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Is it Still Going to be a “Soft Landing”?
2023 has been one of the more difficult years to navigate. For example, if you chose the wrong stocks, sectors or simply decided to hide in cash – you didn’t fare well. However, what’s also made it hard has been the various shifts in sentiment the past ~9 months. These shifts have ‘whipped’ traders around. Today, with the US 10-year yield challenging almost 5.0% – the “R” word is back in the vernacular. Much of this can be explained by understanding where we are in the economic cycle… and today it’s “late cycle”. The challenge is navigating this phase is the most difficult of any… as it will often last longer than many expect.
September Didn’t Disappoint
Coming into September – I reminded readers it has the worst record of any calendar month. The Trader’s Almanac tells us the S&P 500 has lost an average of 1% each September over the past 10 years. And over the prior 25 years – the average monthly returns are -0.67%. Dismal. This year, the S&P 500 gave back 4.9% for the month. But it wasn’t just September – stocks hit the pause button after June. For the quarter, the Index surrendered 3.64%.The Nasdaq fared far worse – losing 4.12%. None of this should come as a surprise…
Bye Bye Sugar High
Are equities finally connecting the dots? Maybe. Whilst this has been a difficult market to trade – my sense was to approach with caution. From mine, there were too many open questions. For example, when the market was trading around 4600 – my sentiment was the downside risk outweighed any upside reward. We are now ~8% lower… closer to the zone of where I felt the S&P 500 could trade. In short, valuations were stretched. Put another way, the risk premium for owning stocks wasn’t there. But markets pushed higher – taunting the Fed on their “higher for longer” script.
The Battle-lines are Drawn
Here’s today’s question: do you think 18.3x forward earnings is a good risk/reward bet? For me, the answer is no. And I say this because investors have a very compelling alternative. We don’t need to look any further than bond yields. For example, the 12-month US treasury yield offers investors 5.45%