Election and Fed risks loom for US stocks after strong first half of
2024
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[June 28, 2024] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As U.S. stocks lock in a solid first half,
investors are speculating whether political uncertainty, potential
Federal Reserve policy shifts and big tech's market dominance could make
the rest of 2024 a tougher slog.
The S&P 500 is up 15% year-to-date thanks to strong corporate earnings,
a resilient U.S. economy and enthusiasm over artificial intelligence
that powered massive gains in stocks such as chipmaker Nvidia. The
index’s steady march upward produced 31 new highs in the first half, the
most for first half of any year since 2021.
The first half has been "very much a Nirvana period for stocks," said
Tim Ghriskey, senior portfolio strategist at Ingalls & Snyder. "The
economy has been stronger than many people anticipated including the
Fed."
If history is any guide, the momentum in U.S. stocks is likely to
continue: a positive first half has been followed by additional gains in
the rest of the year 86% of the time, according to a CFRA study of
markets during election years since 1944.
But the ride could get bumpy. Political uncertainty is likely to be a
more powerful factor on asset prices, as investors focus on the U.S.
presidential election. A recent JPMorgan survey showed investors see
political risk in the U.S. and abroad as the top potential destabilizing
factor for stocks.
Investors have also become increasingly concerned about the narrowness
of the market’s advance, which has been concentrated in a handful of
tech powerhouses. Nvidia alone - whose shares are up 150% this year -
has accounted for about a third of the S&P 500's total return, according
to Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Another key uncertainty is whether the economy can maintain the balance
of gradually cooling inflation and resilient growth that has fueled
investor confidence. A sharp deviation from that so-called Goldilocks
scenario could upend the Fed’s plans to cut rates later this year.
"With a wide range of potential macro outcomes in 2025, partly due to
the U.S. election result, market volatility is likely to increase,"
wrote Jason Draho, head of asset allocation, Americas, for UBS Global
Wealth Management.
POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY
While investors have mostly been focused on factors such as earnings and
monetary policy this year, politics are expected to loom larger as the
matchup between President Joe Biden, a Democrat, and Republican
challenger and former president Donald Trump intensifies in the coming
months.
Futures tied to the Cboe Volatility Index reflect increased demand for
protection against equity gyrations around the November vote, as polls
continue to show the candidates neck and neck.
Signs that one of the candidates is gaining the upper hand could ripple
out into asset markets. For many, it comes down to divergent tax
policies: a Democratic sweep of the White House and Congress could mean
the party would have a freer hand to raise taxes, generally seen as a
negative for equities, according to UBS Global Wealth Management.
The first live debate of the 2024 election race late Thursday spurred a
rise in U.S. stocks futures and the dollar in a move some investors
interpreted as a reaction to a strong showing by Trump.
One potential wildcard, according to strategists at Janus Henderson, is
a contested or prolonged election. "Any commentary suggesting it's a
real threat could create bouts of volatility in the coming months, and
that volatility would likely continue until a victor is announced," they
wrote.
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A Wall St. street sign is seen near the New York Stock Exchange in
New York City, U.S., September 17, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
CONCENTRATION AI-fever and strong earnings have helped drive up
equities in the first half, but gains have been concentrated in tech
and growth stocks, including Nvidia, Microsoft and Amazon.
The equal weight S&P 500 index - a proxy for the average stock - is
up just 4% for the year, a fraction of the S&P 500’s gain. Many
investors believe big tech dominance is well deserved, given strong
balance sheets and leading positions at the top of their industries.
But their growing heft could make markets unstable if the case for
holding tech and growth stocks weakens and investors head for the
exit all at once. "It's understandable why everyone has drifted to
these names, but it's a bit of a game of musical chairs. If the
music stops, there's going to be a problem," said Stephen Massocca,
senior vice president at Wedbush Securities. Meanwhile, the 12-month
forward price to earnings ratio of the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 has
risen to 26 from 20, two years ago, according to LSEG data.
Some investors are looking to areas of the market that have
underperformed in recent months, expecting the rally in tech to
spread out into other sectors. Jack Ablin, chief investment officer
at Cresset Capital, has been focused on "quality dividend companies"
and small caps.
"We think that perhaps the large cap has run a little too far and
that we'll now see perhaps a broadening," Ablin said.
GROWTH
Most investors have cheered signs of cooling inflation and
moderating growth this year, as it bolsters the case for the Fed to
cut interest rates from a multi-decade peak. But a more pronounced
economic slowdown could fuel worries that elevated interest rates
are weighing more heavily on the economy.
Fed officials have trimmed their projections to just one rate cut
this year from a previous forecast of three, thanks to the economy’s
strength and unexpectedly sticky inflation.
Market reactions to past rate cutting cycles have largely hinged on
whether the cut came during a period of comparatively strong
economic performance or in response to a sharp slowdown in growth.
While the S&P 500 has risen by an average of 5.6% in the 12 months
after a cycle has begun, cuts that came along with a challenging
economic environment coincided with far worse returns, an Allianz
study examining rate cuts since the 1980s showed. For example, a
rate cutting cycle that kicked off around the collapse of the dotcom
bubble in 2000 saw the index down 13.5% a year later.
"Every landing is a soft landing until it is not," said Julia
Hermann, global market strategist at New York Life Investments.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Diane Craft)
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