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						U.S. fund managers brace for consumer slowdown
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		 [February 09, 2019]   
		By Sinéad Carew 
 (Reuters) - With expectations for slowing 
		growth escalating, U.S. fund managers are selectively avoiding stocks in 
		consumer companies as lofty valuations, concerns about declining 
		earnings estimates, and consumer confidence keep them on guard.
 
 Low U.S. unemployment and rising wages should point to a healthy 
		consumer, but worries about global growth, domestic U.S. politics and a 
		U.S.-China trade war have been wearing on consumer and investor moods.
 
 Wall Street expects fourth-quarter earnings growth of 14.7 percent for 
		the S&P 500's consumer discretionary index - below the 17.8 percent 
		consensus from October at the beginning of the fourth quarter, according 
		to data from Refinitiv as of Friday morning.
 
 And for the first quarter, analysts expect discretionary earnings to 
		fall 1.7 percent, compared with expectations for 6 percent growth on 
		Oct. 1.
 
 For consumer staples, fourth-quarter earnings are expected to grow 4.2 
		percent, down from the 6.7 percent consensus in October, with 0.7 
		percent growth expected for the first quarter.
 
		
		 
		
 In comparison, the broader S&P benchmark is expected to report 
		fourth-quarter earnings growth of 16.8 percent and decline 0.1 percent 
		in the first quarter.
 
 "Our thoughts on the global consumer is that the marginal data points 
		coming in are more negative than positive," said Eric Freedman, Chief 
		Investment Officer at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis. His 
		firm is "market weight to slightly underweight" on consumer 
		discretionary while it views consumer staples valuations as "fair to 
		slightly over valued."
 
 U.S consumer confidence fell to a 1-1/2 year-low in January as a partial 
		shutdown of the government and financial markets turmoil left households 
		nervous, according to a Conference Board survey.
 
 Shawn Kravetz, Esplanade Capital LLC's chief investment officer, said 
		while the "consumer remains generally robust, most people have had 
		something in their life in the past few months that has given them 
		pause."
 
 "For the wealthy it was watching the stock market go down 15 percent in 
		the fourth quarter," Kravetz said. "For government workers, it was weeks 
		of no cash flow and uncertainty. For many it was the uncertainty of the 
		shutdown and what the secondary effects might be to them directly, to 
		their jobs or businesses, or the economy at large ... everyone was 
		touched directly or indirectly. That didn't pop the bubble but certainly 
		let a little air out."
 
 Like other investors, Kravetz is largely avoiding consumer stocks 
		because of their valuations.
 
 The consumer discretionary index trades at roughly 19.8 times forward 
		earnings estimates compared with 17.3 for consumer staples and a 15.8 
		multiple for the broader S&P, according to Refinitiv data.
 
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			Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 
			New York, U.S., February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
             
"You're paying more for less growth," said Burns McKinney, a portfolio manager 
at Allianz Global Investors in Dallas. His firm holds stocks in consumer 
companies including Target Corp and General Motors but is underweight the 
broader discretionary and staples sectors.
 Companies that have yet to report their earnings include Coca-Cola Co, PepsiCo 
Inc, Newell Brands Inc, and Walmart Inc, which fit into the staples category, 
while discretionary companies that have yet to report include retailers such as 
Home Depot Inc, Macy's Inc, Gap Inc and Target.
 
 "The big retailers like Walmart are fairly valued with solid expectations but 
also with some risks," Kravetz said. "The brands like Coca-Cola and Pepsi are 
mostly near their highs as safety in storms but with enough risks to keep us 
away. The stores like Macy's and Gap are challenged."
 
 Jharonne Martis, director of consumer research at Refinitiv, said retail growth 
is still healthy, but because growth was "significantly stronger" earlier in 
2018, "some of the stocks could be punished" when retailers report earnings.
 
 "We're already seeing that consumer confidence has lowered and analysts have 
been lowering expectations for 2019," said Martis.
 
 So far, 71 percent of consumer discretionary firms have beat Wall Street's 
fourth-quarter earnings expectations, with more than half of the results already 
released. About 64 percent of staples companies have beat estimates, with 
reports out from two-thirds of the sector, according to data from Refinitiv.
 
 A major challenge to first-quarter numbers for consumer companies was the 35-day 
partial U.S. government shutdown, when hundreds of thousands of federal workers 
went without paychecks.
 
 Because of the shutdown, government data releases were delayed. The U.S. 
Commerce Department's Census Bureau announced earlier this week that it would 
release December's retail sales report on Feb. 14.
 
 
 In a recent Reuters poll a majority of economists saw the shutdown having a 
significant impact on first quarter gross domestic product growth, with the 
median expectation for a 0.3 percentage point trim.
 
 On top of this, a late-2018 equity market sell-off, which sliced 19.8 percent of 
the S&P 500 between Sept. 20 and Dec. 24, also scared consumers, according to 
Morgan Stanley.
 
 (Reporting by Sinéad Carew. Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Rosalba O'Brien)
 
				 
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