Insights
Equity Market Commentary - December 2023
|
Takeaways & Key Expectations
|
• |
December 12, 2023
|
Equity Market Commentary - December 2023 |
A few lessons from 2023.
If you are receiving this directly, thank you. That means you have invested in either our SMAs or mutual funds.
However, over those 93 years, the market produced two consecutive down years 11 times.2 That means being bearish after a negative year for the S&P 500 has only produced a 12% success rate.
Bears usually sound more intelligent on the surface, but in reality, the market has gone up most of the time. Simply put, I/we believe an optimistic bias is just plain smarter, especially after a down year.
Had you invested in the S&P once it breached that -25% decline every one of these 8 times, your subsequent return over the next 1-year averaged +22%.4 That’s more than double the historical annual returns for equities. Buying during these times when there was “blood on Wall Street” has proven to be an excellent strategy.
Of course, in October 2022, nobody knew what the 1-year return from the most recent -25% decline would be.
Now we do.
Over the next 12 months, off the 2022 -25% decline, the S&P 500 returned +20%.5 Pretty darn close to what has happened in the past, I would say.
This is yet another reminder to become more bullish when stocks swoon, not more bearish.
We like to follow the bottom-up numbers.
Here’s why:
Companies “guide” the analysts to estimates based on what they see in their businesses. If business strengthens, companies might “suggest” analysts increase their numbers, and the reverse if companies see weakness.
The bearish top-down narrative coming into 2023 was that the S&P 500 was going to earn $190-$200.6 A big down year to follow the $220 of earnings in 2022.
Yet companies never confirmed this thesis. Bottom-up estimates have remained solidly steady in the $220-$230 range all year.7 Overall, companies never supported the weakening economy scenario coming out of Wall Street.
Listen to what companies say.
Here is an example of what I mean.
We have heard all year that the magnificent 7 stocks are “expensive” relative to the rest of the market. According to whom?
Here is the reality:
Since the start of the year, the analysts who follow those 7 companies have collectively been forced to raise their earnings projections for the year by nearly 15%.8 In essence, the “E” estimate for the 7 companies has consistently been way too low. Hence, the P/Es have looked higher than reality.
This is not an endorsement of only those 7 stocks. It’s a reminder that stock prices embed future expectations, and if those expectations are raised, stocks tend to go up. If expectations are lowered, stocks usually go down. That is why the magnificent 7 have surprised so many this year.
Do not take somebody’s estimates as gospel. Watch the trends.
They became the hot product.
In my opinion, whatever is the hot product rarely works the next 12 months. In 2021 uber-growth strategies became the rage… and a complete bust in 2022. Does anyone remember when MLPs were the rage? And then oil prices collapsed…
As Bloomberg goes on to point out, dividend products have performed very poorly this year as rates have risen.
(By the way, the hot product this year? Money market funds. More on that to come in our 2024 Outlook.)
Energy was the best performing sector in 2022, and it has been one of the worst this year.10
Never get too bullish or too bearish on energy stocks.
A bank’s solvency is not always determined by the quality of its assets relative to its liabilities. Solvency is ultimately determined by the confidence of its depositors.
SVB Financial invested almost exclusively in AAA US Treasuries/Government mortgages. Yet through social media, a few well known depositors set off a panic untethered, in our opinion, to the reality of SVB Financial’s asset portfolio.
The balance sheet is not the sole determinant of a company’s viability. (This is a scar I will carry for a long time.)
While it’s always more fun to look ahead, it’s important to take a step back and review what we learned from the year prior to turning the page. Both the good and the painful lessons.
After such a surprisingly fruitful year in the equity market for 2023, we hope everyone has a chance to enjoy the holidays with their families and friends.
As always, a sincere thank you for your investment in Applied Equity Team’s strategies. Without that, our team would not exist.
Please listen to our 2024 market outlook webcast on Wednesday, January 17th at 11am EST. The “elves” of AEA are working up plenty of new (and hopefully provocative) charts and tables.
Andrew
|
Head of Applied Equity Advisors Team
Applied Equity Advisors Team
|