FINSUM
Top Strategist Says Recession Imminent
(New York)
Don’t be fooled by the “prophets of boom”, or the many Wall Street and economic leaders who are saying that the US economy is in great shape and will deliver strong growth for years to come. One well known strategist, David Rosenberg, who called the Great Recession before the Crisis, says that a recession is imminent and will arrive within the next 12 months. Rosenberg believes the January 26th high for the S&P 500 will be the peak of this bull market, and that it will ultimately be the Fed that sparks the recession. “Cycles die, and you know how they die? … Because the Fed puts a bullet in its forehead”.
FINSUM: There are a lot of late cycle indicators flashing in the US economy right now. A recession in the next year does seem plausible, if not overly likely.
Goldman Says Stocks Have No Magic Bullet
(New York)
Corporate earnings are doing well and are forecasted to keep rising. Alongside those improvements in operating performance, one would expect stocks would likely keep rising. Not so fast, says Goldman Sachs, who says that earnings improvements will likely do little for stock prices. David Kostin, the firm’s chief US equity strategist, says that earnings’ influence on prices will be moderated by a number of factors. “The appreciation potential will be constrained by tightening monetary policy, a flattening yield curve, rising trade tensions, and the upcoming mid-term Congressional elections.”
FINSUM: In other words, stock market investors are dealing with much more than operating performance. We think the market will discount earnings even more than expected because a lot of the gains are being driven by the tax policy change, making the improvement temporary in nature.
Dow May Have Longest Losing Streak Since 1978
(New York)
Well, the Dow might be about to suffer its longest losing streak in 40 years. The index has lost eight days in a row, and many of them were punishing. Now, if the Dow loses again today, making it nine days in row, it will be the longest streak since 1978. Since 1896, the Dow has only suffered ten losing streaks of nine days or more.
FINSUM: This seems like one of those stats that appears fairly meaningless when it is happening, but in hindsight might seem the start of a bear market/correction or recession.
The Death Knell for Stocks
(New York)
One of the big worries about the stock market right now is that the rise in bond yields could threaten appetites for equities. Well, the ultimate test of that theory has arrived. As of this week, the yield on the One Month Treasury note, yes the one month, is now just about equal to the S&P 500’s average yield. The One Month is yielding 1.84% versus 1.89% for the S&P 500. The notes have very little credit risk or interest rate risk. ETFs that invest in short-term debt have seen $17 bn of inflows this year.
FINSUM: So fund flows are starting to show why we are worried about stocks. Equity dividend funds have been seeing outflows, while fixed income funds have been seeing inflows.
The SEC Rule is Getting Slammed
(Washington)
For an industry that was initially happy with the SEC best interest rule proposal, things have really gone south. On top of the battle over the use of the advisor/adviser title, industry critics are slamming the proposal for a new 4-page disclosure document called a “Customer Relationship Summary” which is supposed to “synopsize an advisor’s services, fiduciary status, fees and other information”. Many say the document is too long and arduous for advisors and will only confuse clients. Charles Schwab, for instance, says that the CSR “could saddle advisors with duplicative and unnecessary compliance challenges”. The firm wants a one-page version.
FINSUM: It is interesting to see that the more the industry has dug into the rule proposal, the more it dislikes it. We wonder how much the SEC will revise the rule following the end of the comment period.