Trade uncertainty darkens U.S. small caps outlook
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[May 20, 2019]
By Sinéad Carew
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shares of smaller
publicly listed U.S. companies have fallen more on recent U.S.-China
trade tensions than larger corporations and could face an even rougher
road as the year wears on unless the prospects for economic growth
improve.
Wall Street has been forecasting a return to growth for the S&P 600
index of small cap stocks in the second half of 2019, but an
intensifying trade battle between the world's two biggest economies puts
these hopes into doubt.
Because they depend less on overseas sales than bigger companies, some
investors say small caps may be less vulnerable in a trade war
situation.
But if rising tariffs boost import prices to the extent that it slows
U.S. economic growth, then smaller companies, which often have less
financial cushion than big multinationals, could be badly hurt. And
since many U.S. companies use overseas suppliers, tariff hikes could
make imported goods too pricey.
"Because they have more domestic sales it doesn't mean they're totally
insulated," said Jill Carey Hall, U.S. strategist at Bank of America
Merrill Lynch. "If we don't get a resolution on trade, you don't
necessarily want to own small caps. They tend to fare more poorly in
risk-off environments."
Since U.S. President Donald Trump's May 5 tweets about raising tariffs
on $200 billion of Chinese goods to 25% from 10% the S&P 600 has fallen
5.4% and the Russell 2000 small cap index has declined 4.9% compared
with the benchmark S&P 500's 2.9% drop.
(GRAPHIC: Small caps vs S&P 500 - https://tmsnrt.rs/2LOW5Y3)
One problem is that companies depending on imports for inventory had no
time to stock up in the days between Trump's tweet and the actual tariff
hike, started May 10.
And if the United States fulfills its threat to slap 25% tariffs on
another $300 billion of goods that China sells here, that would add to
the pressure.
Wall Street is already expecting a first-half earnings recession for the
S&P 600 index of small cap stocks.
The average expectation is for a first-quarter earnings per share
decline of 18% followed by a 9% second-quarter decline, according to
I/B/E/S data collected by Refinitiv analyst David Aurelio.
"This will be the worst reporting season for small caps since 2009,"
said Jefferies equity strategist Steven DeSanctis, referring to
first-quarter results.
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., May 16, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Looking forward, analysts expect third-quarter EPS growth of 6.9% for the S&P
600 and 23.3% growth for the fourth quarter, according to Refinitiv's Aurelio.
But Wall Street may be too optimistic about the second half of the year,
especially if the U.S.-China trade dispute is not resolved, according to
DeSanctis, whose firm is predicting a prolonged trade battle.
"For small caps to pick up and resume their outperformance we need to see better
trends in the economic data in the second half, which would lead to better
earnings growth in the third and fourth quarter, which the Street is expecting,"
he said.
In fact, traders in the bond market and fed funds futures are making bets that
imply the exact opposite - that U.S. economic growth will weaken.
"There's definitely a higher probability today that things aren't going to get
better in the second half," said DeSanctis.
For growth to improve, U.S. consumer spending needs to stay strong, according to
DeSanctis, who says the consumer would need to offset weakness in capital
spending arising from corporate uncertainty over international trade.
To be sure, the labor market is still strong and wages are still growing. But
that may not be enough.
"That's important people do have money in their pocket to spend," said DeSanctis,
but he said small caps would struggle if tariffs inflate the price of consumer
goods.
"If costs are really going to start to escalate, people are going to be far more
concerned about their spending patterns," he said.
(Reporting by Sinéad Carew, Chuck Mikolajczak and April Joyner; editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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