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Wally’s Monthly Update | August 2016 WALLY’S MONTHLY UPDATE Market valuation, the Fed’s success, and high stakes in November In this month’s letter we make the case for why the market can sustain higher valuations amidst an improving earnings picture and unattractive alternatives to stocks. We assess the Fed’s remarkable success following eight years of exceptional challenges. Finally, we briefly present the case for why the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), a widely respected think tank affiliated with the Economist magazine, assesses the potential implications of a Trump victory in November. Why the market can sustain elevated valuations The inevitable warnings have been voiced. It’s 1999 or 2007 all over again. Stocks are too expensive. The market is about to crash. You’ve heard it all before. While there are indeed some similarities with 1999, the year before the dotcom bubble began to violently unravel, 2016 is a very different world. Let’s start with the similarities. Broadly, there are two. For the first time since that year, all three US indexes (the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite Index) are at or near all-time highs. The second similarity is in the market’s relatively elevated valuations. Although nowhere near the foolish heights reached in late 1999 and early 2000, the market is indeed trading near its highest multiple in years. First, let us define what we mean by “valuation”. Although several multiples can be used to value a market, such as the Price-To-Sales, Price-To-Book, or Price-To-Cash Flow ratios, the most commonly used Wally MacDonell Portfolio Manager Tel: 1-844-241-9890 [email protected] valuation multiple is the Price-To-Earnings (PE) ratio. Even the PE ratio itself can be measured in several ways. Specifically, we can measure the price relative to lagging (i.e. last 12 months’) earnings, forward (next 12 months’) earnings, or the so-called CAPE (Cyclically Adjusted PE) ratio. The latter was developed by Professor Robert Schiller of Yale University and is designed to smooth out earnings volatility by dividing the market price by the average of the last ten years’ earnings. The idea of PE ratios is relatively simple. A dollar is a dollar. Over time investors’ willingness to pay for a dollar of earnings will fluctuate within a historical range. At the low end of the range, stocks will look cheap and thus be more likely to gain in the future, while the opposite will be the case at the high end of the range. Various studies have confirmed that the ten-year return following elevated multiples significantly lags that following cheap multiples. So where are we now? When looking at the CAPE and the lagging PE for the S&P 500, there is no question that ScotiaMcLeod®, a division of Scotia Capital Inc. www.macdonellgroup.ca ® Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia, used under license. ™Trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia, used under license. Scotia Wealth Management™ consists of a range of financial services provided by The Bank of Nova Scotia (Scotiabank ®); The Bank of Nova Scotia Trust Company (Scotiatrust ®); Private Investment Counsel, a service of 1832 Asset Management L.P.; 1832 Asset Management U.S. Inc.; Scotia Wealth Insurance Services Inc.; and ScotiaMcLeod ®, a division of Scotia Capital Inc. Wealth advisory and brokerage services are provided by ScotiaMcLeod, a division of Scotia Capital Inc. Scotia Capital Inc. is a member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund and the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada. Wally’s Monthly Update | August 2016 their values are above their respective historical longterm averages (see charts). But the forward PE ratio is more intriguing. By its very nature, it is forward looking, which is really what investors care about. But its main weakness is that it relies on analysts’ forecasts of future earnings and is therefore subject to analysts’ biases. That’s where the lagging PE comes in. It uses companies’ reported earnings. Given the volatility of earnings and the well-documented tendency of firms to manipulate their earnings in the short-term, the CAPE is a steady ratio not subject to such volatility or manipulation. S&P 500 Last 12-mos PE Ratio: has actually improved to 13.8% from 12.5%. Should this forecast hold, investors’ optimism would be validated. Moreover, a significant portion of the decline in earnings came from the energy sector. Other sectors, such as the consumer discretionary (14.3), industrials (13.0%), utilities (11.3%), and health care (6.3%) sectors were the profit growth leaders in the second quarter. By comparison, the energy sector is poised for an 86% decline in earnings growth. The strong earnings by US retailers bode well for the strength of the US economy and are a reflection of consumer confidence. The two sectors that have surprised to the upside the most are industrials and information technology, leading to an upward revision in earnings forecasts for both sectors. Strength in cyclical sectors like these is an encouraging sign for future earnings growth. In fact, industrial is one of three sectors (including health care and utilities) with second-quarter earnings growth that is better than consensus expectations on Jan. 1. S&P 500 CAPE Ratio: Source: www.multpl.com With the second quarter earnings season now nearly complete for the S&P 500 Index, earnings growth, while negative, is more than 3% ahead of initial expectations, according to S&P Capital IQ. Earnings are expected to decline by 2.1% from the second quarter of 2015. While this will be the fourth quarter in a row that the index posted a decline, the rate of decline has improved substantially from the –6.8% recorded in the first quarter. While earnings expectations have been adjusted lower from where they were at the beginning of the year, the growth rate for next year has actually increased as anticipated 2016 earnings have declined more than those for 2017. Calendar-year 2017 S&P 500 earnings per share (EPS) expectations have now declined to $132.80 from $141.26 at year-end 2015, but the 2017 EPS growth rate Investors clearly continue to display confidence in stocks, as evidenced by the triple record in the major US indexes despite the elevated valuation. The forward PE ratio is interesting at this time because of this improving earnings picture. The ratio has now declined slightly even as the market sets new highs. Another booster for optimism is the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), a key leading indicator for stocks. There are in fact two PMIs, one for services and one for manufacturers. Both continue to perform strongly, even when Europe and China are included with the US, despite a slight decline in July following the Brexit vote. This suggests that the global economy as a whole is healthier than many suspect and certainly nothing like the gloomy picture painted by shrill warnings emanating from the political silly season in the US. Wally’s Monthly Update | August 2016 fixed income assets) almost two years ago and raised interest rates for the first time in a decade last December, its policy stance remains highly accommodative. Source: S&P Capital IQ There is another very good reason why we believe the market can sustain elevated valuations for the time being, namely the condition of the bond market. Last month, we wrote that over $12 trillion worth of bonds were now offering negative yields. Since then, the figure has risen to $13.4 trillion, according to the Financial Times (FT). This is not a discrepancy in data as our source last month was also the FT. The addition of $1.4 trillion of bonds whose yields turned negative in 1 month is remarkable to put it mildly. We did say that we thought ultra-low bond yields were here to stay. Investors are left with little choice but to accept higher equity valuations as bond yields plow new depths. Wally’s Bottom Line Despite four quarters of negative earnings growth, the earnings picture is steadily improving in the United States, helping markets sustain higher valuations and alleviating concerns about an impending pullback. The bond market rally continues unabated, leaving yields near all-time lows and $13.4 trillion worth of negative yields. Inflation remains subdued in both the United States and Canada. Although some Fed officials have made some hawkish noises in recent days, the market still expects the central bank to stand pat at its September meeting. Has the Fed succeeded? Since the financial crisis of 2008 central banks around the world have shouldered most of the burden of stimulating the global economy. As the custodian of the world’s biggest economy, the US Federal Reserve has played a particularly critical role in this process. Even though the Fed completed its three rounds of quantitative easing (the creation of new money to buy Markets have therefore been anticipating the Fed’s next move on the path to interest rate normalization (i.e. bringing the Fed Policy Rate back towards its historical average). Fed officials have themselves sent mixed signals about the timing of the next move simply because the data upon which the Fed bases its decisions has itself been mixed. In recent days, no less than three Fed officials have hinted that a September rate hike is not off the table, although the consensus is still for no move in September. So it begs the question, has the Fed’s policy worked? The answer is not so straight forward, but on balance we think it has. The main purpose of accommodative central bank policy is to stimulate the economy by encouraging individuals and companies to spend rather than save. On that front, the Fed has succeeded in spurring personal consumption and to a lesser extent corporate spending. While sales at US retailers stalled in July, June sales were stronger than previously estimated. This follows a series of record setting retail sales figures throughout the year. Consumer confidence remains high according to the Conference Board’s Index, suggesting that consumption growth should continue its strength through the third quarter. The housing market also continues to show signs of strength. Commercial and industrial loans extended by US banks have consistently grown at double digits since May 2014. In the meantime, inflation remains subdued, a key factor that alleviates pressure on the Fed to normalize rates. Compared to the rest of the world, the US economy continues to be the most robust, consistently churning out healthy data and beating estimates. Job creation has surpassed expectations and wage growth has finally started to pick up. At the same time, financial markets have been on a tear. It is rare for both stocks and bonds to boom at the same time, as they have recently. On balance, the Fed can be judged to have succeeded in a hostile environment that started with the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, through the near-breakup of the Eurozone, increasing geopolitical turmoil in the Middle East, a belligerent Russia, widespread terror attacks around the world, a collapse in oil prices, and now Brexit and Trump. All in all not Wally’s Monthly Update | August 2016 bad after eight challenges. years of such unprecedented Unusually high stakes for the November election Notwithstanding the improving earnings picture and sustained investor optimism, there are risks that could derail the market. When valuations are elevated, markets tend to be more sensitive to disruptive events. One such potentially disruptive event, to put it mildly, would be a Trump victory in November. The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), a widely respected think tank affiliated with the Economist magazine, currently places such an eventuality tied for fifth place among the biggest risks facing the global economy at this time. The EIU ranks the risks based on both the severity and the probability of the risk. A Trump victory is down to fifth from the second place it held in June only because the probability has declined. Make no mistake, a Trump victory would very likely be a disruptive event for the global economy and financial markets. We will let the words of the EIU speak for themselves: “Trump has given very few details of his policies - and these tend to be prone to constant revision - but a few themes have become apparent. First, he has been exceptionally hostile towards free trade, including notably NAFTA, and has repeatedly labelled China as a "currency manipulator". He has also taken an exceptionally punitive stance on the Middle East and jihadi terrorism, including, among other things, advocating the killing of families of terrorists and launching a land incursion into Syria to wipe out IS (and acquire its oil). In the event of a Trump victory, his hostile attitude to free trade, and alienation of Mexico and China in particular, could escalate rapidly into a trade war. At the least it would scupper the Trans-Pacific Partnership between the US and 11 other American and Asian states signed in February 2016. His militaristic tendencies towards the Middle East (and proposed ban on all Muslim travel to the US) would be a potent recruitment tool for jihadi groups, increasing their threat both within the region and beyond, while his vocal scepticism towards NATO would weaken efforts to contain Russia's expansionist tendencies. Elsewhere, and arguably even more alarmingly, his stated indifference towards nuclear proliferation in Asia raises the prospect of a nuclear arms race in the world's most heavily populated continent. Although we do not expect Trump to defeat Hillary Clinton, there are risks to this forecast, especially in the event of a terrorist attack on US soil or a sudden economic downturn”. Clinton has largely followed the edict that when your opponent is busy self-destructing, do not get in the way. Polls show her comfortably ahead both nationally and in key battleground states. Two and a half months however is an eternity in politics. Like everyone else, we will closely follow developments in this unique election cycle and act as necessary to adjust our positions. We obviously do not take a political position on these pages. In an objective sense, we do view a Clinton victory as clearing up a lot of uncertainty and anticipation that currently resides within investors. Should she in fact win the election, and especially if the Democrats win back the Senate, we could see progress on a number of stalled initiatives such as infrastructure spending, development of renewable energy, and the ratification of the TPP (notwithstanding Clinton’s current stated opposition to the treaty). All of those would be economically stimulative and should help push financial markets higher. This publication has been prepared by an advisor of ScotiaMcLeod, a division of Scotia Capital Inc. (SCI). This publication is intended as a general source of information and should not be considered as personal investment or tax advice. We are not tax advisors and we recommend that individuals consult with their professional tax advisor before taking any action based upon the information found in this publication. Opinions, estimates, and projections contained herein are our own as of the date hereof and are subject to change without notice. The information and opinions contained herein have been compiled or arrived at from sources believed reliable but no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to their accuracy or completeness. Neither SCI nor its affiliates accepts liability whatsoever for any loss arising from any use of this publication or its contents. This publication is not, and is not to be construed as, an offer to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy any securities and/or commodity futures contracts. 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