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Posted by Craig Basinger on Jun 5th, 2023

Two Tales of the Same Market

Global equities, as measured by the Bloomberg World Equity Index, are up 9% so far in 2023. So, is it safe to give the all-clear with a soft landing and markets go higher? The market advance certainly supports the bulls, as does continued strong employment and recovery signs in housing. On the other side are the bears, highlighting the narrow breadth and weakness in many forward-looking economic signs pointing to recession risk. This is normal. Often during economic turning points, the cross currents in data reach very high levels. Confounding this is lingering inflation, which boosts topline sales growth and can mask the signs of deteriorating business activity.

In fact, it is also common to see material equity market advances in and around economic turning points. The following chart montage measures the S&P 500 one year before and after recession onset. The percentage is measured from the pre-recession high. It is rather common to see decent market advances before a recession hits and sometimes even rallies after it starts, before things typically get worse. Of course, knowing when a recession has started is also something that only becomes clear many months or quarters after the face. Kind of hard to tell in real-time.

S&P 500 one year before and after recession onset

Now if you believe the current environment is some sort of cross between 1973 (inflation+nifty 50) and 2000 (tech bubble), those years should be focused on a little more. We would point out that a +10% rally for the S&P 500 in the second quarter of 2001 was led by a +38% advance in the Information Technology sector. That did not end well. Sound potentially familiar? The S&P 500 Information Technology sector is up +35% year-to-date in 2023, with the S&P +10%.

The crux of this is not to get too excited or complacent just because we have enjoyed a good rise in stock prices so far in 2023. But the real question remains – is there a recession coming soon?

Recession/no recession cross-currents

As our readers hopefully know, we are in the higher recession probability camp. Hence our moderate underweight in equities with moderate overweights in bonds and cash [see portfolio positioning below]. We are back to a neutral duration on bonds and less credit. Not super defensive, but it's certainly tilted that way. Our multi-asset balanced model is +3.7% year-to-date and is defensive with some up-market capture. Ideally, we plan to become even more defensive as/if recession evidence builds. Which, of course, raises the most important question – what if we are wrong?

With names such as 'pre-mortem' or 'bull vs bear case,' the objective is clear – actively engage and try to see the other side's opinion. With our defensive tilt, we believe a recession is a higher probability than no recession. Here is an attempt to convey both sides:

recession risk vs no recession anytime soon

Hopefully, this highlights some of the cross-currents the market and investors are currently battling. It is no 'slam dunk' in either direction. That being said, we believe the left column carries more weight or a higher probability. Also worth considering is not just which side has the greater likelihood of being correct but the magnitude of the impact. If the bulls are right, given S&P 4,200 and TSX 20k, the upside may be limited. If the bears are right, but clearly early, the downside impact may be larger.

For now, we will keep our foot off the gas and hover over the brake.

Market Message

Since the beginning of the year, we've increasingly become incrementally more defensive in our positioning. Perhaps our framework is wrong. After all, the S&P 500 is up 10% so far this year and is up 17% off of the lows from last October. International markets have performed even better, with the MSCI EAFE Index up over 25% off the lows last year. Thankfully we have been overweight international. Canada has lagged, but this, too, corresponds with the theme that last year's worst markets are this year's best-performing. Tech certainly fits into this theme, with the NASDAQ up a stunning 25% YTD. It's worth noting that the NASDAQ is still 18% below its all-time high, and the S&P 500 is 12% below its high-water mark.

Is this a bear market rally or the beginning of a new bull? Unfortunately, it's impossible to give a concrete answer without the benefit of a rearview mirror. The broad market narrative is signalling this could be the beginning of the next bull, with the S&P above all major moving averages. We don't believe it's a coincidence that the rally has stagnated right at the 50% retracement from last year's fall. We saw similar bounces to exactly the 50% retracement level in both 2001 and 2008.

The four (actually six) horsemen

This is one of the thinnest rallies that we've really ever seen. In the late 1990's tech bull, the "four horsemen of the apocalypse" were repurposed as the four horsemen of the Internet – EMC, Cisco, Oracle and Sun Microsystems. At times during that bull, these names represented most of the market's advance. They were changing the world and how we communicate.  Not owning them meant you lagged the market cap-weighted index.  Sadly, Oracle is the only one of the four to ever exceed its 2000 peak, a feat achieved fourteen years later in 2014. Once again, we have a market that is ridiculously narrow. The S&P 500 is up 10% this year, with six companies representing almost all of the gains! Are these the six horsemen of AI…

six companies representing almost all of the S&P 500 gains

Digging further into market breadth, or lack thereof, we will highlight the performance difference between the S&P 500 Equal Weight vs Market Cap. Last year's outperformance for equal weight has been erased, with the market cap index now just narrowly outperforming since the beginning of 2022. So far this year, equal weight is losing by the widest margin for a calendar year since Bloomberg's data began in 1990. Returns being driven by the largest companies in an index aren't unusual, but this does look extreme. Markets are not suggesting broad strength, it's idiosyncratic, and this is why we don't believe it's really giving us an all-clear signal despite briefly breaking out of the 4,200 range.

equal weight underperformance

We believe it's time to fight the momentum trade. Even the world's largest momentum ETF seems to be late to the party once again. Its semi-annual rebalance will see its tech weight move up from just 3.2% to 20.6%. Energy and Health Care allocations will be slashed, and the Fund will once again be tilted heavily toward tech and other growth sectors. The very exposures that drove tremendous underperformance to the S&P 500 last year. Ignoring the confines of the calendar, we wanted to see just how unprecedented the past five months have been in terms of the historical five-month performance difference between the Technology sector and the equal weight index. The 33.8% difference is massive and historically rare over any 5-month period going back to 1990. The only two similar periods were a brief stint in 2020 and in the late 90s. In both periods, we believe it's noteworthy that the relative performance then dropped in subsequent months.

rolling 5-month performance

With the debt ceiling nearly behind us, investors can turn their attention more fully to central banks and the potential for further hikes. AI's prominence in corporate updates has helped defy the gravity of rising rates which typically have an outsized impact on the tech sector and other rate sensitives. This relationship is currently broken, but we would expect that the AI boom is merely a mirage, like a bountiful oasis in the desert. We are not doubting the potential of AI, but we are doubting the near-term impact. It evokes a sense of hope and promise but conceals the underlying challenges facing not only the sector by the market as a whole.

Nasdaq has been immune to rising bond yields recently

Other concerning relationships

Key sectors such as discretionary stocks, transports, and banks have continued to struggle. These economically sensitive stocks are finding few buyers even at current depressed levels. The relationship between discretionary stocks and consumer staples is a useful indicator to read into risk sentiment within the market. In the chart below is the ratio of the equal-weighted sectors against each other to remove the outsized impact of Tesla and Amazon. Though Discretionary stocks have rebounded somewhat relative to Staples, most of this happened in January and has been all but absent the past few months.

Dow Theory is a classical technical tenant, and it suggests that the movements of the stock market can be analyzed by examining the interaction between the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Average. According to the theory, confirmation of a bullish trend occurs when both the DJIA and DJTA move in the same direction. Both were strongly in line in 2022 but had been diverging of late, with Transports recently making new lows for the year.

discretionary vs staples

Looking ahead, we should assume there will be volatility and twists and turns in the months ahead. For now, given the underlying market signals and lack of breadth, we suggest continued defensive positioning in equity markets. The market will start to fully discount potential earnings recession and further economic weakness. We remain underweight sectors that are more cyclically sensitive and would suggest fading the tech advance.

Tech innovations such as the PC, internet and wireless proliferation have changed all our lives over the past few decades. But history shows that markets can get ahead of themselves, and it takes time to see who ultimately wins. This year's tech blowout is not without precedent; however, these periods of outperformance have historically been followed by relative underperformance. The lack of broad participation shows that investor sentiment and confidence are concentrated in only a select few stocks, making the market more susceptible to volatility and potential downside risks.

Market cycle

Market cycle indicators remained stable from last month with no changes. Off the bottoms, thanks to some improving economic data in housing. Manufacturing remains weak while global and fundamentals are mixed. Welcome to continued cross currents in the data, again a regular occurrence around potential turning points.

market cycle indicators

Portfolio positioning

No changes to our portfolio positioning this past month. We remain with a moderate underweight in equities and a moderate overweight in cash and bonds. Full underweight in emerging markets and moderate overweight in international has worked well of late. The moderate underweight in U.S. equities, not so much.

asset class strategic guidance

We continue to find decent value in the more conservative parts of the bond market, given the rise in yields. Again, our fear of duration has fallen as a potential recession is our base case. And among alternatives, we continue to lean on volatility or defense strategies with real assets.

The final word

We don't know if there will be a recession or how the market may react one way or the other. But we do know there is more evidence of slowing than accelerating. Today, this does not appear to be reflected in equity prices and probably not in bond prices either, given credit spreads. The data will likely remain mixed, offering support to make either a bullish or bearish argument. Given the impact of either scenario and the probabilities in our analysis, we remain defensively tilted.

"It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future" – Yogi Berra

— Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments
— Derek Benedet is a Portfolio Manager at Purpose Investments
— Brett Gustafson is an Analyst at Purpose Investments

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Sources: Charts are sourced to Bloomberg L.P.

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Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees and expenses all may be associated with investment funds. Please read the prospectus before investing. If the securities are purchased or sold on a stock exchange, you may pay more or receive less than the current net asset value. Investment funds are not guaranteed, their values change frequently and past performance may not be repeated. Certain statements in this document are forward-looking. Forward-looking statements ("FLS") are statements that are predictive in nature, depend on or refer to future events or conditions, or that include words such as "may," "will," "should," "could," "expect," "anticipate," intend," "plan," "believe," "estimate" or other similar expressions. Statements that look forward in time or include anything other than historical information are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results, actions or events could differ materially from those set forth in the FLS. FLS are not guarantees of future performance and are by their nature based on numerous assumptions. Although the FLS contained in this document are based upon what Purpose Investments and the portfolio manager believe to be reasonable assumptions, Purpose Investments and the portfolio manager cannot assure that actual results will be consistent with these FLS. The reader is cautioned to consider the FLS carefully and not to place undue reliance on the FLS. Unless required by applicable law, it is not undertaken, and specifically disclaimed, that there is any intention or obligation to update or revise FLS, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Craig Basinger, CFA

Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments. With over 25 years of investment experience, Craig combines an educational foundation in economics & psychology with years of experience in both fundamental and quantitative research. A long-term student of the markets, Craig’s thoughts and insights can be seen in his Market Ethos publications and through his regular contributions on BNN.

Craig and his team bring a transparent and cost-efficient approach to investment management. The team provides asset allocation OCIO services and directly manages over $1 billion in assets. The team manages dividend mandates, quantitative risk reduction strategies and asset allocation services.

Derek Benedet

Derek is a Portfolio Manager at Purpose Investments. He has worked for the past sixteen years in the investment industry with experience at CIBC Wood Gundy, GMP Securities as well as Richardson Wealth. He is a Chartered Market Technician (CMT), a designation obtained through expertise in technical analyses and is granted by the Market Technicians Association. His unique investment approach combines technical analysis, quantitative finance and fundamental analysis.

Brett Gustafson

Brett is a Portfolio Analyst at Purpose. He is responsible for relationship management and advisor support and focuses heavily on portfolio analytics for advisors, our own proprietary models, as well as equity research. With over nine years of experience in the investment industry, Brett started his career out as an Investment Advisor at a Canadian independent asset management firm where he cared for several high-net-worth families. Brett graduated from the University of Calgary with a Bachelor of Commerce degree. He is currently pursuing his CFA designation with the goal of becoming a Portfolio Manager.