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Our latest “Fundstrat inflation dashboard” is updated.
- indeed.com data shows jobs openings softening and openings soon down year over year (slide 15)
- Sea freight costs down 52% YoY and still sliding (slide 26)
- New homes for sale inventory at a cycle high of 8.6 months (slide 28)
- Hotel rates rose this week after sliding for weeks (slide 36)
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The rally seen in equity markets post-CPI has been largely met with skepticism. This is essentially true of the gains seen over the past week and past month. Below is a comment from a sellside strategist and is emblematic of the pushback we get from clients (keep in mind, the sellside often mirrors what institutional investors broadly are saying).
As to why, we think much of this is explained by an anchored cognitive bias. The following contributes to investors seeing “half-empty”
- Fed is raising rates and the binary conclusion is stocks go down
- Inflation has been problematic for the past 16 months, and investors see it as “sticky” ala 1970s-80s, meaning it will linger for years and years
- Stocks have been falling, so the momentum is negative
- Stocks are rising only for “technical reasons”
On that latter point, I had lunch this week with an institutional investor who in summary said:
- “there is no fundamental reason for stocks to be going up, especially if someone cares about earnings”
- “the only people who are bullish are doing it for technical reasons, has anyone ever met a really rich technician?”
- “name one fundamental investor who likes stocks here, there are none”
- you get the picture. Deep skepticism.
But as we have discussed multiple times in our commentaries, we believe stocks are rising for the right reasons. There are multiple factors (see section below) but we view August 1982 as the best analog. When inflation apexes, markets see this first and then the Fed reacts.
Breadth of rally is expanding…
Notably, the breadth of this rally is expanding. There are multiple measures but Mark Newton, Head of Technical Strategy, notes two measures that are useful:
- the advance/decline line is breaking to the upside (see below)
- small-caps relative performance is breaking out to the upside
These are both solid measures of market breadth and show the rally in stocks is broadening. This lends further credence to the rally.
Rally breadth is expanding = risk/reward favors a focus on “lower quality” and “small-caps”
And in the past, when breadth is expanding, risk/reward improves for both “lower quality” and “small-caps” with the rationale being:
- improving financial conditions favor companies with lower margins = lower quality
- interest rates flattening favors companies with higher debt leverage = lower quality
- improving Fed outlook and lower inflation favor smaller players = small-caps
BREADTH STOCKS: 6 stocks that leverage the expanding market breadth
Our data science team, led by tireless Ken, has put together a list of stocks that have improved risk/reward. These stocks meet the following criteria:
- lower quality on margins
- higher leverage levels
- attractive on Fundstrat’s Quant Model quintile 1
- attractive technical characteristics as determined by Mark Newton
There are 6 names. The list and tickers are below:
- $HAS
- $LEN
- $JBHT
- $SEDG
- $MTB
- $D
COGNITIVE BIAS: Humans have a cognitive bias that impacts perception of incoming data
We have posted this below example previously. Notice how our brains see these balls as colored? Yet, in fact, these balls are all the same color. I know this is not exactly the same as how investors view markets, but the same process is at work.
- every incoming data point is compared to a working baseline view
- and human cognitive bias can often overfit how this data is interpreted
Inflation seems to be inflecting in the “hard” data but many argue nothing has changed
At Fundstrat, we suffer the same risk, but we try to course correct. And our collaborative process of incorporating demographics, historical context, technicals, fundamentals, quantitative and investor surveys provides us balance:
- today, we think the views on inflation are overly pessimistic
- inflation is difficult to predict and forecast
- but the July CPI (8/10) and July PPI (released 8/11) are showing a pronounced break in pattern
- this break is a sharp slowing
- and corroborates the visible and consistent easing of inflationary pressures seen in commodities, durable goods, inventory corrections, alternative data and even consumer surveys
July PPI is a “break” in pattern — DEFLATION
The July PPI came in below expectations with producer prices DEFLATING in July:
- PPI down -0.5% versus consensus +0.2%
- June PPI +1.1%
- deflation, yup
And as shown below, this is a break in pattern:
- PPI has not been negative MoM since May 2020
- hard to ignore, right?
July CPI is a “break” in pattern — “hard” data starting to reflect disinflation seen in leading indicators
The July CPI report seems to be changing the minds of the “inflationists” who have argued inflation would be sticky for years, and as a consequence, the Fed would need to “burn the economy to the ground.”
- instead, July CPI actually DEFLATED by -1.93bp month-over-month
- yup, deflation
- the July headline CPI is the lowest reading since June 2020
- inflation eased far faster than consensus argued
- bonus: July CPI came in -20bp below consensus estimates
The deflationary impacts of some categories show that inflationary pressures are not uniformly accelerating:
- Energy was the biggest contributor -0.42pp of the headline decline
- Travel was a -0.09pp
- Used cars and rentals was -0.02pp
- 3 categories that contributed to massive surges in inflation throughout 2022 turned into deflation contributors
And as we noted earlier this week, gasoline is tracking for a decline in August. And the CPI impact will amplify:
- July gasoline subtracted -0.41pp
- August gasoline to subtract -0.81pp, or 2.0X the impact
- deflationary pressures larger in August
Cleveland Fed Inflation Nowcasting showing +0.19% CPI MoM in August, or 2.2% annualized
The July CPI downside surprise is influencing August CPI nowcasts. The Cleveland Fed inflation nowcasting model is looking for +0.19% MoM for August CPI, or 2.2% annualized
- as our gasoline analysis above shows
- august CPI could arguably be negative again
- especially if travel and used cars continue to cool
CPI lags real-time incoming data by 3-4 months
As our clients know, central to our thesis in 2022 is inflation would soften in 2H. This is counter to consensus and many of our clients, who generally believe inflation is sticky and would be elevated for many years ala 1970s to 1980s. And leading indicators for inflation, which we publish in our inflation dashboard, have shown the underlying trend in inflation was substantially lower than the “hard” data (CPI, PCE or PPI reports).
- notice how many leading indicators of inflation, including surveys, show as vast improvement
- July CPI (reported in August) is the first CPI print that was not “hot”
- we published this table several months ago and are now updating it
Hard data (“CPI”) lags soft data…Intuitively, Fed is not only watching “hard” data
And the above shows that “hard” CPI reports lag even the surveys by 2 months. If this is the case:
- realized inflation could be falling for 3-4 months
- consumers seen in surveys don’t recognize this for 5 months (+1)
- CPI report won’t show this for two additional months
- you get the picture
- we don’t think the Fed is primarily watching CPI
COUNTERTRADE: Sellside is more “hawkish” than Fed and more “hawkish” than inflation markets
In fact, this focus on CPI (almost solely) is the reason the sell-side seems so hawkish. Take a look at this chart based on the data collected by Bloomberg Analytics:
- there are Wall Street firms calling for 5% Fed Funds
- and hikes throughout 2023
- if the sellside is more hawkish than Fed and inflation markets
- it makes sense to “fade” that
COUNTERTRADE: 9 of 15 sellside equity strategists are outright bearish
It is not only the economists on the sellside that seem too hawkish. Look at the YE 2022 S&P 500 price targets of sellside strategists:
- 9 of 15 are outright bearish, with upside for stocks below that of 2-year bonds
- 6 of these have declines in their forecast from today into YE with one at 3,600
- only 1 sees the S&P 500 posting positive gains by YE 2022
As our clients know, we believe the S&P 500 will see a recovery similar to 1982 and thus, recover YTD losses before YE.
To clarify, in 1982, equities bottomed 9 weeks before the Fed even posited abandoning “anti-inflation” tactics:
- stocks bottomed 8/12/1982
- Volcker posited shifting on 10/5/1982
- stocks sniffed out this change well ahead of time
- the entire 36 month bear market was erased in 4 months
- yippey
STRATEGY: 2022 Bear market was 164 days, or 25% duration of prior bull
Our data science team put together the comparative duration of bull markets and bear markets, and the corresponding ratio:
- since 1942, there have been 14 such cycles
- median ratio of bear vs bull is 31%, meaning a bear market is roughly 1/3 duration
- since 1982, this ratio is only 15%
- in 2022, the preceding bull market was 651 days
- the current bear market was 164 (using 6/16)
- or 25% ratio
As seen below, this ratio is solidly within the ranges seen since 1982.
- many investors think “more time” is needed for this bear market
- but given the shortness of the preceding bull market 651 days versus 1,309 median
- the corresponding bear market should also be shorter
BUY THE DIP REGIME: Stocks already saw fundamental capitulation
And we want to revisit the chart below, which looks at the internals of the S&P 500 — the % stocks >20% off their highs, aka % stocks in a bear market.
- this figure surged to 73% on 6/17
- this was only exceeded 3 times in the past 30 years
- each of the 3 prior instances was the market bottom
- we think this is the 4th instance
BUY THE DIP: forward returns strong
And stocks have the best forward returns when this figure exceeds 54% as shown below:
- in 3M, 6M and 12M
- the best decile for returns
- is when this figure is oversold >54%
- hence, buy the dip regime is in force
BOTTOM LINE: If equities sell-off after the July CPI, buying the dip makes sense
Our head of Technical Strategy, Mark Newton, sees higher odds of a pullback into August. There are multiple signs he is watching and are discussed in his notes. In short:
- he sees chances for S&P 500 to fall back towards 3,900 into August
- but this is a buyable pullback
Frankly, a pullback would be welcome, given stocks moved up so sharply in the past few weeks. And our clients remain mostly skeptical. In our conversations, most cite the fundamental risks:
- inflation is still high
- recession is still coming
- EPS downgrades coming
- too short to be a proper bear
- Fed still hiking
While many cite this, look at how well stocks are reacting to incoming news. The negative pre-announcements and lowered guidance by semiconductors.
- if these negative announcements happened in May/June, equities would have gone into a death spiral
- today, stocks are down but not that materially
- arguably, this shows how light positioning is within equities
- if investors are bracing for the worst, bad news itself has less impact
- argues to “buy the dip”
33 GRANNY SHOTS: Updated list is below
The revised 33 Granny shots are shown below. The list is sorted by the most attractive (most frequently cited) to least. To be a “Granny shot” the stock needs to appear in at least two portfolios:
- $AAPL in 5 of 6 portfolios
- $GOOGL $MSFT in 4 of 6 portfolios
- $AMZN $META in at least 2
- This reinforces our favorable view of FANG in 2H2022
33 Granny Shot Ideas:
Consumer Discretionary: $AMZN, $AZO, $GPC, $GRMN, $TSLA
Information Technology: $AAPL, $AMD, $AVGO, $CSCO, $KLAC, $MSFT, $NVDA, $PYPL, $QCOM
Communication Services: $GOOGL, $META
Energy: $CVX, $DVN, $XOM
Financials: $ALL, $AXP
Real Estate: $AMT, $CCI, $EXR
Health Care: $ABT, $BIIB, $ISRG, $MRNA, $REGN
Consumer Staples: $BF/B, $MNST, $PG, $PM
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33 Granny Shot Ideas: $AAPL, $GOOGL, $MSFT, $ALL, $BF/B, $CSCO, $NVDA, $PG, $PM, $ABT, $AMD, $AMT, $AMZN, $AVGO, $AXP, $AZO, $BIIB, $CCI, $CVX, $DVN, $EXR, $GPC, $GRMN, $ISRG, $KLAC, $META, $MNST, $MRNA, $PYPL, $QCOM, $REGN, $TSLA, $XOM
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