Attitudes are on the cusp of shifting in 3 major ways ๐ฅ
Plus a charted review of the macro crosscurrents ๐
Stocks declined, with the S&P 500 falling 1.1% last week. The index is now up 6.5% year to date, up 14.4% from its October 12 closing low of 3,577.03, and down 14.7% from its January 3, 2022 closing high of 4,796.56.
Over the past two weeks or so, it seems attitudes have begun to shift favorably regarding monetary policy, economic growth, and the trajectory of stock prices.
1. The Fed acknowledges inflation is coming down ๐ฆ
In May of last year, Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned โthere could be some pain involved in restoring price stability.โ A month later, we learned inflation was unexpectedly heating up again. And then on June 15, the Fed announced an eye-popping 75-basis-point interest rate hike, the largest increase the central bank made in a single announcement since 1994.
Back then, I explained how these dynamics presented a conundrum for the stock market as market beatings would continue until inflation improved in the Fedโs eyes.
Fast forward to February 1, following several months of cooling inflation data, when Powell said at the conclusion of the Fedโs monetary policy meeting: โWe can now say, I think, for the first time that the disinflationary process has started. We can see that.โ (Emphasis added.)

โPowell cited the word โdisinflationโ 13 times in this press conference,โ Tom Lee, head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors, wrote that day in a note to clients. โThis is a major change in language and tone and shows that the Fed is now officially recognizing the growing disinflation forces underway. In [the December press conference], โdisinflationโ was used ZERO times by Powell.โ
This is a pretty big deal for the stock market, as prices tend to bottom in the weeks and months before major bullish developments. If this less hawkish tone from the Fed holds, then itโs possible the October 12 low for the S&P 500 was the beginning of the next bull market.
โIn our view, Chair Powell is placing more weight on an โimmaculate disinflationโ scenario, where inflation pressures subside without some softening in labor market conditions, including higher unemployment,โ Michael Gapen, U.S. economist at BofA, wrote on Tuesday. โThis stands in contrast to the Powell from Jackson Hole, Wyoming, last August, who leaned strongly into doing whatever it takes to bring inflation down and emphasized that inflation was unlikely to subside without some โpainโ in labor markets.โ
As long as the inflation numbers continue to trend on the cooler side, the Fed seems likely to keep its less hawkish tone.
For more, read: TKer's 2022 word of the year: 'Pain' ๐ฅ, When the Fed-sponsored market beatings will end ๐, and The market beatings will continue until inflation improves ๐ฅ.
2. The economy is less likely to go into recession ๐ช
I canโt pinpoint exactly when the consensus among economists was that the U.S. was due for a recession. The worries certainly intensified after we learned GDP growth was negative in Q1 of last year, and they got a whole lot worse when we learned growth was negative in Q2 as well.
For more on how recessions are and arenโt defined, read: You call this a recession? ๐คจ.
Over this period, Iโve been skeptical of the idea that the U.S. was destined for a downturn given the massive economic tailwinds I couldnโt stop thinking about and still canโt stop thinking about.
Coming into 2023, the baseline expectation for many Wall Street firms was that the U.S. would enter a recession at some point during the year.
But after the robust January jobs report and expansionary January ISM Services survey earlier this month, sentiment among economists has shifted a bit.
On Monday, Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius published a note titled, โReceding Recession Risk,โ in which he lowered the odds of the U.S. entering a recession in the next 12 months to 25% from 35%.
โContinued strength in the labor market and early signs of improvement in the business surveys suggest that the risk of a near-term slump has diminished notably,โ Hatzius wrote.
On Wednesday, we learned the Atlanta Fedโs GDPNow model saw real GDP growth climbing at a 2.2% rate in Q1. This metric is up considerably from its initial estimate of 0.7% growth as of January 27.

On Thursday, The New York Times published an article from Jeanna Smialek titled: โWhat Recession? Some Economists See Chances of a Growth Rebound.โ The title speaks for itself.
On Sunday, The Wall Street Journal published an article from Nick Timiraos titled: โHard or Soft Landing? Some Economists See Neither if Growth Accelerates.โ It addresses the same themes.
All that said, it could take a few more weeks of resilient economic data before more economists officially revise their forecasts to the upside.
For more, read: 9 reasons to be optimistic about the economy and markets ๐ช and The bullish 'goldilocks' soft landing scenario that everyone wants ๐.
3. The stock market might not crater in the first half ๐
Many prominent Wall Street strategists warned that the S&P 500 was likely to sell-off sharply during the early part of 2023 before recovering at least some of those losses later in the year. This was driven by the expectation that expectations for earnings would continue to get revised lower.
But there were at least three issues with all this: 1) stocks often rise in years when earnings fall, 2) stocks usually bottom before earnings bottom, and 3) when many people expect stocks to sell-off for the same reason, then that information is likely to be already priced into the market.
The S&P 500 is up 6.5% in 2023 so far, and the index has spent much of this period higher than where it started the year.
At least one top strategist has abandoned his call for an early sell-off. Hereโs Goldman Sachsโ David Kostin in a Feb. 3 note to clients (emphasis added):
Recent macro developments have strengthened our economistsโ confidence in a soft landing and reduced equity downside risk in the near term. Outside the US, the growth picture in China has brightened following an earlier-than-expected reopening and Europe is now on track to avoid a recession following a warmer-than-expected winter. In addition, Fed Chair Powell this week did little to push back on the easing of financial conditions. Our rates strategistsโ expected path of Treasuries suggest little near-term upside to yields. We therefore believe the risk of a substantial drawdown in the near term has diminished, barring unforeseen data surprises. We raise our 3-month S&P 500 price target to 4,000 (-3% from today) from 3,600. As shown this week, still-light institutional investor positioning points to the risk of a chase that would see the market temporarily overshoot our S&P 500 target of 4,000.
Most of the S&P 500 have announced quarterly financial results in recent weeks, and based on what theyโve revealed, it looks like the outlook for earnings may not be as grim as previously anticipated.
โ[W]e see no recession ahead in the broad economy โ or in earnings โ but a soft landing,โ Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research, said on Tuesday (h/t Carl Quintanilla). โWe are currently estimating that S&P 500 operating earnings will be up 4.7% this year to $225 per share and 11.1% next year to $250.โ

The S&P 500 is currently trading above most strategistsโ year-end target for the index. Should these gains hold and perhaps improve, we could soon see some strategists revise up their targets.
For more, read: Wall Street's 2023 outlook for stocks ๐ญ, Stocks often rise in years when earnings fall ๐คฏ, One of the most frequently cited risks to stocks in 2023 is 'overstated' ๐, and Everyoneโs talking about a near-term sell-off. A contrarian signal?
What to make of all this
Not everyone thinks resilient economic growth is unambiguously good news.
โWith very strong job growth, a higher labor force participation rate, and a decline in the unemployment rate to the lowest level since 1969, it is beginning to look more like a โno landingโ scenario,โ Apolloโs Torsten Slok wrote in a February 4 note. โUnder the no landing scenario the economy does not slow down, and upside risks to inflation are coming back after the initial decline in inflation driven by supply chain improvements.โ
Renewed concerns about inflation could force the Fed to get more hawkish, which puts economic growth and rising stock prices at risk. In other words, good news could become bad news once again. For more on this dynamic, read: Your guide to 'good news is bad news' and 'bad news is good news' ๐.
But if thereโs one thing weโve learned in recent months, itโs that we can simultaneously have consecutive months of healthy job growth and inflation readings that come in cool. For more on this dynamic, read: The bullish 'goldilocks' soft landing scenario that everyone wants ๐.
As always, time will tell what actually happens. But for the time being, the optimists appear to be triumphing over the pessimists as inflation, economic growth, and stock prices have been trending favorably in recent months.
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More from TKer:
The bullish 'goldilocks' soft landing scenario that everyone wants ๐
9 reasons to be optimistic about the economy and markets ๐ช
Everyoneโs talking about a near-term sell-off. A contrarian signal? ๐ค
Thatโs interesting! ๐ก
Did you know cricket is the second most watched sport in the world? And itโs emerging in the U.S. in a big way. From JohnWallStreet:
โฆAmerican Cricket Enterprises (ACE), the entity operating Major League Cricket (MLC), has raised more than $100 million. ACE founders Sameer Mehta, Vijay Srinivasan, Satyan Gajwani and Vineet Jainย โ and the balance of company investors โ are betting the league will be able to draw the sportโs top players and attract interest from fans around the globe, becoming a staple of the cricket calendar in the process. If it can, club valuations will โgrow like a hockey stick,โ Sanjay Govil (chairman, Infinite Computer Solutions and CEO, Zyter Inc.) said. Govil owns the team in Washington D.C. Dallas, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York City and Seattle will also have clubs playing in the inaugural โ23 season, which is slated to take place from June 13-30.
Reviewing the macro crosscurrents ๐
There were a few notable data points from last week to consider:
โ๏ธ Supply chains continue to improve. The New York Fedโs Global Supply Chain Pressure Index
โ a composite of various supply chain indicators โ fell in January and is hovering at levels seen in late 2020. It's way down from its December 2021 supply chain crisis high.
๐ Inventory levels are up. According to Census Bureau data released Tuesday, wholesale inventories climbed 0.1% to $932.9 billion in December. The inventories/sales ratio was 1.36, up significantly from 1.24 the previous year.
For more on supply chains and inventory levels, read: โWe can stop calling it a supply chain crisis โ,โ โ9 reasons to be optimistic about the economy and markets ๐ช, โand โThe bullish 'goldilocks' soft landing scenario that everyone wants ๐.โ
๐ Consumer sentiment is improving. From the University of Michigan February Survey of Consumers: โAfter three consecutive months of increases, sentiment is now 6% above a year ago but still 14% below two years ago, prior to the current inflationary episode. Overall, high prices continue to weigh on consumers despite the recent moderation in inflation, and sentiment remains more than 22% below its historical average since 1978.โ

๐๏ธ Consumers are spending. From BofA: โWe saw signs of strengthening in consumer spending in both retail and services in January, accelerating from December. Total Bank of America credit and debit card spending per household was up 5.1% YoY in January, vs. 2.2% YoY in December. On a month-over-month (MoM) seasonally adjusted (SA) basis, total card spending per household was up 1.7%, more than reversing the 1.4% MoM decline in December.โ

๐ป Theyโre buying cheap beer. From FreightWavesโ Rachel Premack: โโฆBeer became suddenly pricey at the end of last year. Beer prices at retail, which doesnโt include bars or restaurants, popped 7% during the last 13 weeks of 2022โฆ That price increase is showing up in how people are buying brews, said Dave Williams, vice president of Bump Williams Consulting. People are increasingly buying, say, 12-packs over 30-packs or even single servings of beer. Theyโre trading down too โ snagging the more economic Keystone over comparatively pricey Coors. That explains why the โbelow premiumโ segment was the only one to see an increase in demand in January compared to January 2022, according to the National Beer Wholesalers Associationโs Beer Purchasersโ Indexโฆโ

๐ณ Consumers are taking on more debt, but levels are manageable. According to Federal Reserve data, total revolving consumer credit outstanding increased to $1.196 trillion in December. Revolving credit consists mostly of credit card loans.

While the aggregate borrowing seems high, theyโre much more reasonable when you look at consumer finances more holistically. From BofA: โOn the savings side, Bank of America internal data suggests median household savings and checking balances across income groups have been trending down since April 2022, with the lowest income group (<$50k) seeing the steepest drawdown. But deposits remain above 2019 levels (Exhibit 6) for all income cohorts.โ

๐ณ No, they are not maxing out their credit cards. From BofA: โLower income consumers appear to still have some level of comfort in terms of their financial constraints. On the one hand, the ratio of median household card spending to median deposit balances (spending-to-savings ratio) remained lower than in 2019 for households with an annual income of less than <$150k (Exhibit 7). This suggests this cohortโs spending would not need to be reduced too much for the spending-to-savings ratio to return to 2019 levels. On the other hand, the Bank of America credit card utilization rate also remained lower than in 2019 across income groups (Exhibit 8).โ

For more on this, read: Consumer finances are in remarkably good shape ๐ฐ
๐ต Consumers are getting more on their savings accounts. From Semaforโs Liz Hoffman: โThe average savings account rate has quintupled since last January to 0.33%, according to data from the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporationโฆโ

๐ค Low union participation helps explain low wage growth. From UBS: โโWage growth is slowing noticeably along multiple measures even with a decades low unemployment rate. Why? โฆ One reason could be low bargaining power for workersโฆ The share of unionized workers among private employees fell to 6% in 2022, according to the BLS.โ

๐ฐ Wall Street is busy. From Bloomberg on Tuesday: โAbout seven IPOs are expected to raise a combined $900 million and begin trading by Friday [Feb. 10], making for the busiest week since Octoberโs $990 million listing by Intel Corp.โs self-driving technology unit Mobileye Global Inc., according to data compiled by Bloomberg. [Last] weekโs debuts include solar power equipment maker Nextracker Inc., which plans to raise as much as $535 million in what would be the yearโs biggest deal yet. Enlight Renewable Energy Ltd., which is already public in Israel, plans to add a listing on the Nasdaq.โ

And itโs not just IPOs. There were numerous reports of dealmaking activity last week involving some big names (link).

๐ ๐ Big companies announce layoffs. On Monday, Bloomberg reported that Dell Technologies would be โeliminating about 6,650.โ On Tuesday, Zoom announced it would โsay goodbye to around 1,300 hardworking, talented colleagues.โ On Wednesday, Disney announced it would be โreducing our workforce by approximately 7,000 jobs.โ On Thursday, News Corp announced โan expected 5% headcount reduction, or around 1,250 positions,โ and Axios reported that Yahoo would lay off โmore than 1,600 people.โ
Hereโs UBS economist Paul Donovan offering some perspective: โAnother companyโDisney this time โ has announced headcount reductions. We get US initial jobless claims data [Thursday], and the macroeconomic data does not match the high profile press releases of job losses. A major reason is that large companies are not that important economically โ smaller businesses matter most to labor markets. Smaller businesses tend to have underemployment rather than unemployment. It is quite hard to fire 10% of a three-person company.โ
For more on this, read: Making sense of conflicting news on the labor market ๐ค.
โ ๏ธ More big layoff announcements to come? Goldman Sachs economists think itโs possible. From a research note published Monday: โโฆon the negative side, there could be additional layoff announcements yet to come from other large companies, as roughly 15% of companies in the S&P 500 have seen headcount increases of 40% or more since the start of the pandemic (Exhibit 4), and only one-fifth of them have announced layoffs so far.โ
But: โโฆon the positive side, similar to the rebalancing seen so far in the broader labor market, even these companies that have announced layoffs have reduced their total demand for workers overwhelmingly by reducing job openings rather than by conducting layoffs.โ For more on job openings, read: How job openings explain everything in the economy and the markets right now ๐.
Also: โโฆExhibit 7 shows that most industries (8 out of 11) have reemployment rates above pre-pandemic levels, including the information sector (the sector of most major tech companies), and that all of them have reemployment rates that are above the recent expansion average.โ
Iโve started an informal thread on Twitter tracking anecdotes of companies hiring (Link).
For more on hiring, read: That's a lot of hiring ๐พ and You should not be surprised by the strength of the labor market ๐ช.
๐ผ Unemployment claims remain low. Initial claims for unemployment benefits climbed to 196,000 during the week ending Feb. 4, up from 183,000 the week prior. While the number is up from its six-decade low of 166,000 in March, it remains near levels seen during periods of economic expansion.

For more on low unemployment, read: 9 reasons to be optimistic about the economy and markets ๐ช.
๐ On work from home #WFH. From Stanford professor Nick Bloom: โData on 4,000 U.S. firms #WFH policies: 1) 50% of firms are fully on-site, like food-service, accommodation and retail, 2) 40% combine #WFH and in person days in various ways: min-days, anchor days, employee choice etc, 3) 8% are fully remoteโ

Putting it all together ๐ค
Weโre getting a lot of evidence that we may get the bullish โGoldilocksโ soft landing scenario where inflation cools to manageable levels without the economy having to sink into recession.
And the Federal Reserve has recently adopted a less hawkish tone, acknowledging on February 1 that โfor the first time that the disinflationary process has started.โ
Nevertheless, inflation still has to come down more before the Fed is comfortable with price levels. So we should expect the central bank to continue to tighten monetary policy, which means we should be prepared for tighter financial conditions (e.g. higher interest rates, tighter lending standards, and lower stock valuations). All of this means the market beatings may continue and the risk the economy sinks into a recession will be elevated.
Itโs important to remember that while recession risks are elevated, consumers are coming from a very strong financial position. Unemployed people are getting jobs. Those with jobs are getting raises. And many still have excess savings to tap into. Indeed, strong spending data confirms this financial resilience. So itโs too early to sound the alarm from a consumption perspective.
At this point, any downturn is unlikely to turn into economic calamity given that the financial health of consumers and businesses remains very strong.
As always, long-term investors should remember that recessions and bear markets are just part of the deal when you enter the stock market with the aim of generating long-term returns. While markets have had a terrible year, the long-run outlook for stocks remains positive.
For more on how the macro story is evolving, check out the previous TKer macro crosscurrents ยป
For more on why this is an unusually unfavorable environment for the stock market, read: The market beatings will continue until inflation improves ๐ฅ ยป
For a closer look at where we are and how we got here, read: The complicated mess of the markets and economy, explained ๐งฉ ยป
TKerโs best insights about the stock market ๐
Hereโs a roundup of some of TKerโs most talked-about paid and free newsletters about the stock market. All of the headlines are hyperlinked to the archived pieces.
10 truths about the stock market ๐
The stock market can be an intimidating place: Itโs real money on the line, thereโs an overwhelming amount of information, and people have lost fortunes in it very quickly. But itโs also a place where thoughtful investors have long accumulated a lot of wealth. The primary difference between those two outlooks is related to misconceptions about the stock market that can lead people to make poor investment decisions.
Stomach-churning stock market sell-offs are normal๐ข
Investors should always be mentally prepared for some big sell-offs in the stock market. Itโs part of the deal when you invest in an asset class that is sensitive to the constant flow of good and bad news. Since 1950, the S&P 500 has seen an average annual max drawdown (i.e., the biggest intra-year sell-off) of 14%.
How stocks performed when the yield curve inverted โ ๏ธ
Thereโve been lots of talk about the โyield curve inversion,โ with media outlets playing up that this bond market phenomenon may be signaling a recession. Admittedly, yield curve inversions have a pretty good track record of being followed by recessions, and recessions usually come with significant market sell-offs. But experts also caution against concluding that inverted yield curves are bulletproof leading indicators.
How the stock market performed around recessions ๐๐
Every recession in history was different. And the range of stock performance around them varied greatly. There are two things worth noting. First, recessions have always been accompanied by a significant drawdown in stock prices. Second, the stock market bottomed and inflected upward long before recessions ended.
In the stock market, time pays โณ
Since 1928, the S&P 500 generated a positive total return more than 89% of the time over all five-year periods. Those are pretty good odds. When you extend the timeframe to 20 years, youโll see that thereโs never been a period where the S&P 500 didnโt generate a positive return.
700+ reasons why S&P 500 index investing isn't very 'passive'๐ก
Passive investing is a concept usually associated with buying and holding a fund that tracks an index. And no passive investment strategy has attracted as much attention as buying an S&P 500 index fund. However, the S&P 500 โ an index of 500 of the largest U.S. companies โ is anything but a static set of 500 stocks. From January 1995 through April 2022, 728 tickers have been added to the S&P 500, while 724 have been removed.
The key driver of stock prices: Earnings๐ฐ
For investors, anything you can ever learn about a company matters only if it also tells you something about earnings. Thatโs because long-term moves in a stock can ultimately be explained by the underlying companyโs earnings, expectations for earnings, and uncertainty about those expectations for earnings. Over time, the relationship between stock prices and earnings have a very tight statistical relationship.
When the Fed-sponsored market beatings could end ๐
At some point in the future, weโll learn a new bull market in stocks has begun. Before we can get there, the Federal Reserve will likely have to take its foot off the neck of financial markets. If history is a guide, then the market should bottom weeks or months before we get that signal from the Fed.
What a strong dollar means for stocks ๐
While a strong dollar may be great news for Americans vacationing abroad and U.S. businesses importing goods from overseas, itโs a headwind for multinational U.S.-based corporations doing business in non-U.S. markets.
Economy โ Stock Market ๐คทโโ๏ธ
The stock market sorta reflects the economy. But also, not really. The S&P 500 is more about the manufacture and sale of goods. U.S. GDP is more about providing services.
Stanley Druckenmiller's No. 1 piece of advice for novice investors ๐ง
โฆyou don't want to buy them when earnings are great, because what are they doing when their earnings are great? They go out and expand capacity. Three or four years later, there's overcapacity and they're losing money. What about when they're losing money? Well, then theyโve stopped building capacity. So three or four years later, capacity will have shrunk and their profit margins will be way up. So, you always have to sort of imagine the world the way it's going to be in 18 to 24 months as opposed to now. If you buy it now, you're buying into every single fad every single moment. Whereas if you envision the future, you're trying to imagine how that might be reflected differently in security prices.
Peter Lynch made a remarkably prescient market observation in 1994 ๐ฏ
Some event will come out of left field, and the market will go down, or the market will go up. Volatility will occur. Markets will continue to have these ups and downs. โฆ Basic corporate profits have grown about 8% a year historically. So, corporate profits double about every nine years. The stock market ought to double about every nine yearsโฆ The next 500 points, the next 600 points โ I donโt know which way theyโll goโฆ Theyโll double again in eight or nine years after that. Because profits go up 8% a year, and stocks will follow. That's all there is to it.
Warren Buffett's 'fourth law of motion' ๐
Long ago, Sir Isaac Newton gave us three laws of motion, which were the work of genius. But Sir Isaacโs talents didnโt extend to investing: He lost a bundle in the South Sea Bubble, explaining later, โI can calculate the movement of the stars, but not the madness of men.โ If he had not been traumatized by this loss, Sir Isaac might well have gone on to discover the Fourth Law of Motion: For investors as a whole, returns decrease as motion increases.
'Past performance is no guarantee of future results,' charted ๐
S&P Dow Jones Indices found that funds beat their benchmark in a given year are rarely able to continue outperforming in subsequent years. According to their research, 29% of 791 large-cap equity funds that beat the S&P 500 in 2019. Of those funds, 75% beat the benchmark again in 2020. But only 9.1%, or 21 funds, were able to extend that outperformance streak into 2021.
One stat shows how hard it is to pick market-beating stocks ๐ฒ
Picking stocks in an attempt to beat market averages is an incredibly challenging and sometimes money-losing effort. In fact, most professional stock pickers arenโt able to do this on a consistent basis. One of the reasons for this is that most stocks donโt deliver above-average returns. According to S&P Dow Jones Indices, only 22% of the stocks in the S&P 500 outperformed the index itself from 2000 to 2020. Over that period, the S&P 500 gained 322%, while the median stock rose by just 63%.
That is, assuming markets donโt get hit by some unexpected risk event. For more on this, read: Sorry, but uncertainty will always be high ๐ฐ.
Hereโs some info on how the index is constructed, according to the NY Fed: โWe use the following subcomponents of the country-specific manufacturing PMIs: โdelivery time,โ which captures the extent to which supply chain delays in the economy impact producersโa variable that may be viewed as identifying a purely supply-side constraint; โbacklogs,โ which quantifies the volume of orders that firms have received but have yet to either start working on or complete; and, finally, โpurchased stocks,โ which measures the extent of inventory accumulation by firms in the economy. Note that in case of the U.S., the PMI data start only in 2007, so for the U.S. we combine the PMI data with those from the manufacturing survey of the Institute for Supply Management (ISM).โ