Investment Outlook – July 2024
INTRODUCTION Investor risk appetite should remain strong as central banks ease policy in response to lower inflation. Broadly speaking,...
Corporate fundamentals have been deteriorating in the US. Over the past six months we have seen meaningful erosion in profit margins, pricing power and the outlook for credit. The dropoff has been particularly steep in manufacturing industries. Our conclusion is based on work done by our analysts who closely follow the financials of more than two dozen industries as well as from our top-down macro research.
The US economy has been slowing, as one might expect in the late stages of an economic cycle. Signs indicating financial markets are concerned about that slowdown have not been hard to spot. The price of copper, a commodity tightly tied to the economic outlook, has fallen sharply. Yields on 10-year Treasurys have declined below yields on two-year Treasurys. And the stock market, as measured by the S&P 500, had its worst first half since 1970.
In our view, the market’s concerns are well-founded. The slowdown is real and we expect it to continue. Even so, we believe that corporations are in a good position to weather a downturn. Credit fundamentals will likely weaken but we do not expect them to break down or reach crisis levels.
Our view rests on a few key foundations:
It is worth pointing out again that while we have a relatively sanguine view of corporate health, we do see weakening ahead. We think conditions will likely get worse, but we anticipate a steady drift lower rather than a collapse. In our view, fundamentals will descend via the stairs, not the elevator.
Corporations came into this phase of the cycle with considerable strengths—high profits and manageable leverage—and will likely benefit from diminishing costs pressures. Together those elements could limit any damage the slowdown might bring.
By Craig Burelle, Senior Macro Strategies Research Analyst
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