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Investment Perspective · 08.27.24

Fundamentals Matter

While short-term fluctuations and sudden selloffs have tested the markets, key indicators such as corporate profits, employment data, and economic resilience have held firm.

  • Portfolio Construction
  • High Yield Strategy
  • Risk Management
  • Fixed Income Insights
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Executive Summary

Key Points

What it is

We explore the role of economic fundamentals in countering the volatility observed in the market today.

Why it matters

Understanding the interaction between fundamentals and market fluctuations may help investors refine their approach, balancing risk with opportunity.

Where it's going

If fundamentals hold, growth may persist in equities and high-yield bonds, yet caution is warranted.

It has been an eventful past month for the markets. A rotation into U.S. small cap equities gained traction after inflation data came in softer than expected. From a little before mid-July through the end of the month, small caps outperformed large caps by 12%. Over that period, value stocks, real estate and Treasuries performed notably well, too. While those areas produced abnormal gains, broader equities ended the month slightly up as well. However, things took a turn in August. In the span of three days global equities sold off 7%, Japan equities saw more than a 12% one-day loss, and U.S. equities breached the 5% correction threshold. The (a measure of U.S. equity volatility) recorded its largest ever intraday spike. While it’s early days, the dust has somewhat settled since. Global equities sit over 3% above the recent trough and volatility levels — while still elevated — have come down.

 

Associated with the sell-off have been several candidates. Starting in the first half of July, semiconductor stocks have sold off more than 20%. Also, Bank of Japan tightening has corresponded with a sharp appreciation in the yen. This has led to an unwinding of carry trades and potentially leverage elsewhere. Adding fuel to the fire was softer than expected U.S. employment data that elicited heightened growth concerns. We do not attribute recent volatility to a change in . The increase in the U.S. unemployment rate was driven by increased supply. Layoffs have remained low and job demand remains intact by historical standards. Corporate profits remain solid with second quarter earnings season shaping up reasonably well. We, along with consensus, expect ~13% earnings growth for U.S. equities over the next 12 months.

 

Lingering volatility is certainly possible through year end. Volatility is a normal part of market cycles, with 5% corrections occurring five times per year on average. During these periods, diversification can help buffer losses. Across the recent three-day 7% selloff in global equities, investment grade fixed income gained 2%. The stock-bond correlation has been rising over the past several years alongside accelerating inflation (see chart). With inflation coming down toward more normal levels, it is possible that a negative stock-bond correlation can continue to serve as a ballast during equity drawdowns.

 

We made no changes to our tactical positioning this month. Recent market developments have not changed our constructive outlook for macroeconomic and corporate . Our base case remains for a soft landing and easier central bank policy than in recent years. We maintain pro-risk tactical positioning in the Global Policy Model with a preference for equities over fixed income. Within fixed income, we prefer high yield over investment grade given a supportive economic outlook and cushion from high yield’s income component against adverse moves in rates and/or credit spreads.

 

— Anwiti Bahuguna, Ph.D. – Chief Investment Officer, Global Asset Allocation 

Diversification support

 

The shift lower in the stock-bond correlation helped contain losses for balanced portfolios during the recent equity selloff.

stock bond rolling 60 day correlation of daily returns

Source: Northern Trust Asset Management, Bloomberg. Stocks represented by S&P 500 Index; Bonds represented by Bloomberg US Treasury Index. 2010-2019 average (avg) starts 3/30/2010. Trading day data from 12/31/2009 through 8/9/2024.

Interest Rates

 

We took the main message from the July Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting to be that while recent economic data releases have given the Committee greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably towards their target, they’re also watching the labor market for unexpected weakness.

 

Regarding inflation, their description was qualified as “somewhat elevated” compared to “elevated” last meeting. Similarly, they observed “some further progress…” towards their 2% objective, compared to “modest further progress” six weeks ago. Regarding the labor market, job gains “moderated,” instead of “remained strong,” and the unemployment rate “moved up but remains low,” instead of “remained low.” Perhaps most notably, the statement added that the “Committee is attentive to the risks to both sides of its dual mandate.” This is a sharp contrast to the language the Committee has used over the past couple of years, which indicated that “the Committee remains highly attentive to inflation risks.” Overall, the market did not appear to view the July FOMC meeting as a game-changer. Market participants have likely already turned their attention to upcoming data releases and the annual meeting of senior central bankers in Jackson Hole.

 

— Dan LaRocco, Head of U.S. Liquidity, Global Fixed Income

MOVING CLOSER

 

The Fed is widely expected to cut rates in September.

number of rate cuts expected

Source: Northern Trust Asset Management, Bloomberg. Estimated number of moves priced in to the current forward-curve structure for the U.S. using the futures model. Data from 2/8/2024 through 8/9/2024.

  • The FOMC is moving closer to policy normalization.

  • We, along with the market, expect the first cut in September. We expect a 25-basis point cut.

  • We remain underweight investment grade fixed income and see little downside to interest rates from here.

 

 

Credit Markets

 

High yield (HY) remain tighter than historical averages. An often overlooked contributing factor is that HY duration is much shorter than in the past. Duration and credit spreads typically are upward sloping as investors demand additional compensation for loaning money for an extended period. Therefore, the decrease in the duration of the asset class usually leads to tighter spreads.

 

Duration in HY is decreasing due to a number of reasons. One is because most high yield bonds have a call feature. As bonds continue to rally, they begin trading to call prices and can be called before maturity by the issuers — which leads to a decrease in duration. Another aspect is new issuance has been oriented toward shorter duration paper. Companies prefer to lock in today’s higher levels of funding for shorter periods of time. Most of the duration for the asset class also comes from higher quality issuers who have been more opportunistic in letting maturities roll off. Recent U.S. jobs data led high yield spreads to widen significantly due to the sharp rally in rates, but given these structural shifts in the asset class and better fundamentals than historical norms, this may be an attractive entry point.

 

— Eric Williams, Head of Capital Structure, Global Fixed Income

Structurally TIghter Spreads?

 

Shifts in high yield duration are leading to tighter spreads.

shifts in high yield duratino from 2014 to 2024

Source: Northern Trust Asset Management, Bloomberg. OAS = option-adjusted spreads. Modified duration is a formula that expresses the measurable change in the value of a security in response to a change in interest rates. Data from 8/7/2014 through 8/5/2024. 

  • High yield spreads have continued to be range bound for much of this year. Spreads remain tighter than historical averages.

  • The high yield index duration is materially shorter than in the past, helping drive tighter spreads.

  • High yield remains our largest tactical overweight.

 

Equities

 

In July, U.S. small caps saw an abnormal gain of 10.8% compared to 1.2% for large caps. Consistent with past small cap rallies, the gains were quick and sharp. Returns were driven by higher valuations. Small cap revenue and earnings expectations remain subdued versus large caps. July’s solid returns quickly reversed in August. Through August 9, global equities sit 3.6% lower on the month. The small cap rally has at least momentarily reversed with U.S. small caps down 6.9% compared to 3.2% for large caps. At the forefront of the drawdown have been Japan equities and semiconductor stocks, both of which have corrected over 20% from July highs (see chart). The peak-to-trough global equity drawdown has been more contained at ~9%.                 
 

Recent market events have not altered our constructive fundamental views on a soft landing and solid corporate profits. Market corrections are a normal part of market cycles, with 5% corrections occurring ~5 times per year on average (~1.5 times for 10% pullbacks). While there have been early signs of stabilization, enduring volatility is not off the table. But with equity valuations now lower, sentiment less stretched and supportive fundamentals intact, we reaffirmed our overweight equity positioning.  

 

— Colin Cheesman, Investment Strategist, Asset Allocation

What goes up came down

 

Global equities sold off after a small cap rally in July.

global equities sold off after small cap rally

Source: Northern Trust Asset Management, Bloomberg. Total return data from 6/30/2024 through 8/9/2024. Past performance is not indicative or a guarantee of future results. Index performance returns do not reflect any management fees, transaction costs or expenses. It is not possible to invest directly in any index.

  • In July, small caps delivered a 10.8% return compared to 1.2% for large caps.  

  • The rally sputtered in August alongside the unwind of carry trades and softer-than-expected economic data. Japan and semis were among the notable laggards.

  • We do not believe the selloff reflected a major fundamental deterioration or imbalance. We remain overweight all three of the major equity regions

 

 

Real Assets

 

With the backdrop of widening breadth in the stock market coupled with the expectation that the Federal Reserve will be easing into the end of the year, Global Real Estate (GRE) and Global Listed Infrastructure (GLI) outperformed the broader equity market in July. The outlook for infrastructure appears to be improving. The sector enjoys tailwinds from multiple areas: defensive cash flows, expectations of lower rates, and positive fundamentals with strong growth from increasing demand for global power driven by the growing computational requirements of AI. These positive fundamentals are expected to lead to high single-digit earnings growth over each of the next few years. Further, GLI screens historically cheap on a valuation basis, which bodes well for its expected longer-term performance.
 

Real estate may face some headwinds if global growth significantly slows. Like GLI, the asset screens cheaply on a valuation basis, but unlike GLI, GRE earnings may not be able to keep up with broader equities. Over the next 12 months, GRE is expected to grow earnings at 2 – 3%, while broader equities are expected to grow in the low teens.

 

— Jim Hardman, Head of Real Assets, Multi-Manager Solutions

Real Resurgence?

 

GRE and GLI have beaten broader equities recently.

global real estate vs gloabl listed infrastructure vs global equities

Source: Northern Trust Asset Management, Bloomberg. Data from 6/30/2024 through 8/9/2024. Past performance and historical trends are not predictive of future results. Index performance returns do not reflect any management fees, transaction costs or expenses. Indexes are gross of fees. It is not possible to invest directly in any index.

  • GRE and GLI have returned more than broader equities since the end of June.  

  • While the infrastructure sector is expected to experience tailwinds and strong earnings growth, real estate is expected to grow earnings more modestly and may face headwinds from a slowing economy.

  • We made no changes to our real assets positioning and remain neutral to real estate and infrastructure and underweight natural resources.
Base Case Expectations
Risk Case Expectations
Global Policy Model chart

Source: Northern Trust Capital Market Assumptions Working Group, Investment Policy Committee. Strategic allocation is based on capital market return, risk and correlation assumptions developed annually; most recent model released 8/9/2023.The model cannot account for the impact that economic, market and other factors may have on the implementation and ongoing management of an actual investment strategy. Asset allocation does not guarantee a profit or protection against a loss in declining markets. GLI = Global Listed Infrastructure, GRE = Global Real Estate, NR = Natural Resources. 

Unless noted otherwise, data on this page is sourced from Bloomberg as of August 2024..

Main Point

Why Fundamentals Matter Now

While market conditions are inherently unpredictable, focusing on fundamentals may offer a potentially attractive approach to navigating uncertainty. Our latest analysis examines how key economic indicators might help support informed investment decisions during this period of volatility.

Point of View

High-Yield Bonds: Gaining Traction for Good Reason

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