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2023 may not be over yet, but with only a few weeks left, it appears to have been a great year to be an investor. Global equities are up about 15%, led by the S&P and Europe at +20%, followed by Japan at +13%, and the TSX at +7%. Remember that the TSX held up much better in 2022, so don’t fret too much. The news keeps getting better as bonds went up, too. Looking at the broad market ETFs, Canada is up 5%, while U.S. bonds are up 4%. The cherry on top, you also got paid to sit in cash somewhere in the 4%-5% range.
Despite all these healthy 2023 returns, we’ve noticed from our interactions with advisors and speaking at client events that investors seem a bit disgruntled. So why are investors not enthusiastic about what appears to be a pretty darn good year? It could be inflation makes people less happy or it could be all the recession talk. However, we think it is something even simpler. Despite the gains this year, it has just taken too damn long for markets to recover back to previous highs. Global equities, S&P, and TSX are all still below their previous highs reached at the end of 2021 or even longer for bonds back to 2020.
This is now the longest drought without all-time highs since the great financial crisis of 2008-09. Investors clearly expect better from their investments, likely a learned response from the “buy the dip” era. The “buy the dip” (BTD) mantra was steadily reinforced during the bull market from 2009 to 2020 and then reinforced with concrete plus rebar during the Covid market drop and recovery. The lesson was simple: if the market goes down, buy some. If it goes down more, buy more. Then sit back and wait a few weeks for prices to recover, wait a few more weeks, and new highs start to pile up. Easy-peasy.
Unfortunately, the BTD era may be over and not simply because it has been almost two years since equity markets made a new high. The BTD era was created thanks to a confluence of factors:
1. Following the 2008 credit recession, there was a disinflationary blanket on the economy, as consumers and banks reduced leverage. This created a lower-growth world with a greater risk of deflation vs inflation. This helped yields gradually move lower and allowed central banks to stimulate (quantitative easing) anytime the economy or market stubbed its toe.
2. Valuations at the start of the BTD dip era were very low, well below historical averages. Valuations often revert to the mean, and this provided an added steady positive influence on asset prices.
This created a market, both equities and bonds, that weakness proved very short-term as there were factors or stimuli that would mitigate any pain and speed the recovery along. It was a great time to be investing and an even better time if you enacted the BTD strategy.
The current market is certainly different. The disinflationary blanket that enabled central banks’ free stimulating ways is over. Inflation is now a thing again (just like before the BTD era). Central banks now have to balance price stability with economic growth. Speaking of economic growth, it too has started to become more volatile. Just look at negative GDP in Germany, Japan, and Canada, flat GDP in the U.K., and still strong GDP in the U.S. Plus, valuations are now more on the expensive side of historical averages.
The ingredients for the BTD era appear to be gone. It was fun. There is something else afoot, though: dispersion. The BTD era enjoyed less dispersion than normal. Dispersion across markets, across asset classes, across sectors, and across equities was lower. The simple explanation for this was that it was a more macro-driven market. The macro dominated performance, often dwarfing things like company fundamentals or valuations. That actually made investing easier, you just needed market exposure or beta. It didn’t matter as much how you got it.
The chart below shows the S&P 500 sector performance dispersion over time. Recessions or bear markets certainly make dispersion spike higher as defensive sectors hold up better than those that are more economically sensitive (usually). More importantly, looking at non-recession periods, current dispersion is much higher than before.
Now, you may be wondering why you should care about dispersion. It is evidence that the market is becoming more micro-driven. Company fundamentals are starting to matter more, leverage matters again, and how a company or investment can handle higher yields or inflation matters. From 2010-2020, it was more of a macro beta-driven market. Not saying the macro drivers are gone, but it would appear there is more of a balance between the macro and the micro. Just look at the dispersion in performance in 2023 among sectors for the S&P and TSX…it’s HUGE.
Don’t get us wrong, we are not saying buying into market weakness isn’t going to work or not enhance longer-term performance. But it may not be as quick a positive feedback experience as it has been over the previous decade. Nor are we saying the macro drivers are not still very impactful on performance. But the micro is starting to matter more again.
Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments Inc. and portfolio manager of several Purpose funds, including Purpose Tactical Thematic Fund.
Notes and disclaimer
Content copyright © 2023 by Purpose Investments Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part by any means without prior written permission is prohibited. This article first appeared on the “Market Ethos” page of the Purpose Investments’ website. Used with permission.
Charts are sourced from Bloomberg unless otherwise noted.
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