Global factor views: Macroeconomic uncertainty leaves Quality in favour
Key points:
- Despite current market and macroeconomic challenges, markets are ahead year to date
- We believe a slow-growth, high-inflation backdrop argues in favour of Quality stocks
- We remain neutral towards Value and Low Volatility, and are negative on Momentum
Global economic activity has been relatively resilient, but cracks are beginning to show. The Federal Reserve expects a “mild recession” in the US later in 2023, brought on in part because of the banking sector turmoil, while Europe may also endure a contraction.
We presently forecast global GDP growth of 2.7% this year and next, down from 3.5% in 2022.1 While slower growth may well help ease inflationary pressures and most central banks are probably close to the peak of their tightening cycles, interest rate cuts are unlikely to occur anytime soon given how stubborn core inflation has been.
But despite the macroeconomic challenges, and March’s banking crisis, global markets have rallied. The MSCI World NR Index is up 9% year to date, as investor risk appetite was buoyed by China reopening and the downgrading of the likelihood of a hard landing for the US economy.2
Looking ahead, given market valuations are no longer cheap, earnings growth will be key to supporting 2023 returns. Bottom-up earnings per share growth and margin forecasts look optimistic given the slower macroeconomic, high-inflation backdrop.
These conditions increase the risk of negative earnings surprises and argue in favour of a focus on high-quality companies with profit moats - strong competitive advantages that can potentially help protect their profits.
Given current macro conditions we set out in detail our outlook for equity market factors below.
Quality: Positive
Quality – equities with more consistent earnings and typically less share price volatility – tends to outperform when macro momentum is weak or slowing and we remain positive on this factor (see Exhibit 1). Quality stocks should also benefit when interest rates are close to their peak, which should mean that the de-rating headwinds experienced by Quality-Growth is likely to be behind us.
In addition, a weak macroeconomic backdrop combined with optimistic earnings expectations increases the risk of negative earnings surprises, but high-quality companies should be less exposed to this. While macroeconomic and earnings views underpin our positive outlook, we would highlight that some Quality constituents look relatively expensive compared to historical levels, which argues in favour of an active approach.
Exhibit 1: Quality returns over stages of the economic cycle
Source: AXA IM EQI, ISM. Quality returns calculated by AXA IM EQI based on top quintile of ROE. Stage of economic cycle based on six-month rolling average of ISM New Orders: Rebound (increasing, below 46), Early Acceleration (increasing, 46-55), Late Acceleration (increasing, above 55), Early Deceleration (decreasing, above 55), Late Deceleration (decreasing, 55-46), Retrenchment (decreasing, below 46).
Value: Neutral
Value stocks - those which appear to be trading for less than their underlying worth – are currently cheaper than their historical average3 (see Exhibit 2). But despite this, we remain neutral towards the asset class, for two primary reasons. First, interest rate conditions may be more benign compared to this time last year, when the more hostile monetary tightening backdrop favoured Value over Growth, but rates are unlikely to retreat quickly from here. Second, slowing macroeconomic momentum is typically unfavourable for Value, generally because of its exposure to more cyclical areas of the market.
Exhibit 2: Value: Book-to-Price relative to market
Source: AXA IM EQI. Value calculated AXA IM EQI based on top quintile of Book to Price.
Momentum: Negative
Despite Momentum’s poor recent performance, our macro, valuation, and technical indicators for the factor remain unsupportive and we therefore stick to our negative view. With Momentum, the aim is to capture stocks which have had a positive price change relative to the market over the last 12 months, and presently it remains a popular, crowded trade. From a macro perspective slowing growth has not historically been supportive of price momentum. Its exposure to the energy sector, while down from where it was at the start of 2023, also remains a barrier; in the absence of a serious deterioration in geopolitics, the recent significant excess performance of energy is unlikely to persist, and this may weigh on the performance of Momentum. With market-wide 2023 earnings forecasts looking optimistic, our preferred measure of investor sentiment remains earnings revisions.
Low Volatility: Neutral
Slowing macroeconomic momentum is the key metric that continues to argue in favour of the defensive attributes of Low Volatility. But we remain neutral because forward valuations are not cheap and while we expect slower economic growth, we acknowledge there is a low probability of an entrenched recession.
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