Stocks usually do well after the midterms. Not this time, forecasts BlackRock

Stocks usually do well after the midterms. Not this time, forecasts BlackRock

Posted on

So much for the safety of the tech behemoths, those supposedly friendly giants who may be relatively richly valued but you could still count on to buttress your portfolio.

Poorly received results from the likes of Meta
META,
Alphabet
GOOG,
Microsoft
MSFT
and Amazon
AMZN
et al saw nearly $1 trillion at one point chopped of the big tech valuations this week, according to the FT.

Forlorn equity investors have seen TINA turn to TIN. From There Is No Alternative to stocks, we now seemingly have There Is Nobody you can rely on.

But at least with the U.S. midterm elections fast approaching on Nov. 8, surely we have the politicians to help us. Well, not this time says the team of analysts at BlackRock led by Wei Li, global chief investment strategist.

Stocks tend to do well after the U.S. midterms, they note, because gridlock is a common result, and this prevents policy changes that could rattle the market.

However: “We see a bigger problem for stocks than any potential positives from the midterm election outcome: a looming recession. We have argued how central banks rushing to hike policy rates to get inflation back to target would need to crush interest rate-sensitive parts of the economy first,” says BlackRock’s team.

They point to clear signs of damage already inflicted on housing, for example.

“As mortgage rates soar along with the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes, the number of
new housing starts is falling quickly. The slide in housing starts this year (see
orange line in the chart below) is already steeper than past mega Fed rate-hike
cycles such as in the 1970s and early 1980s – as well as the unwind of the mid2000s U.S. housing boom (other colored lines),” they write in a note published this week.


Source: BlackRock

Any fiscal stimulus that may follow the midterms could be counterproductive for markets, BlackRock reckons, because it would operate at cross purposes to the Federal Reserve’s battle against inflation. It would come as debt levels are high and interest rates are rising, a combination that may revive the bond market vigilantes, just like it did recently in the U.K.

BlackRock says that following the midterms the political focus will shift to the economy, and in particular lawmakers will start to express that they see greater danger in the Fed’s tightening than they do in the impact of inflation.

“We see the politics of rates creeping into the politicization of everything with more voices beginning to decry the aggressive rise in interest rates that is causing recession. We see the Fed stopping its hikes amid the economic damage and pressure to ease up on tightening, but price pressures will persist. That’s why we think it will eventually have to live with some inflation,” says BlackRock.

Still, the Fed will only pause “only after the economic damage of rate rises is clear. All this outweighs any expected boost for stocks after the midterms, in our view…We’re underweight developed market equities,” BlackRock concludes.

Markets

S&P 500 futures
ES00
were down 0.7% to 3792 and Nasdaq 100 futures
NQ00
fell 1.2% to 11098 as disappointing corporate earnings weighed on sentiment. The 10-year Treasury yield
BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
rose 8 basis points to 4.004%. Concerns about more COVID-19 shutdowns in China pushed U.S. crude oil futures
CL
down 1.3% to $87.90 a barrel.

The buzz

Amazon stock
AMZN
is down about 14% in premarket action and in line to trade at its lowest level since April 2020 after the company forecast weak holiday sales following Thursday’s closing bell.

Apple shares
AAPL
are inching up 1% or so after its post-close results contained no shockers, though it did warn it was facing headwinds from a strong U.S. dollar
DXY.

Big oil dominates the earnings calendar on Friday, with Chevron
CVX
and Exxon Mobil
XOM
presenting their figures. Chevron topped earnings estimates.

Elon Musk has finalized his $44 billion purchase of Twitter. According to reports he has swiftly fired CEO Parag Agrawal and will take over the role on an interim basis. Tesla shares
TSLA
are down 1% before the opening bell.

The euro
EURUSD
traded back below parity with the dollar after the European Central Bank on Thursday suggested the pace of future rate rises would likely slow. The buck also gained against the pound
GBPUSD
as traders waited for next Wednesday’s Federal Reserve decision on interest rates.

With that in mind there’s a big batch of data coming on Friday, which may color the Fed’s thinking. Arguably the most important is the bunch of personal consumption expenditure, or PCE, figures for September, due at 8:30 a.m. Eastern. At the same time the employment cost index for the third quarter will be published and the September real disposable income and real consumer spending reports.

Then at 10 a.m. traders get the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index and inflation expectations for October, alongside pending home sales for September.

Best of the web

Inside the secret prisoner swap that splintered the U.S. and China.

Xi Jinping catches global investors off guard.

The cloud boom has hit a plateau, and it’s costing investors billions.

The chart

Wall Street analysts and investors may not be overtly declaring stagflation, probably because the condition -– high inflation during a recession – -is stock market kryptonite. But as the two charts below from Bank of America show, consumers certainly seem to be of a stagflationary mindset. Forty-five percent of respondents reckon a recession has already begun, while 75% thought that inflation would be elevated over the next 12 months.


Source: BofA

“Over the last month, the BofA US Consumer Confidence Indicator retreated from a five-month high of 33.7% to a two-month low of 31.3% as of October 23. Consumers are concerned about the economy as inflation is yet to be tamed and recession fears grow,” wrote the data analytics team at BofA.


Source: BofA

Top tickers

Here were the most active stock-market tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern.

Random reads

The real benefit of twitter – how bird song improves your mental health.

On the other hand….there is Derek the Menace, the dive bombing jackdaw.

Poisonous prose found in Yorkshire library.

Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *