World stocks survive banking turmoil - but for how long?
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[April 06, 2023] By
Naomi Rovnick and Sumanta Sen
LONDON (Reuters) - Banking sector turmoil has not dented demand for
equities, with MSCI's world stock index up 7% so far this year.
Hopes that the Federal Reserve and others could soon pause the most
aggressive interest rate hiking cycle in decades has supported stocks
even as sentiment more generally has been rattled by the failures of two
U.S. lenders and Credit Suisse's shotgun merger with UBS.
But under the surface, bad omens for world stocks are building.
1/ TIGHTER CREDIT
Customers have whipped deposits out of U.S. regional banks and Swiss
authorities' shock wipeout of $17 billion worth of Credit Suisse bonds
has rattled a key market for European bank funding.
Analysts say this undermines the sector's ability to lend money to
companies. Central bank surveys show U.S. and European banks are already
tightening lending standards, historically a predictor of dismal stock
market performance.
When financing is scarcer companies pay more for loans, hurting profits
and share prices.
"Tightening lending standards tend to correlate with recessions, and the
stock market tends to fall during recessions," said Jason Da Silva,
senior research analyst at London bank Arbuthnot Latham. "This is not a
good sign."
2/ MANUFACTURING SLOWDOWN
Recessions starting in the United States tend to flow to the rest of the
world and consequently global stocks.
The U.S. ISM manufacturing index, a leading indicator of economic
activity, dropped to its lowest since May 2020 last month and signaled a
fifth straight month of contraction.
The data showed "a recession is due pretty soon in the U.S. and other
advanced economies," said Capital Economics senior markets economist
Oliver Allen. "That downturn is going to start to weigh on risky assets
pretty heavily."
3/ TECH HOLDS THE CARDS
Stock market gains so far in 2023 have been dominated by tech stocks, an
industry that may not be immune to recession.
Tech, the largest sub-index of the MSCI World, has jumped 20% so far
this year; other big sector constituents such as banks , healthcare and
energy are flat or lower.
The U.S. S&P 500 index rose 7% in the first quarter, in a gain it has
held onto since. Seven mega-cap tech stocks were responsible for 92% of
the S&P 500's first-quarter rise, Citi notes.
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The logo of Credit Suisse is pictured on
a building near the Hallenstadion where took place the Annual
General Meeting, two weeks after being bought by rival UBS in a
government-brokered rescue, in Zurich, Switzerland, April 4, 2023.
REUTERS/Pierre Albouy
The bank's head of U.S. equity trading strategy, Stuart Kaiser, said
institutional investors view big tech companies, which generally
have strong balance sheets and low debt, as a shield against a
credit squeeze.
The defensive tech trade could work in a shallow recession. But in a
deep downturn, Kaiser cautioned, money managers may dump tech too:
"The next step would be just to sell stocks."
4/ FINANCE WOBBLES
March was the first month in 20 years where financial stocks fell
10% or more and the MSCI World index did not drop, Morgan Stanley
research shows.
This historical relationship may have faltered because the market
"does not believe there will be meaningful contagion from the
financial sector into the broader economy," Morgan Stanley chief
European equity strategist Graham Secker said.
Florian Ielpo, head of macro at Lombard Odier Investment Management,
who has held an underweight position on global stocks since January
2022, cautioned banking troubles could still pull overall stocks
lower.
"Banks are likely to lend a lot less to the economy," Ielpo said.
Higher costs of credit will weaken earnings, he added, prompting "a
moment of reckoning" when equity holders switch allocations to
bonds.
5/ FINALLY, THE YIELD CURVE
U.S. Treasury yields are higher than those on 10-year peers. This
so-called yield curve inversion, often a harbinger of recession,
last month became the deepest in 42 years.
Since 1967, yield curve inversions have occurred 15 months before
recessions, on average, Barclays research shows.
While stocks can rise as the yield curve inverts, the rally is not
often sustained. The S&P 500 on average hit a cycle peak just four
months before a U.S. recession begins, Barclays found.
"It is not unusual for equities to keep rising even as (the) yield
curve inverts," Barclays head of European equity strategy Emmanuel
Cau said. "But the bond market is looking ahead and of the view that
current activity strength won't last."
(Reporting by Naomi Rovnick; graphics by Sumanta Sen, Editing by
Dhara Ranasinghe and Conor Humphries)
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