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Wall St Week Ahead

As earnings loom, investors weigh recession resilience

Sunday, 9 July 2023


NEW YORK, July 8 (Reuters): As second-quarter earnings approach, investors are looking at beaten-down sectors which might gain ground regardless of whether the US economy falls into recession this year.
While the benchmark S&P 500 has gained nearly 15 per cent year-to-date driven by a handful of megacap growth and technology names, some sectors have lagged, including the S&P 500 healthcare, which is down 4.7 per cent. The financials sector is down 2 per cent, while energy is nearly 9 per cent lower.
These unloved sectors are growing attractive to investors increasingly torn over whether a long-feared US recession will ever materialize.
Global fund managers increased their allocations to healthcare and banks by about 5 percentage points in June, while cutting holdings of popular recession plays such as cash and consumer staples companies, BofA Global said.
Large asset managers such as BlackRock and Wells Fargo highlighted healthcare as a favored sector in their recent outlooks for the rest of the year.
Some large banks have improved their US economic outlooks, with Goldman Sachs cutting the chance of a recession within the next 12 months to 25 per cent from 35 per cent. The Commerce Department, meanwhile, increased its estimate for first-quarter Gross Domestic Product growth to an 2 per cent annualized rate from its initial 1.3 per cent estimate.
Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist for LPL Financial noted a "tug of war" in the market over the likelihood of a recession.
"But until we hear from companies that they are cutting their labor force, then we think that we will not have a dire earnings season and some of these lagging sectors will become more favorable," she said.
The US economy added the fewest jobs in 2-1/2 years in June, but persistently strong wage growth pointed to still-tight labor market conditions, new data on Friday showed, all but ensuring the Federal Reserve will resume raising interest rates later this month.
That will likely continue to weigh on stocks overall as borrowing costs increase. Overall, earnings in the S&P 500 are expected to fall 5.7 per cent in the second quarter, largely due to declining margins, Refintiv data showed.
Despite that dim picture, "cheap" valuations and stable healthcare earnings make the sector increasingly attractive to invest in if the economy does slow in the second half, said Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist for Wells Fargo Investment Institute.