Gavekal’s Charles Gave recalls the 1970s bear market, which occurred just as he began his finance career. He sees high probability we are now in the early stages of a similar period. Few now recall that era, so Gave shares three important lessons he learned.
Key Points:
- Between February 1971 and the end of 1974, the S&P 500 to gold ratio fell from 102 to 14. No one could really explain why.
- According to Warren Buffett, a bear market is the process through which capital returns to its legitimate owner. Doing so in this case will require both time and heavy price movements.
- Initially in such periods, no one understands why the market is falling.
- Gave’s best guess is the next Bear Marketwill arise from a collapse in both European bonds and social democracies, leading to a drop in middle class consumption.
- By the end of a great bear market, no one is asking “are we there yet?” because those who did would have already been fired.
Charles Gave notes over-indebtedness is always the root cause of great bear markets. If so, today’s giant debt loads – government, corporate and household – suggest the next bear market will be a big one.
US Economy
- The jobs market held up better than expected in May
- The retail sector registered some job losses.
- Prime-age labor force participation continues to rebound, which should ease wage pressures (as more Americans return to work).
- One area of concern in the jobs report was an uptick in part-time employment for “economic reasons.”
- Wage growth appears to be slowing (helped by stronger labor force participation)
- Overall, the labor market looks stronger than it was prior to the pandemic.
- But hiring is likely to slow in the months ahead amid increased focus on cost-cutting.
- The market increasingly expects a 50 bps rate hike in September. The “pause” talk has died down for now.
- Here is the business activity index.
- Backlog of orders:
- A separate service-sector PMI report from S&P Global showed accelerating input costs (likely driven by energy prices).
- Retail gasoline prices are headed higher, which will keep pressuring consumer sentiment.
- Equity futures traders are betting on deterioration in economic activity (and earnings).
- The hit to household wealth could become a drag on consumption.
- Danske Bank expects a recession in the US next year,
- as inflation takes a toll on spending.
- Are earnings estimates too optimistic?
- Housing demand continues to ease.
- A higher percentage of sellers have been dropping prices.
- Economic growth is expected to slow substantially.
- Will we see a recession?
- US consumer credit growth topped forecasts again.
- Household balance sheets remain relatively healthy.
- And household cash levels are holding above pre-pandemic levels.
- Atlanta Fed’s GDP tracker is holding below 1% for Q2 GDP.
- Retail gasoline prices continue to surge, …
- ……depressing consumer confidence.
- Mortgage applications dipped to 2013 levels over the Memorial Day week.
Here is MBA’s seasonally-adjusted data. Their adjustment tends to be noisy, especially around US holidays.
- This has been the fastest decline in housing affordability in decades
- CoreLogic expects home price appreciation to cool but hold in positive territory.
- Housing investment is expected to deteriorate.
- What percentage of apartment renters are moving out to buy a home?
- US commercial property sales are now down relative to last year.
- And property prices are cooling as well.
- Market expectations for the fed funds rate by the end of the year are nearing 3%. Some analysts expect the US central bank to keep delivering 50 bps hikes at every meeting until there is visible progress on inflation.
- Wider federal budget deficits are expected next year and beyond.
Market Data
- What were the drivers of this year’s selloff.
- Deteriorating CEO confidence points to downside risks for earnings growth.
- we have some performance data from last week.
- Sectors:
- Share of the top 100 global tech firms’ market capitalization:
- Small caps have been outperforming in recent days.
- According to the FT, “around 16% of US stocks are held by index trackers and ETFs vs. 14% by actively managed funds.”
- Fund fees continue to shrink.
- The S&P 500 is stuck in a range as investors await the CPI report.
Quote of the Week
“Strive for progress, not perfection”
Picture of the Week
All content is the opinion of Brian J. Decker