Bonds are looking attractive again?Time to shift your assets?
Last week hedge funds bought utilities, real estate, and energy stocks and sold industrials, consumer discretionary, technology, financial and materials stocks.
The BofA Global Fund Manager Survey saw big positioning into bonds and out of equities last month.
Is it time to shift your assets? What’s your plan?
$DIA $SPY $IWM $QQQ $TLT $SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust(DIA)$ $SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(SPY)$ $iShares Russell 2000 ETF(IWM)$ $Invesco QQQ(QQQ)$ $iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF(TLT)$
Below are highlights of some key points from last week, presenting arguments for both optimistic and pessimistic outlooks:
Bullish Highlights for the Week Ending August 16th:
• The soft-landing narrative gained more support with the biggest rise in headline retail sales since January 2023, coupled with the lowest initial unemployment claims since early July.
• Signs of disinflation emerged as core PPI and core CPI came in cooler than anticipated, while the New York Fed’s three-year inflation expectations dropped to their lowest in over a decade.
• Walmart exceeded expectations, raised its guidance, and reported no signs of further deterioration in consumer spending.
• Dovish tones from the Fed, with Bostic and Goolsbee cautioning against the risks of delaying rate cuts.
• Positioning has improved after the post-NFP/BoJ pullback, with Goldman Sachs estimating CTAs offloaded $52B in US equities over the past month, but have now largely turned into buyers under most scenarios.
• Volatility reduction supports a systematic shift, with the VIX down over 40 points from its intraday peak on August 5th and below its level prior to the July NFP report.
• Favorable flow patterns continued with the seventh consecutive week of inflows into US equities and the seventeenth week of inflows into global equities.
• Companies increasingly view cost-cutting and operational efficiency as buffers for margins, especially as pricing power diminishes.
• Significant M&A activity in consumer staples, highlighted by Mars’ $36B acquisition of Kellanova.
Bearish Highlights for the Week Ending August 16th:
• Fed easing expectations for 2024 dropped below 100 basis points late in the week, down from a peak of over 130 basis points on August 5th.
• While core CPI was slightly cooler than forecast, shelter inflation rebounded with both Owners’ Equivalent Rent (OER) and rent figures surprising to the upside.
• Despite improved growth sentiment, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow estimate for Q3 decreased to +2.4% from +2.9%, while the Philly Fed manufacturing index, NAHB housing index, and industrial production all fell short of expectations.
• Consumer caution remains high, with recent attention on rising delinquencies in consumer loans (credit cards and autos) and an uptick in bankruptcy filings.
• Home Depot, despite low expectations, lowered its guidance and cited increased macroeconomic uncertainty as a broader pressure on consumer demand.
• More corporate layoffs were announced, with Cisco reducing its workforce by 7% and Sonos by 6%.
• Alphabet underperformed in the tech rally due to reports that the DOJ might consider a breakup as a remedy following a significant antitrust ruling, underscoring the challenging regulatory environment for large tech companies.
• Earnings forecasts for Q3 have weakened compared to the stability seen before the previous two quarters, with analysts now expecting around 6% growth, down from an earlier estimate of 11%.
• China continues to weigh on global growth, with July economic activity data largely coming in softer than anticipated.
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- BotakGuy·08-19SlowlyLikeReport