Highly Regarded Analyst Tells Investors How to Position for the Upturn
Are recession worries fully baked into stock prices? At least one Wall Street analyst has publicly made her case this may be accurate. And she offers tips on what sectors may have more upside and on those that have factors working against them. While a recession still may occur before year-end, forward-looking stock investors may have fully priced that risk in – forward-looking investors may also be the reason the overall market is up on the year despite greater expectations of a recession. They are looking past any slowdown.
Stock market participants, many still down on last year’s price moves, have been extremely cautious in front of a Fed that is playing catch up in a fight against inflation. The rapid Fed Funds rate increases that began in March 2022, coupled with quantitative tightening, sank stocks, bonds, and even cryptocurrency holdings. While the economy did shrink for two consecutive quarters last year, there are many that expect a mild recession will begin at some point this year.
Those that do expect a bumpy economic ride and a rough landing point to high-interest rates, a weakening dollar, tech industry layoffs, and a Federal Reserve that is resolved to get inflation down as soon as possible.
Savita Subramanian, equity and quant strategist at Bank of America Securities, proposed to investors in a research note published on April 24, that these fears and recession worries have been in place for a while and may be largely baked into the market. She says, barring a sudden shock to the economy, it makes sense for investors to reintroduce riskier assets into their portfolios.
Her guidance on finding value is well thought out. Subramanian, proposes investors own stocks over bonds and cyclical stocks over defensive names. The reason given is that hedge funds and long-only funds are near maximum exposure in defensive industries such as health care, utilities, and consumer staples. The suggestion here is that the probabilities would lean toward a better risk-reward payoff for cyclical names.
Ms. Subramanian does not say an economic slowdown won’t occur; instead, her thinking seems to be that after raising the Federal Funds rate from near-zero to a range of 4.75% to 5%, there is more control should a downturn need to be dealt with by easing. When rates are at or near zero percent, there is less the Fed can do to stimulate growth. So far, we’ve made it through the first quarter, and now April with only a few disruptions in the banking sector.
“Even if a recession is imminent, the Fed has latitude to soften the impact after pushing rates up by 5%. And after the fastest hiking cycle ever, the only thing to ‘break’ so far is SVB,” Subramanian wrote.
In an article published in Barron’s this week the investment news publication wrote, “Some corners of Wall Street are feeling confident that there will be no recession and that the very things that make a recession appear likely–the inverted yield curve, inflation, and the recent banking crisis–actually guarantee that one won’t happen.”
This could be good news for investors that have been nervous about having money in a market that has been given much to be concerned about, and ver little to be jubilant about.
On Thursday, GDP (Gross Domestic Product) for the first quarter will be released. No one expects this to indicate a recession began then. Forecasters expect that the economy will show 2% growth, following growth of 3.2% and 2.6% in the third and fourth quarters of 2022. This is one of the cases where if the number surprises much higher, the market may expect the Fed to make bigger rate moves. If it surprises on the low side, markets may see it as a sign of an approaching recession.
Take Away
A highly regarded analyst joins others with thoughts that the market could be priced for a recession; this could be good for stocks. If true, investors may want to start looking past a recession. Those she is most positive on are riskier names. While funds and other investors are near maxed out in lower-risk holdings, there is far less upside for them. The bigger upswings can occur in the industries, market-cap sectors, and companies that have been given less attention due to recession fears.
Managing Editor, Channelchek