With Black Friday ahead, investors look to U.S. consumer stocks
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[November 19, 2022] By
David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As the most important
shopping period of the year approaches, some investors are betting
shares of beaten-down consumer stocks will benefit if inflation keeps
falling and retail sales stay strong.
Consumer discretionary stocks, a group whose members run the gamut from
Amazon.com Inc and automaker Tesla Inc to retailer Target Corp, have
been walloped by surging prices, with the S&P 500’s consumer
discretionary sector falling nearly 33% for the year to date compared
with a nearly 17% fall for the broader index.
Yet recent data has shown signs that inflation may be ebbing in the face
of stronger-than-expected retail spending, raising cautious optimism
that the economy could avoid a recession or experience only a mild
downturn. Investors poured a net $1.05 billion into consumer
discretionary stocks in the past week, the sixth-largest weekly inflows
since 2008, data from BofA Global Research showed.
The upcoming Black Friday, the day after the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday
and traditionally one of the year’s biggest shopping days, may give
investors greater insight into the extent that consumers are opening
their wallets.
“There’s some questions as to how strong the consumer really is, so this
will be a tricky holiday season,” said Edward Yruma, an analyst at Piper
Sandler. “Everybody is watching the strength of the consumer and so far
the consumer has held.” Yruma is bullish on retailers Nordstrom Inc and
Target. He believes, however, it may be too early to bet on the sector
as a whole since inflation remains high by historical standards while
many on Wall Street fear the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy
tightening may bring on a U.S. recession. To be sure, consumer stocks
have had more than their fair share of woes this year. Target shares
plunged on Tuesday after the company warned of "dramatic changes" in
consumer behavior that were hurting demand. Amazon.com, the world's
biggest online retailer, said on Oct. 27 it was preparing for slower
growth because "people's budgets are tight" due to inflation.
The companies' shares are down 29.6% and 43.5% year-to-date,
respectively. While retail sales in October were strong, data suggests
that subprime auto loan delinquencies are increasing and higher-income
shoppers are starting to trade down, Morgan Stanley economists said in a
note on Friday.
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Signage is seen at the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., November 11,
2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
"The consumer has been a pillar of strength this year, but as rates
keep rising and the labor market slows, consumers will have no
choice but to pull back on spending," the firm's economists wrote.
The bank's analysts are underweight the consumer discretionary
sector.
Others, however, see reasons to remain bullish - even in the face of
a potential economic downturn.
"Recession fears are so priced in to this group," said Jim Paulsen,
chief investment strategist at the Leuthold Group. "If we have a
mild recession ... they will do very well from here on out." He is
betting shares of retailers, hotels and restaurants will outperform
the rest of the sector in the coming year.
Some companies’ lower valuations may also give investors wiggle room
if the economy slows, said Bobby Griffin, an analyst at Raymond
James. His firm has a strong "buy" on shares of Home Depot Inc,
which are trading at a 15% discount to their historic forward
price-to-earnings multiple.
"We've had this fear of inflation all year and the consumer has held
up pretty well so far," he said.
At the same time, signs of consumer strength could also be a red
flag to the inflation-fighting Fed, bolstering the case for the
central bank to push forward with the monetary policy tightening
that has pressured markets and drained risk appetite this year.
Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer for Independent Advisor
Alliance, believes signs that consumers are not being affected by
rising rates could lead to a higher-than-expected peak in the Fed’s
rate hiking cycle.
"We’re skeptical the worst is behind us," he said.
(Reporting by David Randall in New York; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili
and Matthew Lewis)
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