The worries of April were the source of investor happiness during the month of May as thanks to factors that served to stop the rise in U.S. government yields, the S&P 500 recaptured the majority of its April decline. First, the Federal Reserve tapered QT by more than expected, effectively boosting forward 12-month liquidity by US$420B. On this point, we continue to contest Powell’s notion that monetary policy is tight; phooey it is! Sure, rates have gone up but a) the U.S. economy is far less sensitive to interest rates than it was in the past, and b) the ten-year graph below confirms the U.S. continues to swim in a sea of liquidity (70% above pre-COVID levels). We believe this latter fact has played a significant role in boosting the price of assets and U.S. economic growth. Second, the U.S. Treasury’s ‘Quarterly Refinancing Announcement’ (QRA) was in-line with expectations including nominal auction sizes expected to be stable for “at least” several quarters. Finally, U.S. April economic data released in May was softer on growth and inflation, a combination seen as being good for forward rate cuts yet within the context of an economy still growing enough to generate the profits requisite of a S&P 493 (ex-M7) trading at more than 19X forward EPS.
Equity markets experienced some payback during April post their strong Q1 performance, as the third consecutive month of higher-than-expected inflation pushed bond yields high enough to damage the price of stocks. Beyond mid-month, stocks fluctuated on a mixed set of economic releases until the one-two punch of a clear enunciation by the Fed that their market “put” remains in place, and April’s softer than expected jobs reports enabled investors to recoup some losses on both stocks and bonds at the start of May.
Led by the ‘price momentum’ factor which had its best quarterly performance in 20 years, the S&P 500 exited March posting its 50th consecutive day at least one standard deviation above its 50-day moving average for only the 12th time during the past 100 years. For all the talk of tightened monetary policy, liquidity remains abundant and appears to be a key driver for stocks. The +10.16% YTD price return for the S&P500 can be split between the M7 (37% or 3.76% of the gain from this 29% share of the market) and the S&P 493 (63% or +6.4% from the remaining 71% of the S&P’s total market cap). This more recently balanced return profile is evident from the far right side of the relative strength graph below of the equal weighted SPX to the market weighted SPX. After reviewing the performance of our funds, this note will touch on inflation and the upcoming Presidential election.
Markets continued to rock and roll during the month of February. This was driven by liquidity, the belief that decent economic growth will continue and a confidence that the market knows better than the Fed about the future path for interest rates. In this note, we will review the performance of the funds and explain why we remain cautiously net long the markets.