Posts tagged leading indicators
Cruising for a Bruising

Financial market pundits are a bit like dogs chasing cars; they wouldn’t know what to do if they caught one. And so it is that after trying to figure out whether the economy and markets would achieve a soft landing in the wake of the post-Covid tightening cycle, no one quite knows what to think now that the soft landing appears to have arrived.

Let’s list the key requirements for a soft landing.

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What to do with high-flying tech at the start of 2024?

I am coming into 2024 in a decent position. My MinVar equity portfolio, designed to extract the best from both worlds in the perennial battle between growth and value, has done largely what it is supposed to do. It has offered positive, but below-beta, returns with below-beta volatility, the latter which means that your humble blogging investment analyst has been able to sleep calmly at night. In bonds, I moved my exposure onto the front early in 2023 in line with the yield curve inversion. At this point I see no reason to change that strategy. Why buy negative carry in duration when you don’t have to? There will be a time to take a strong bet on duration, but I can’t really see that point until either the front-end has collapsed under the weight of global central bank easing, or unless the curve rinses everyone by bear-steepening sufficiently to restore a positive roll and carry in the long bond. In other words, I don’t see any reason to buy duration as long as the curve is still deeply inverted.

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Is the downturn over?

The most significant change across my favourite market charts in the past few weeks is the fact that the US 60/40 portfolio is now eking out a small positive gain on a six-month basis. Chart 01 shows that my in-house 60/40 index—using the S&P 500 and the US 10y note—is now posting six-month returns to the tune of just over 1%. This reversal from a nadir in six-month returns of almost -20% earlier this year is driven by both stocks and bonds. The S&P 500 is up a bit over 10% since mid-October, and ten-year yields are off their highs. This, in turn, invites the question of whether we’re seeing the beginning of a reversal in the decline in stocks, and rise in yields, which have haunted investors this year. I wish I knew. To get at an answer to the question, however, it’s best to separate the equity story from the bond market story, at least to begin with.

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At the Mercy of Inflation

I’ll let the charts do the talking this week. This is always a good idea when it’s been a while since you’ve had a broader look at markets. As far as I can see, not much has changed. The U.S. CPI report is still the most important economic report of the month. The violent sell-off in response to what was a small upside surprise to U.S. core inflation in August is all you need to know. Markets would like to see a sustained roll-over in inflation, and an associated pivot in Fed tightening. So far, this is not happening. Equities have suffered badly in the wake of the August CPI data, and a 75bp rate hike from the Fed later this month is now a done deal. Some sell-siders have even stuck their neck out, calling for a 100bp hike. It’s gnarly.

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