Defensive stocks top 2019 playbooks
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[December 29, 2018]
By April Joyner and Caroline Valetkevitch
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Perceived safe havens like
utilities and consumer staples, often an afterthought in Wall Street's
cascade of year-ahead investment recommendations each December, are
emerging as top picks as stocks limp into 2019.
Growth-oriented sectors like tech or communications services have
typically dominated year-end roundups of investment ideas. But an
uncertain economic outlook and concerns the bull market's roar is
morphing into a bear's growl have more Wall Street banks telling
investors to play it safe.
A Reuters analysis of 2019 outlooks from 10 major financial institutions
found eight, including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Barclays, with
"overweight" ratings on at least one defensive sector for 2019. That
marks a big change from last year, when just two of those banks favored
any defensive sectors.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch, for instance, has moved its rating on
utilities <.SPLRCU> to "overweight" from "underweight."
"Utilities offering 6 to 8 percent total return with a lower level of
risk might actually be a good place to be in an environment where
volatility is rearing its head," Savita Subramanian, the bank's head of
U.S. equity and quantitative strategy, said during a recent outlook
call.
The lack of analyst love for defensive sectors over the years is
understandable.
Appreciated more for their rich dividend yields than share price gains,
the utilities and consumer staples sectors have turned in relatively
yawn-worthy performances during the long bull run since the March 2009
market bottom.
Utilities and staples <.SPLRCS> are up 135 percent and 160 percent,
respectively, versus the S&P 500's <.SPX> 268 percent gain. The tech
sector has jumped 441 percent and consumer discretionary has soared 513
percent.
But defensive sectors have held up reasonably well for the past three
months while the market has crashed around them.
Nasdaq is now in a bear market, having recently slid more than 20
percent from its record high in late August, and the S&P 500 earlier
this week was just a stone's throw from bear territory.
In recommending defensive sectors, including the health sector <.SPXHC>
in some instances, many strategists cited decelerating U.S. and global
economic growth and the potential for higher market volatility.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., December 28, 2018. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
And geopolitical issues such as U.S.-China trade tensions and Britain's exit
from the European Union could continue to weigh on U.S. equities in 2019,
investors said.
Defensive sectors may also benefit from an expected slowdown in the pace of
Federal Reserve interest rate increases in 2019.
Because of their higher dividend yields, defensive stocks are seen as bond
proxies and do poorly when interest rates and bond yields are on the rise, as
they were through much of this year.
But the Fed is now seen throttling back on rate hikes, and benchmark 10-year
Treasury yields <US10YT=RR> have retreated to around 2.75 percent, down by
roughly half a percentage point from an early November high.
Robert Phipps, director at Per Stirling Capital Management in Austin, Texas,
recently added a utilities position to his stock holdings, the majority of which
are in growth sectors.
"There's the income component, and it is actually among the few sectors that
still has upside momentum," he said.
Cyclical and growth sectors are not entirely out of the mix. For instance, RBC
Capital Markets has "overweight" ratings on consumer staples and healthcare but
also on financials <.SPSY> and energy <.SPNY>.
Some investors argue it is too early to jump into defensive sectors with
economic and earnings growth expected to continue, albeit at a slower pace. Safe
havens are also looking pricey relative to growth stocks.
Forward price-to-earnings ratios for the S&P 500 consumer staples and utilities
sectors are now higher than for the technology sector, according to Refinitiv
data. Utilities are the priciest they have been relative to tech stocks in 2-1/2
years.
Still, even some of the more optimistic strategists say a sector allocation
shift is warranted. Jonathan Golub, chief U.S. investment strategist at Credit
Suisse Securities in New York, recently upgraded his rating on healthcare to
"overweight."
"The economy is going to move forward, and I think the market is going to move
forward, but they're not going to be led by things that are as cyclical," Golub
said.
(Reporting by April Joyner and Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Dan Burns and
Meredith Mazzilli)
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