16 May 2024

After Rough Quarter, Investors Buckle Up

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Investors are bracing for more large price swings across stocks, bonds and commodities heading into a month that is associated with market tumult. Stocks rose Wednesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average adding 1.5%. The gains ended a third quarter that included the largest percentage declines for U.S. stock indexes and the most volatility since 2011, reflecting concerns about the pace of growth in China and elsewhere around the globe.

Many investors said the U.S. economy is expanding steadily and that stocks are likely to recover in coming months, as they have from past retreats during a six-year-long stock rally. Few are expecting a repeat of October swoons in 1929, 1987 or 2008. But two factors are giving some analysts and traders pause and likely leading to further market swings: Wall Street analysts expect quarterly corporate earnings will decline for the second quarter in a row for the first time since the financial crisis, and financing conditions are tightening in corporate-bond markets.

Together, the factors are causing stock investors who previously snapped up shares at the first sign of a market wide pullback to boost cash balances and wait for further declines. Some said they are worried about valuations that remain high by historical standards, while others are waiting to see if turbulence in the bond market and many emerging markets will subside.

For the quarter, the S&P 500 fell 6.9%, the Dow industrials dropped 7.6% and the Nasdaq Composite Index declined 7.4%. That is the largest percentage falloff since the third quarter of 2011, when the European debt crisis roiled financial markets. Despite the decline in stock prices, many analysts don’t see stocks as a buy. Some are cutting earnings expectations, adding to concerns about valuations.

Profits for S&P 500 companies slipped 0.7% in the second quarter compared with the year-ago period, marking the first decline since the third quarter of 2012, according to FactSet. Profits are expected to fall 4.9% in the third quarter, which would be the first time since 2009 that earnings fell two quarters in a row.

While the S&P 500 has fallen more than 5% since the end of July, the S&P trades at 16.7 times the past 12 months of earnings, compared with its 10-year average of 15.7, according to FactSet. In early August, before the S&P 500 fell into correction territory—a loss of 10% or more from a recent peak—the S&P 500 traded at 18.2 times the past year of earnings.

Many analysts said other signals of a U.S. recession haven’t materialized. They still expect the U.S. economy to expand at a modest but healthy 2.5% annual rate this year and point out that unemployment is at its lowest levels since early 2008. Consumer spending, a major growth driver, is picking up.

Growth stocks—shares of companies that tend to reinvest earnings into expanding the business instead of paying dividends—are also faring better than the broader market, suggesting many investors still believe the economy will accelerate.

Bond investors in recent months have demanded higher yields relative to Treasurys to own highly rated U.S. corporate debt, indicating some worry about companies’ ability to repay. This week, some companies canceled bond sales, including the U.S. arm of Spanish bank Banco Santander SA and shopping-center company CBL & Associates Properties Inc. Hewlett-Packard Co. sold $14.6 billion of bonds on Wednesday, one of the biggest debt offerings this year, according to S&P Capital IQ LCD.

Prices have dropped more sharply in the market for junk bonds, those issued by lower-rated firms. Junk-bond trends in the past have served as a leading indicator for broader economic conditions and stock-market performance.

These companies carry more debt and have less financial leeway to withstand an economic downturn. That makes the gap in yield between these bonds and comparable U.S. Treasurys a widely watched metric of corporate financial health that tends to foreshadow declines in the stock markets. On Tuesday, it shot up to 6.34 percentage points, the highest level since 2012, according to Barclays PLC data.

The extra yield investors demand to hold high-grade European corporate debt over government bonds has jumped to its biggest level since July 2013, at 1.48 percentage points, according to Barclays data.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal.

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