it is an extremely difficult and drawn out process to effect change. In the meantime, the health care sector's ability to lift selling prices stands in stark contrast with the overall corporate sector. For instance, the small business sector is showing an inability to lift selling prices, as reflected by the NFIB reported price change series, (shown inverted, top panel), which is bordering on recessionary readings. As a result, health care profits should continue to outperform, and we reiterate our recent move to a high-conviction overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HLTH.

The euro area's nominal GDP and wage bill are growing at 3%, suggesting that fears of deflation are overdone. But a higher wage bill has implications for profits growth.

EM/China growth improvements and the associated rally will falter on their own without tightening by policymakers. The short duration of these mini-cycles and a lack of observable catalysts make it impossible to precisely time selling out of EM positions. This makes us reluctant to chase the rally. Regardless how the impeachment process proceeds, Brazil is heading into a fiscal/public debt crisis.

Earlier this month we made a rare shift from underweight to overweight in the S&P cable & satellite index, because fears of cord cutting and skinnier cable packages undermining profitability were no longer justified. In fact, in real terms, consumer outlays on cable have jumped to new highs. Unsurprisingly, the latest consumer price report showed that cable TV inflation is following in the footsteps of spending: the rate of pricing power growth is accelerating (bottom panel). That implies low subscriber churn, reducing the likelihood that capital spending will need to materially increase to maintain competitiveness. Importantly, cyclical share price momentum is still well below levels that have marked previous interim relative performance peaks, and should continue to climb based on the uptrend in real consumer spending (middle panel). We reiterate our upgrade to overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CBST - CMCSA, CVC, TWC.
Monday's upgrade of the energy sector to neutral and the exploration & production index to overweight does not mean that refiners are out of the woods. In fact, the opposite is true, because the crude oil supply glut will morph into a refined product glut. Refiners are still running full out, likely in response to strong gasoline demand, but that is creating a glut of distillate inventories and boosting overall fuel supplies. Overall refined product consumption is barely growing, underscoring that inventories will continue to build. Weakening overall demand for finished oil product is also evident in the plunge in railcar shipments, which heralds a potentially painful decline in relative stock performance (top panel). Part of the plunge in rail shipments of oil reflects reduced shale oil production, which will boost refiner input costs via higher crude oil prices. Keep in mind that refining margins are already under cyclical stress, because of the tight spread between Brent and WTI crude oil prices (third panel). Our refiner earnings model, based on refining margins and utilization rates, is plunging. Consequently, the odds of a sustained profit squeeze are high. We reiterate our high conviction underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5OILR - PSX, VLO, MPC, TSO.
One refrain from market bulls is that sentiment is too bearish, which is contrarily positive. Indeed, our own Composite Sentiment Gauge is still decisively in a bearish zone. However, action trumps rhetoric. Investors are responding to polls bearishly, but do not appear to be positioned that way. True bearishness elicits a rush for the equity exits, which prompts position deleveraging, a valuation squeeze, a dramatic increase in cash levels and a premium on portfolio protection, as measured by the VIX and SKEW indexes. Yet valuations are probing historic highs, as measured by the median industry group price/sales ratio (bottom panel). Investors are not nervously hedging long positions, as evidenced by historically depressed readings in the VIX and SKEW indexes. Meanwhile, margin debt remains near record levels, both in absolute terms and compared with market cap and/or GDP (fourth panel). Moreover, investor cash holdings are historically low, the opposite of a bearish signal. The broad market lows in 2000 and 2009 were marked by unanimity among these indicators, namely bombed out sentiment and speculation readings, extreme anxiety about a potential crash, cheap valuations, low margin debt, high cash levels and a high degree of global economic pessimism. At the moment, none of these indicators is confirming that investors are positioned defensively. Consequently, we are reluctant to champion a bullish equity outlook on the basis that pessimism reigns. We expect our outsized exposure to non-cyclical sectors to continue generating alpha.

Bearish sentiment is a red herring, as most other measures of investor positioning point to a strong undercurrent of bullishness. That is contrarily worrying.

The equity bear case is obvious. Prices are approaching overhead resistance and face fundamental headwinds.

Special Report

This week <i>Global Alpha Sector Strategy</i> in conjunction with <i>Emerging Markets Strategy</i> is sending out a <i>Special Report</i> on EM deep cyclical sectors, discussing debt and cash flow dynamics, identifying how far advanced the capital expenditure down cycle is, and determining if recent EM deep cyclical strength should be bought or faded.