Investors shouldn’t expect much relief from market volatility as the transition from QE to QT spells trouble for risk assets

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The S&P 500 could dip as low as 3,000-3,200 during the forecast recessionary period

Author of the article:

Financial Times

Anne Walsh

Published Feb 15, 2023  •  4 minute read

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Traders work the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images files By Anne Walsh

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Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Investors should be forgiven for hoping that 2023 will be different after 2022 was such a white-knuckle year for interest rates and market valuations. It will be different, but they should not expect much relief from volatility.

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The strong jobs figures in the United States for January demonstrate that real-time economic releases still have the power to surprise. But the more meaningful long-term matter for investors to keep in mind is that we have transitioned from a world of quantitative easing (QE) to one of quantitative tightening (QT).

We believe that no one should be betting on the U.S. Federal Reserve pivoting from that in a quarter or two just because the U.S. is close to a recession. The days of making easy money during QE are over. The year-over-year growth rate of the M2 measure of money supply in the U.S. neared 30 per cent post-COVID-19 because of the massive monetary and fiscal policy response to the pandemic. But it did not drive goods and services inflation or real economic activity to the degree that Milton Friedman would have predicted.

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Because of the big gap between economic and money supply growth, this excess liquidity showed up in inflated asset prices. Prices went up for everything, both for quality assets and for speculative ones that did not deserve capital. We believe that contraction in the Fed’s balance sheet and M2 should have the opposite effect.

The Fed may be closer to the end of its hiking cycle than the beginning, but QT will continue with the central bank’s run-off strategy of reducing its balance sheet by not reinvesting the proceeds from maturing U.S. Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Its balance sheet reduction has barely started. In April 2022, the Fed balance sheet peaked at about US$9 trillion in assets, and today it stands at US$8.5 trillion.

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The nominal cap amount of runoff is US$95 billion per month and it will be continuing on autopilot for the foreseeable future (although partly offset recently by slower prepayments on some MBS held by the Fed). We do not expect a repeat of September 2019 when money markets were spooked by the decline in the aggregate size of the Fed’s balance sheet to US$3.7 trillion from US$4.4 trillion at the beginning of 2018, and the central bank had to begin purchasing Treasuries again. The Fed has since put programs in place that should help ease a similar dislocation in money markets.

We are now in a consolidation period that marks the end of a secular bond bull market that lasted more than 35 years. This period will be characterized by reduced market liquidity, capital rationing and persistent volatility in asset prices. The silver lining for bond investors is that consolidation periods can endure for years before the next bond bear market begins.

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During this kind of consolidation period, market participants have to be thoughtful and nimble about where to invest. A recession could come as early as the middle of the year, but corporate credit fundamentals are strong heading into the downturn.

Guggenheim research shows that the debt of all domestic U.S. non-financial corporate businesses is around five times pre-tax profit, a leverage ratio that is much lower than typical heading into a recession. Among the same companies, the current coverage of interest expenses by earnings before interest and tax is the highest for 50 years, at 16 times.

The U.S. consumer balance sheet is also strong, with savings still higher than before the pandemic, low levels of debt and significant homeowner net equity. These factors should help keep the recession relatively mild.

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Recommended from Editorial Investors don’t expect stock rally to last despite recession threat receding: Bank of America survey 4 steps to getting investment income without paying the CRA more taxes Markets may be bouncing back, but managing risk is as important as ever But the transition from QE to QT spells trouble for risk assets, while a looming turn in the business cycle means the rates market should be a tailwind for fixed-income investors as 10-year Treasury yields head back down towards three per cent from current levels around 3.7 per cent. Equity markets should decline as we move through an economic slowdown, and finish meaningfully lower than they are today.

Based on analysis conducted by our research team of price-to-earnings multiples during times of slowing economic activity, the S&P 500 could dip as low as 3,000-3,200 during the forecast recessionary period, down from the current level of around 4,130.

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Article content Our view is that along with the fall in equity prices, the lowest-rated credit end of the markets, such as CCC-rated bonds, will also come under price pressure, probably selling off as defaults rise and downgrade activity increases.

With equities probably set to fall, and investment-grade corporate credit and structured credit yields at attractive levels, our view is that now is a good time for active managers to start allocating defensively and move up in credit quality.

We may have started a new year, but investors should still be prepared for a bumpy ride. The good news of higher bond yields is that they are getting paid to prepare.

Anne Walsh is chief investment officer for Guggenheim Partners Investment Management LLC.

© 2023 The Financial Times Ltd.


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