Stock-market investors should still brace for ’70s-style ‘stagflation,’ warn strategists

Date:

Share post:


Investors are in love with Goldilocks, but should instead remain on the outlook for Disco Duck, according to a team of Wall Street quantitative strategists.

“Going back to the question of market macro regime, we believe that there is a risk of the narrative turning back from goldilocks towards something like 1970s stagflation, with significant implications for asset allocation,” wrote a team of J.P. Morgan analysts, led by closely followed strategist Marko Kolanovic, in a Wednesday note.

That 1970s scenario was a topic of discussion in the second half of last year, but was discarded in favor of “Goldilocks-type” or “just-right” outcomes more recently, they said.

Archive: Why it’s wrong to compare today’s inflation surge to 1970s-style ‘stagflation’ (Oct. 26, 2021)

So what were the 1970s all about? Foremost was high inflation that came in three separate waves, with each timed in some way to geopolitical developments, the strategists observed.

Those included the Vietnam War, as well as wars and revolutions in the Middle East. The latter were accompanied by oil embargoes that resulted in energy crises and shipping disruptions. The stage was also set for rising government budget deficits.

That should all sound somewhat familiar to investors today, they said, noting that equity markets were essentially flat from 1967 to 1980 in nominal terms, while bonds and credit outperformed significantly (see chart below).


J.P. Morgan, Bloomberg Finance

“There are many similarities to the current times. We already had one wave of inflation, and questions started to appear whether a second wave can be avoided if policies and geopolitical developments stay on this course,” they wrote.

Also see: 1970s-style stagflation may be at risk of repeating itself, Deutsche Bank warns

The strategists see parallels between now and the 1970s geopolitical backdrop, noting three conflict zones: Eastern Europe, the Middle East and the South China Sea.

Related to those conflicts, investors have already witnessed one wave of an energy crisis and the world is enduring a current round of shipping disruptions in the Red Sea.

The biggest risk by far revolves around tensions or a trade war with China that could have a much bigger impact on the global economy and would trigger a second wave of inflation and a market selloff, they said.

Meanwhile, fiscal deficits aren’t on a sustainable path.

It could all be setting up a reversion of the dynamic that prevailed from the late 1980s to the 2000s, in which a “peace dividend” from the end of the Cold War gets undone, turning into a macro backdrop characterized by a “conflict tax” or “conflict inflation,” they said.

What would that mean for assets?

“If such a negative feedback loop were to take hold (as it did in the 1970s), investors would move out of equities and into fixed-income assets — i.e. seek to receive elevated yields that companies and governments need to pay to fund, rather than more elusive equity growth in a stagflationary regime,” wrote Kolanovic and company.

While stocks were flat from 1967 to 1980, bonds significantly outperformed with yields averaging above 7%, they noted — which meant that any yield pickup, such as that provided by private credit, would make a huge difference to long-term portfolio performance.

Investors don’t appear in the mood so far to revisit the 1970s. Stocks have rallied into 2024, with the S&P 500
SPX
passing the 5,000-point milestone while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA
has also scored a string of records.

Stocks were modestly lower Wednesday afternoon, maintaining losses as investors weighed the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s January policy meeting.

Stock Market Today: Dow Jones remains lower as investors weigh Fed minutes, await Nvidia results



Source link

Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

Recent posts

Related articles

DoorDash’s outlook is sinking its stock. But one analyst says it typically forecasts conservatively.

Food-delivery company DoorDash Inc. on Wednesday reported a worse-than-expected first-quarter loss amid signs of a slight slowdown...

Zillow forecasts slower second quarter, amid caution among first-time buyers and agents

Online real-estate listing service Zillow Group Inc. on Wednesday forecast second-quarter sales that were below expectations, as...

Trump might block — or allow — marijuana’s reclassification, but it’s a ‘close call’

While President Joe Biden’s re-election campaign is widely expected to get a lift from his administration’s push...

CVS’s stock suffers biggest drop in 15 years as Medicare Advantage issues weigh on results

Shares of CVS Health Corp. plunged Wednesday toward their biggest selloff in 15 years, after the pharmacy...

Marjorie Taylor Greene plans for vote next week on Speaker Mike Johnson’s ouster

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene on Wednesday said she’ll aim for a vote next week on her effort...

Norwegian Cruise’s stock falls after revenue missed, despite record bookings

Norwegian Cruise’s stock slumped Wednesday, after the cruise operator beat first-quarter profit expectations and raised its full-year...

MicroStrategy explains why bitcoin is better than stocks, bonds or gold

MicroStrategy Inc. is still a business-analytics software company, but executives spent a lot more time on the...

Why global gold demand marked its best first quarter in 8 years

Gold demand marked its strongest first quarter in eight years, buoyed by “healthy investment” from the over-the-counter...