“Should you be over or underweight the US equity market?” is
surely one of the most asked asset allocation questions of the
past 5-10 years. Over the 10 years to June end in US dollar
terms, the US equity market outperformed the UK, Europe
and Japan markets by 255%, 202% and 194%1
, respectively.
There are good reasons for this outperformance. Most recently
of course, the technology giants that dominate the US equity
index were the chief beneficiaries from lockdowns as we all
became dependent on, and some maybe addicted to, their
services. However, it really has been a trend since the financial
crisis that US companies have delivered sustained stronger
earnings growth and better profitability than their developed
market peers
Data releases over the past few months have also been
encouraging. The all-important services PMI indicator
- a closely watched measure of expected future growth -
exceeded 60 for four consecutive months to June, far above
the 50 mark that separates expansion from contraction.
Business confidence is certainly elevated right now and
economic activity is evidently picking up too. The number
of passengers screened at US airports has returned to prepandemic levels, despite collapsing over 96% at the worst
point last year. Furthermore, whilst there is some way to go
before employment fully recovers (non-farm payrolls are still
about seven million shy of pre-pandemic levels) and there are
continued concerns from some employers of a shortage of
labour supply, the unemployment rate has dropped below 6%
for the first time since the pandemic struck.
Whilst the fundamental backdrop appears positive there
are risks, chief of which right now is inflation. Producer price
inflation is running hot at 9.4% and whilst consumer inflation
has jumped higher of late, if businesses can’t fully pass these
higher costs on to consumers, corporate margins could be
squeezed rather aggressively. And, even if they can, then wage
pressures might escalate, which would then pose a threat to
margins. Another longer term risk is presented in the form of
corporate tax reform with a new agenda seeking to claim more
of the profits of multinationals. Whilst the reforms will take
some time before taking effect, it does pose a risk down the
road for the giant tech businesses in particular that operate
globally.
Investors cannot forget valuations either. Historic data over
the long term shows higher starting valuation multiples have
led to lower future returns. Today the US equity market is on
a forward P/E ratio of 22.6 times, a 23% premium to Europe
and an even larger 44% and 80%1
premium to Japan and
the UK. US valuations are lofty but we do acknowledge the
aforementioned negative correlation doesn’t necessarily hold
over the short term and that index valuations are skewed by a
select and concentrated group of mega cap stocks providing
opportunities for active investors beneath – don’t forget the US
equity market share of passive funds now stands at over 50%2!
Another interesting dynamic is around the tax reforms and if
governments do take more of the future profits from certain
companies then it makes valuations look even more stretched
today.
The stimulus we have seen in response to Covid is certainly
worthy of a mention too. On the fiscal side, over the past 16
months we have seen a level of government support that
is comparable only in the immediate aftermath of World
War II. On the monetary side, the Federal Reserve has been
purchasing $120bn of bonds per month which has served to
push yields down and justify higher equity valuation multiples
by virtue of a lower discount rate. The central bank has begun
discussions around tapering the bond buying program and any
rhetoric that sparks fears of tighter monetary policy sooner
than expected to combat higher inflation poses a risk to
equities. As a result, the Fed will be sure to signpost any policy
changes as clearly as possible.
The economic recovery that is underway is likely to see a
period of growth we haven’t seen in decades. A consumer
(which don’t forget accounts for 70% of US GDP) supported
by unprecedented government support, ready to unleash pent
up demand with over $2.6 trillion3
of excess savings will likely
trigger an extraordinary spending boom. However, whilst the
backdrop in the US is positive, it is in other regions too. The
UK and Japanese equity markets are two examples where
cyclical sectors and stocks form a higher weight in market
indexes. These are set to do well in the years ahead, and this
has started to be reflected in earnings expectations. Couple
this with valuations that are at wide discounts and we feel
these regions justify an overweight position. So, whilst we are
constructive on equities overall, we maintain an underweight to
the US today on valuation grounds, although less underweight
than might otherwise be the case on valuations alone given
the supportive backdrop (notwithstanding inflation risks) and
opportunities for active managers to add value.
1MSCI indexes for UK, Europe and Japan. S&P 500 for the US. All
performance, valuation and market data from Bloomberg Finance, L.P.
Valuation data as of 22nd July 2021.
2https://www.bloomberg.com/professional/blog/passive-likely-overtakes-active-by-2026-earlier-if-bear-market/
3https://markets.businessinsider.com
In case you missed it
A black swan
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As is often the case with sport, parallels can be found in markets. Firstly, markets give everyone the opportunity to have as many shots as you like before you become successful, as opposed to footballers who have just one attempt during a shootout.
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