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Weekly Market Recap – August 11, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Stocks were mixed and bonds were mostly lower last week despite July inflation data that came in close to expectations:

* Headline CPI was +0.2% m/m and +3.2% y/y (slightly below consensus of +3.3%)

* Core CPI was +0.2% m/m and +4.7% y/y (in line with consensus)

* Headline PPI was +0.3% m/m and +0.8% y/y (10bp above consensus on both)

* Core PPI was +0.3% m/m and +2.4% y/y (also 10bp above consensus on both)

In addition, Friday’s preliminary August release of the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment survey showed a 10bp decline in 1-year forward inflation expectations, from 3.4% to 3.3%, while longer term (5-10 year) expectations also declined by 10bp, from 3.0% to 2.9%.

Despite the relatively encouraging inflation outlook, US Treasury yields continue to be pulled higher by a combination of domestic supply technicals and the potential for shifting relative value versus Japanese Government Bonds (JGB’s) as the Bank of Japan relaxes its long-held policy of yield curve control. Yields moved higher across the curve last week as a result, sending most bond prices lower.

Stocks finished mixed against this backdrop. Idiosyncratic winners included energy stocks, which have been lifted by the rising tide in oil and gas prices over the past six weeks, and a handful of healthcare names (particularly Eli Lilly) that were the beneficiary of investor enthusiasm regarding the mass market potential of new weight-loss drugs. On the other side of the ledger, most technology stocks were lower on the week as rising rates impacted P/E multiples for longer-dated growth companies.

Chart of the Week: CPI Breakdown (y/y change)

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy showed resilience in the first half of 2023, and Wall Street analysts expect full-year corporate earnings to be roughly flat y/y. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in the second half of 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 due to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets now imply that the Fed Funds overnight interest rate will remain unchanged at 5.25-5.50% until at least March of next year.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – August 4, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Last week Fitch Ratings became the second credit rating agency to downgrade the sovereign rating of the United States one notch from AAA to AA+ (the first was S&P in 2011). While arguably of no real concern in terms of a direct impact on US borrowing costs, this move did dampen sentiment and may have contributed to lower stock and bond prices.

Meanwhile, the Treasury yield curve steepened last week due to a combination of supply technicals and macroeconomic data. At the front end of the curve, rates were lower on the week after dropping significantly on Friday thanks to a soft(ish) nonfarm payroll report. Futures markets discounted the probability of another rate hike this year, while 1y Treasury yields fell 8bp and 2y yields dropped 9bp.

Conversely, rates rose in the belly and long end of the curve thanks to the announcement of greater-than-expected supply of new borrowing from the US Treasury, which in turn contributed to P/E multiple compression, sending stock prices lower.

The most significant macro data last week was the monthly nonfarm payroll report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While unemployment remains near historic lows, the report was slightly softer than expected on balance:

* Change in nonfarm payrolls = +187k vs. consensus of +200k (net 2m revision -49k)

* U-3 Unemployment = 3.5% vs. previous month 3.6%

* U-6 Underemployment = 6.7% vs. previous month 6.9%

* Average hourly earnings = +0.4% m/m (prior month was also +0.4%)

* Average weekly hours = 34.3 (down 0.1 from prior month of 34.4)

Chart of the Week: Monthly Nonfarm Payrolls Added

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy showed resilience in the first half of 2023, and Wall Street analysts expect full-year corporate earnings to be roughly flat y/y. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in the second half of 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 due to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets now imply that the Fed Funds overnight interest rate will remain unchanged at 5.25-5.50% until at least March of next year.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – July 28, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Last week’s main event was the July FOMC meeting, at which the committee raised overnight interest rates by 25bp, to a target range of 5.25% to 5.50%. The accompanying statement was little changed from the previous meeting, although the committee did upgrade its assessment of current US economic growth from “modest” to “moderate”. Fed Chair Jerome Powell maintained a hawkish tone in the ensuing press conference, reiterating that monetary policy would need to remain restrictive for some time in order to bring inflation down to the committee’s 2% target.

Rates moved slightly higher across the curve in response to the fresh round of hawkish commentary, and the odds of yet another 25bp rate hike prior to year-end increased a bit in futures markets. Meanwhile, the market now foresees no rate cuts prior to March of next year.

Equities remained surprisingly buoyant despite the melt-up in rates, perhaps driven by encouraging macro data that raised hopes for a soft landing. The first estimate of Q2 GDP growth came in at +2.4% annualized, showing sequential acceleration in the economy that exceeded consensus estimates. Meanwhile core CPE fell to +3.8% annualized in the quarter, consistent with higher frequency inflation data that has been released in recent months. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence index also rose sharply for the second month in a row, hitting a 2-year high at 117.0 in June.

Tech company earnings have also helped to pull the market higher of late, and last week was no exception. META (fka Facebook) rose 10% on the week after released a better-than-expected earnings and revenue growth, driving significant outperformance in the Comms sector and the Nasdaq.

Chart of the Week: Fed Funds Lower Bound Vs. Core Inflation (PCE y/y)

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy showed resilience in the first half of 2023, and Wall Street analysts expect full-year corporate earnings to be roughly flat y/y. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in the second half of 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19.4x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 due to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets now imply that the Fed Funds overnight interest rate will remain unchanged at 5.25-5.50% until at least March of next year.

Inflation

-After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – July 21, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Equities were mixed last week: rate-sensitive sectors (growth and real estate) struggled while shorter-duration, higher dividend-paying sectors (cyclicals and defensives) outperformed. Small and midcaps also outperformed thanks to their less growth-heavy sector weightings.

Normally one might expect that kind of returns distribution to be driven by rising rates, and at the front end of the curve that was certainly the case. In particular, an unexpected fall in weekly initial jobless claims at 228k (consensus =240k; prior week = 237k) pushed short rates higher and increased the odds that the Fed may still have two more rate hikes to go before year-end.

However, yields in the belly of the Treasury curve hardly budged, and long bond yields actually finished the week slightly lower, keeping the US Aggregate index flat on the week. Credit spreads continued their slow grind tighter, pushing corporate bonds prices up a bit.

Away from jobless claims, other economic news last week was mixed. Housing starts and residential building permits both eased back to 1.4mn annualized in June after a sharp rebound on May, but directionally it still appears that housing activity is on the upswing after hitting a trough around the end of 2022. And finally, the Conference Board’s US Leading Economic Index (LEI) fell sequentially for the 15th month in a row, and is at y/y levels that in the past have only been associated with imminent or in-progress recessions (see the Chart of the Week for a 60-year time series).

Chart of the Week: Conference Board US Leading Economic Index (LEI) – Y/Y Change

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy showed resilience in the first half of 2023, and Wall Street analysts expect full-year corporate earnings to be roughly flat y/y. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in the second half of 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19.5x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 due to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets are currently pricing 1-2 additional 25bp rate hikes over the summer, with no rate cuts expected before year-end.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – July 14, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Better-than-expected inflation data drove rates lower across most of the curve last week, which in turn facilitated P/E multiple expansion and sent stocks higher.

The party got started in earnest on Tuesday, when core and headline CPI both came in below expectations for the month of June. Closely watched core CPI was just +0.2% m/m and fell to +4.8% y/y, while headline CPI also printed at +0.2% m/m and dropped to +3.0% y/y thanks to much lower energy prices relative to this time last year. See the Chart of the Week for a time series of the y/y change in core and headline CPI.

Further upstream, PPI printed at +0.1% m/m across the board (headline, core, and ex trade), with headline PPI nearly entering outright deflation territory for the first time since 2020 at just +0.1% on a y/y basis as well.

The inflation news sent rates lower across the curve, and the likelihood of a second additional rate hike before year-end flipped from odds-on to odds-off (a single 25bp hike at the July meeting appears all but assured at this point).

P/E multiples flexed up on falling discount rates, pushing most US equity benchmarks higher by 2-3% with duration-sensitive growth sectors outperforming. International stocks also outperformed, but continue to lag the US on a YTD basis.

Chart of the Week: Headline and Core CPI (y/y change)

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy showed resilience in the first half of 2023, and Wall Street analysts expect full-year corporate earnings to be roughly flat y/y. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in the second half of 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 due to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets are currently pricing 1-2 additional 25bp rate hikes over the summer, with no rate cuts expected before year-end.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – July 7, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Last week was a tough one for stocks and bonds alike, as resilient labor market data lent support to the Fed’s “higher for longer” interest rate road map:

  • JOLTS job openings remained historically elevated at 9.8 million
  • ADP employment change nearly doubled m/m at 497k for May
  • Nonfarm payroll growth of 209k in June was the 30th straight month over 200k
  • U-3 unemployment fell 10bp to 3.6%
  • Average hourly earning growth accelerated to +0.4% m/m and +4.4% y/y

Minutes from the June FOMC meeting were also released last week, and painted a picture of a less unified committee than the unanimous decision to pause might have suggested. Some committee members had advocated for raising rates by another 25bp, specifically because of the historically tight labor market.

The combination of somewhat hawkish meeting minutes and the ensuing strong labor market data has convinced most investors that another 25bp rate hike is coming at the FOMC meeting later this month. Meanwhile, the belly and long end of the Treasury curve shifted higher by ~20bp as investors recalibrated their longer term inflation and interest rate expectations, pushing the entire curve above 4% for the first time since October/November of last year.

The incrementally more hawkish outlook for monetary policy pushed equity prices lower as well. The selling was broad-based across sectors, market caps, and geographies, with most US and global benchmarks down 1-2% on the week.

Chart of the Week: Nonfarm Payrolls Added

Albion’s “Four Pillars”:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy showed resilience in the first half of 2023, and Wall Street analysts expect full-year corporate earnings to be roughly flat y/y. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in the second half of 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 due to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets are currently pricing 1-2 additional 25bp rate hikes over the summer, with no rate cuts expected before year-end.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – June 23, 2023

Weekly Recap:

Stocks moved lower last week on a cocktail of soft economic data and a reminder from Jerome Powell that the Fed is not done raising interest rates. On the latter point, Powell testified before the US Senate Banking Committee that “it will be appropriate to raise rates again this year, and perhaps twice.” Fed fund futures have not yet bought into the notion of multiple additional rate hikes this year, but are now taking Powell at his word that there will be one more, and the no rate cuts will occur until at least early 2024.

Macro data was mostly weaker last week, with one exception: housing. Residential building permits rose to nearly 1.5 million, while housing starts jumped to more than 1.6 million, with significant increases in both single-unit and multi-family. Absent a recession, it increasingly appears that the cyclical trough in US housing activity may have occurred around the start of this year.

Otherwise, macro data released last week was not encouraging. Initial jobless claims printed at 264k, pulling the 4-week moving average above 250k for the first time since November of 2021. Meanwhile, S&P Global’s US Composite PMI slipped sequentially in the preliminary June reading, with m/m declines in the manufacturing and services components. And finally, the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index (LEI) fell sequentially for the 14th consecutive month.

The consequence of all this was a broad-based pullback in US stocks, with cyclical sectors (industrials, materials, financials, and energy) all underperforming as the nearterm direction of the economy became the primary concern.

Chart of the Week: Conference Board LEI (y/y change)

Albion’s Four Pillars:

Economy & Earnings

The US economy enjoyed a strong second half of 2022, but growth has slowed in early 2023 and corporate operating margins have fallen as labor and input cost pressures bite. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 19x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a mild headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 in response to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets are currently pricing one additional 25bp rate hike over the summer, with no rate cuts expected before year-end.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – June 16, 2023

Weekly Recap

Last week’s headline event was undoubtedly the FOMC meeting, and for the first time in 15 months the Fed kept overnight interest rates unchanged. While this outcome was widely anticipated, investors were keen to hear from Jerome Powell as to the likely forward path of monetary policy. His commentary was decidedly hawkish, as was the updated Summary of Economic Projections which showed that multiple additional rate hikes are still possible. Powell was also quite firm in his pronouncement that no rate cuts would be forthcoming later this year.

The Fed’s “hawkish pause” did little to dent the market’s enthusiasm, however, as stocks rose yet again. The S&P 500 finished higher for the 5th week in a row, and has officially entered bull market territory after rising more than 23% from the October 2022 lows. Relatively benign inflation data may have helped. Headline CPI fell to 4.0% y/y while core CPI dropped 20bp to 5.3% y/y, and PPI (final demand) fell to just 1.1% y/y. Meanwhile, the University of Michigan’s gauge of 1y forward inflation expectations fell 90bp to 3.3%, a clear sign that consumers are starting to view inflation as less of a near term risk.

Bond markets reacted to Fed day with a twist, as short yields rose while longer yields fell. Fed Funds Futures markets are pricing better than even odds of a rate hike at the July meeting (Jerome Powell inadvertently said “skip” to describe the June meeting, and then quickly corrected himself), and for the first time futures are now pricing in no rate cuts before year-end. In the game of “rate cut chicken” between the Fed and futures markets, it appears that the Fed has finally won.

Chart of the Week: Fed Fund Target Rate – Lower Bound

Albion’s “Four Pillars”

Economy & Earnings

The US economy enjoyed a strong second half of 2022, but growth has slowed in early 2023 and corporate operating margins have fallen as labor and input cost pressures bite. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 18x is above the long run average, so valuation could be a mild headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 in response to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets are currently pricing one additional 25bp rate hike over the summer, with no rate cuts expected before year-end.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – June 2, 2023

Weekly Recap

Stocks and bonds rallied in unison last week as the US debt ceiling drama was resolved without a government default. Unlike the prior week, where gains were limited to a relative handful of A/I and chip-related stocks, last week’s move higher in stocks was broad based. All sectors in the S&P 500 finished in the green, with cyclicals and growth stocks leading the way while staples lagged the rally a bit.

Bonds rallied too, as whatever default premium had been baked into Treasury yields was quickly removed by investors. Public commentary from Fed officials favoring a June pause was also helpful, driving the odds of a 25bp hike next week from 70% at the end of the prior week to just 30% by Friday’s close. Credit spreads finished modestly tighter as well.

On the economic front, the main message from incoming data was that labor markets remain strong. JOLTS job openings reversed a recent trend towards normalization with a print of 10.1 million, ADP employment significantly exceeded expectations, and jobless claims were steady.

Meanwhile, the monthly jobs report from the BLS showed strong payroll gains, but also a modest uptick in the unemployment rate, a sequential decline in hours worked, and mild deceleration in the rise in average hourly earnings:

  • Change in Nonfarm Payrolls = +339k (cons. est. +195k)
  • Unemployment rate = 3.7% (prior month = 3.4%)
  • Average weekly hours = 34.3 (prior month = 34.4)
  • Average hourly earnings = +4.3% y/y (prior month = +4.4% y/y)
Chart of the Week: Monthly Nonfarm Payrolls Added

Albion’s “Four Pillars”

Economy & Earnings

The US economy enjoyed a strong second half of 2022, but growth has slowed in early 2023 and corporate operating margins have fallen as labor and input cost pressures bite. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 18x is above the long run average, suggesting that valuation could be a mild headwind to future returns. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be in the mid-single digits.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 in response to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slower than hoped. Futures markets are currently pricing one additional 25bp rate hike over the summer, with the possibility of rate cuts near the end of the year.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.

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Weekly Market Recap – May 26, 2023

Weekly Recap

Last week saw a concentrated rally in technology stocks after GPU manufacturer Nvidia provided an updated forecast for revenue growth that far exceeded analysts’ expectations. In particular, any stock that investors believed to be A/I- or semiconductor-related saw strong buying pressure. Meanwhile, most other companies and sectors finished the week lower despite slow-but-steady progress towards a debt ceiling deal over the course of the week.

Macro data was a bit less cooperative, however, particularly on the inflation front as the PCE Deflator came in higher than expected in freshly released April data:

  • Headline PCE m/m = +0.4% (+0.3% cons est; +0.1% prior month)
  • Headline PCE y/y = +4.4% (+4.3% cons est; +4.2% prior month)
  • Core PCE m/m = +0.4% (+0.3% cons est; +0.3% prior month)
  • Core PCE y/y = +4.7% (+4.6% cons est; +4.6% prior month)

Stubborn inflation sent rates higher on the week, particularly in the front end as investors priced in one additional 25bp rate hike over the summer. Futures markets are fairly evenly split as to whether that hike will occur at the June or July meeting, while expectations of rate cuts in the back half of the year are gradually waning.

Other macro data released last week mostly suggested a resilient economy. Personal incomes and spending rose more than expected in April, as did durable goods orders. In addition, there was a modest rebound in the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment gauge, with assessment of current conditions improving while consumers’ near and longer-term inflation expectations fell.

Chart of the Week: Core PCE Deflator (y/y change)

Albion’s “Four Pillars”

Economy & Earnings

The US economy enjoyed a strong second half of 2022, but growth has slowed in early 2023 and corporate operating margins have been gradually falling as labor and input cost pressures bite. Albion’s base case expectation is that the US economy will enter recession in 2023, putting downside pressure on earnings.

Valuation

The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 18x is above the long run average. More predictive metrics like CAPE, Tobin’s Q, and the Buffett Indicator (Mkt Cap / GDP) suggest that compound annual returns over the next decade are likely to be below the long-run historical average.

Interest Rates

Rates rose dramatically in 2022 in response to a sharp pivot in monetary policy, and have remained elevated so far in 2023 as progress on inflation has been slow. Futures markets are currently pricing one additional 25bp rate hike over the summer, with the possibility of rate cuts in the back half of the year.

Inflation

After reaching 40yr highs in spring of 2022, inflation has moderated somewhat over the past 12 months. Goods inflation has fallen due to softening demand and excess inventory, while services inflation remains elevated, in part due to shelter costs which are somewhat lagged.