1. Over May, the S&P 500 rose 0.87%, primarily driven by valuations. Earnings expectations & valuations contributed 0.13% & 0.74% to the 0.87% rise in markets. Below, we show the sequential evolution of market prices, along a decomposition:
2. Over the last year, the S&P 500 has been dominantly driven by valuations, with total returns rising by 1.03%. We show cumulative returns on the S&P 500 over the last year, decomposed into earnings expectations and valuations:
3. We further decompose these yearly returns into their sector contributions. We begin by showing the primary drivers of the S&P 500. We show the top three drivers in blue (Technology, Financials, Industrials) & the bottom three in red (Consumer Disc., Healthcare, Energy):
4. We drill down into these total returns by isolating the changes in earnings expectations. We show the top three drivers in blue (Consumer Staples, Utilities, Energy) and the bottom three in red (Financials, Consumer Discretionary, Technology):
5. Finally, we examine the contributions of sectors to valuations changes. We show the top three drivers in blue (Financials, Technology, Industrials) and the bottom three in red (Energy, Healthcare, Utilities):
6. Zooming back into the most recent month, we show the composition of the most recent strength in equity markets. We show the sector-wise composition of the most recent months’ returns, changes in earnings expectations, and changes in valuations below:
7. Overall, current equity market gains remain lopsided. We think it is important to recognize that sustained gains at the current pace would require either increased valuations or improved growth expectations from sectors more connected to the real economy.
8. However, we have already highlighted the risk stagflation (-G +I) poses to equities. More specifically, recessions lead to nominal spending collapsing and inflation erodes value. Additonally, policymakers' hands are tied if inflation persists amidst profit contraction.
9. Further details re 8. are shared in the thread below. To summarize our assessment of current conditions- the probability of a future recession is significant, and inflation is likely to be resilient.
10. This context is crucial in evaluating equity market trend strength and sustainability. S&P 500 trend measures remain elevated; however, playing current dynamics forward, there is a considerable chance that trend strength will weaken. We show our S&P 500 trend signal below:
11. We think there is potential for this to continue the equity trend; either technology and related stocks need to continue to see expanding valuations & earnings expectations, or economically sensitive sectors need to see a significant improvement in earnings expectations.
12. Given the headwinds to growth, we think it is unlikely to see either of these outcomes— though further news related to AI may power this rally further.
13. At this stage in the economic cycle, it pays to stay cautious. Looking through our trend signals, there remains considerable dispersion within equity sectors, creating long-short opportunities beyond just beta timing.
14. Therefore, we think being cautious on equity beta or being beta neutral probably makes the most sense here.
Disinflation requires a Recession, but we are not there yet 🧵
1. Economic #cycles generally follow cause-and-effect templates, and this cycle has followed the archetype, albeit with its unique twists.
2. As an economic expansion ages, the ability for output to accelerate begins to stall as the economy runs up on capacity constraints in the form of production and labor limitations.
3. However, if nominal growth remains strong relative to debt service burdens, credit and income can support employment and production to remain faster than population growth and production capacity.
1. In April, households saw incomes increase as employment and inflation contributed to nominal incomes. Alongside this increase in employment income, we also saw continued support from income on assets total incomes. Below we show the composition:
2. Personal income increased by 0.36% in April, disappointing consensus expectations of 0.4%. This print contributed to a sequential deceleration in the quarterly trend relative to the yearly trend.
3. The primary drivers of this print were Employee Compensation (0.6%) & Income on Assets (0.25%). Over the last year, Employee Compensation (3.36%), Rental Income (0.5%), & Income on Assets (0.96%). have been the primary sources of the 5.43% growth in income.
1. Through April, our systems place Real GDP growth at 1.37% versus one year prior. Below, we show our monthly estimates of Real GDP relative to the official data:
2. Below, we show the weighted contributions to the most recent one-month change in real GDP, along with the recent history of month-on-month GDP. Additionally, we show the contribution by sector to monthly GDP in the table below.
3. April saw an improvement in investment activity, contributing significantly to GDP data. Combined with our inflation estimates, this place nominal GDP at 5.31% versus one year prior:
Do not worry in case you missed out on any action from @prometheusmacro last week. Below we pen down all the key takeaways & opinion threads that were shared with the wider community. Make sure to #SubscribeToday so that you don't miss any of the updates.
1. We introduced the 'Prometheus Daily Trend Signals' to share the latest trend updates for all 37 ETFs across four asset classes daily.
1. The current macroeconomic picture remains where heightened nominal demand continues to press against the economy's capacity constraints, creating heightened inflation.
2. We think these dynamics will
likely be resolved through the Fed's tightening cycle by raising interest burdens in the economy relative to incomes, creating pressure on profitability for companies, and leading to an eventual lay-off of
workers.
3. Therefore, the key to understanding whether the Fed's hiking cycle has been adequate is
whether profits will contract. This profit contraction will likely come from declining topline, sticky wages, and increasing debt service costs.
1/ Typically, in macro, we focus on making alpha via going long/short a variety of assets. However, these can often be too complex for everyday investors. Today, we try to bridge some of this gap & share a simple macro strategy that aims to time stocks & bonds:
2/ The performance of stocks and bonds is tied to the future outcomes for growth and inflation, and as active investors, we try to use our expectations for these variables to time our exposure to these markets. For a long-only, largely passive investor, we think...
3/ ...the biggest benefit our process offers is to allow you to side-step the worst drawdowns in these asset classes.
Recessions are the primary risk to stocks as nominal spending collapses. At the same time, inflationary episodes are the primary risk to bonds as their...