The Lookout | Week of April 25, 2022

The Lookout | Week of April 25, 2022

This week we’re featuring insights from Simon Lack and his team at SL Advisors, and Dan Rudnitsky of SMH Advisors in this edition of The Lookout.

Major Market Events:

Tuesday, April 26: US Core Durable Goods, CB Consumer Confidence

Wednesday, April 27:   ECB President Lagarde Speeches, Bank of Japan Monetary Policy Statement

Thursday, April 28:  US GDP and US Initial Jobless Claims

Friday, April 29: EU CPI Report

Simon Lack, SL Advisors, and Portfolio Manager of an energy infrastructure fund

  • The Fed wants tighter financial conditions, and this needs to manifest itself via higher long-term yields since sectors like housing and capital spending are more sensitive to the ten-year yield than the Fed Funds rate. The Fed also needs a weaker stock market because households that feel poorer will spend less, cooling things down. It is truly an unpleasant prospect.
  • Ten-year yields are approaching 3% as compared with 5% annual inflation. Former NY Fed President Bill Dudley notes that policy remains very loose. But yields are edging up, helped by Fed officials warning of successive 0.50% rate hikes, as Powell did last week.
  • Earnings forecasts are being revised higher, reflecting little evidence of any influence from the Fed. Analysts still expect growth next year of 10%, but a 3.4% ten-year yield in 2023 would be enough to keep the ERP (Equity Risk Premium) at 2.5. By this measure, stocks are as expensive as they’ve been in the past decade. Tighter financial conditions include a weaker stock market, according to Bill Dudley. If the stock market repriced to its average ERP of 3.3 over the past ten years, that would imply the S&P 500 around 15%, lower.

Daniel Rudnitsky, SMH Advisors, and Senior Portfolio Manager of an income strategy

  • Investors are preparing for the busiest week of earnings season, with 160 companies in the S&P 500 set to report quarterly results.
  • We’re keeping an eye on the upcoming economic calendar, which includes updates on new home sales, durable goods orders, pending home sales, GDP, and trade balance – however, the bigger focus is likely to be on Federal Reserve expectations.

Thank you for reading The Lookout. Come back next Monday for more insights on what investors can expect in the markets.

Latest

Investing in Big Rivers is a No-Brainer, Common Sense Decision.

The discretionary sector struggled as did all growth and quality-oriented areas of the market in 2022. That was a classic re-set and a raging opportunity to add exposure.

The Next Potential Volatility Explosion: Oil

Oil Shocks and Their Impact on the Stock Market:...

The Future is Finally Here: September 2024 HANDLS Monthly Report

The Institute for Supply Management’s monthly survey of purchasing managers came in below expectations for August, while the Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report indicated that nonfarm payrolls expanded by only 142,000 jobs during the month (against expectations of 161,000 jobs).

Navigating the Rate Cut: A Guide for Advisors

Introduction The ongoing Federal Reserve cycle has sparked intense debate...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Investing in Big Rivers is a No-Brainer, Common Sense Decision.

The discretionary sector struggled as did all growth and quality-oriented areas of the market in 2022. That was a classic re-set and a raging opportunity to add exposure.

The Next Potential Volatility Explosion: Oil

Oil Shocks and Their Impact on the Stock Market:...

The Future is Finally Here: September 2024 HANDLS Monthly Report

The Institute for Supply Management’s monthly survey of purchasing managers came in below expectations for August, while the Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report indicated that nonfarm payrolls expanded by only 142,000 jobs during the month (against expectations of 161,000 jobs).

Navigating the Rate Cut: A Guide for Advisors

Introduction The ongoing Federal Reserve cycle has sparked intense debate...

My 50-Cents – Fed Analysis from Leland Abrams of Wynkoop, LLC

The Federal Reserve Board cut their benchmark rate this...

Investing in Big Rivers is a No-Brainer, Common Sense Decision.

The discretionary sector struggled as did all growth and quality-oriented areas of the market in 2022. That was a classic re-set and a raging opportunity to add exposure.

The Next Potential Volatility Explosion: Oil

Oil Shocks and Their Impact on the Stock Market: A Historical Overview Oil shocks throughout history, whether caused by geopolitical conflicts or disruptions in production,...

The Future is Finally Here: September 2024 HANDLS Monthly Report

The Institute for Supply Management’s monthly survey of purchasing managers came in below expectations for August, while the Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report indicated that nonfarm payrolls expanded by only 142,000 jobs during the month (against expectations of 161,000 jobs).