Tech-fuelled 'everything's awesome' rally looks unstoppable
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[August 18, 2020]
By Saikat Chatterjee and Thyagaraju Adinarayan
LONDON (Reuters) - Today's $72 trillion
question for investors: To buy or not to buy into the global equities
rally? Notwithstanding inflated share prices, politics and the pandemic,
the answer from many is a resounding "yes."
That's not just because unprecedented stimulus - $20 trillion and
counting - is forcing a structural change in how financial assets are
valued.
It's also down to years of societal shifts, innovation and now, the
pandemic, which could transform forever the way people work, study and
shop - playing into the dominant hand of tech stocks.
So while renewed coronavirus outbreaks and looming U.S. elections have
made some investors cautious, many equity bulls are hanging in there,
having already boosted the value of stocks globally by $24 trillion
since end-March.
As global equities near record highs, strategists say the quickfire
bear-to-bull switch was not only justified but deserves to go further.
"The COVID pandemic has taken existing trends – greater dependency on
tech, online shopping, remote working, etc. – and supercharged them,"
said Benjamin Jones, a senior multi-asset strategist at State Street
Global Markets.
With technology stocks holding on to their eye-popping gains, investors
say the next leg of the rally is likely to come from value stocks - so
called because they trade at cheaper valuations than their
growth-oriented peers.
Stocks are benefiting of course from above-average equity-risk premiums,
the return one can earn by holding stocks compared with risk-free
assets. Global stocks carry an ERP of 4.6%, while for U.S. stocks, it's
at 4%.
That might erode over time, but for now interest rates appear firmly
stapled to the floor.
As for valuations, they are hovering near 22 times forward earnings for
the U.S. S&P 500 index <.SPX>, the highest since the dotcom bubble in
early 2000. But then, the index too has changed dramatically with
technology by far its biggest sector component.
Making up around a third of the benchmark index, they are the ultimate
pandemic stay-at-home beneficiaries, especially those known as FANGMAN -
an expanded tech group comprising Facebook <FB.O>, Apple <AAPL.O>,
Netflix <NFLX.O>, Google <GOOGL.O>, Microsoft <MSFT.O>, Amazon <AMZN.O>
and chipmaker Nvidia <NVDA.O>.
Their multiples of 80-100 times forward earnings have led the broader
market higher.
Until a few decades ago, bank, oil & gas, and industrial stocks made up
a bulk of the S&P 500. These sectors typically trade at lower multiples,
given commodity price volatility and high capex needs - a major reason
behind this year's underperformance of Britain's FTSE benchmark.
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Apple logo is seen on the Apple store at The Marche Saint Germain in
Paris, France July 15, 2020. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
"What's odd about the market debate is that it's set up as follows:
look at the S&P 500 and the response is the equity market is
expensive. Then you ask people what they like and they favour a lot
of the secular-growth, high-multiple stocks," said Morgan Stanley
chief cross-asset strategist Andrew Sheets.
A ratio of U.S. stocks on a market weighted basis to an equally
weighted index of shares is at its highest levels since the 2008
crisis, indicating the dominance of the handful of large tech stocks
in the market.
The valuations make all the more sense because of the lower for
longer interest rate environment, said Maximilian Kunkel, CIO of
Global Family Offices at UBS.
"As a result we remain constructive on risk assets even after the
rally."
Many others would seem to agree. On derivative markets, the
put-to-call ratio for U.S. stocks, a measure of positioning
sentiment, is the lowest since 2010. The ratio is inversely related
to equity performance.
Some caution is although warranted, given that asset classes of all
stripes have gained. A portfolio with a 25% split in stocks, bonds,
cash and gold would have earned a record 18% in the last 90 days,
BofA analysts calculate.
But the edifice is vulnerable to a rise in inflation, many argue,
with investors' holdings of yield-sensitive investments up $8.1
trillion over 18 months, according to Morgan Stanley.
Though prices have rebounded from deflationary territory fairly
quickly, inflation remains far below central bank estimates,
indicating equity valuations will remain attractive.
Latest flows data shows investors are switching from cash to
equities.
"I would still say investors are underweight equities and that
provides a fairly decent backdrop for risk assets to rally," said
Jason Borbora-Sheen, portfolio manager at Ninety One Asset
Management.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee and Thyagaraju Adinarayan,
additional reporting by Sujata Rao; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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