Euro Pacific Bank

Portfolio Commentary: Favorable outlook after rocked markets

Published: February 08, 2022

euro pacific advisors fund manager portfolio 
commentary

Relevant Strategies

  • International Balanced
  • International Growth
  • Natural Resources
  • Gold and Precious Metals
  • Peter Schiff

Our Commentary

Market overview

It has been a rough start for the year. Geopolitical tensions between the US and Russia have become increasingly acute, but it is nervous anticipation of the US Federal Reserve withdrawing monetary policy support that has been the main cause of a spike in financial market volatility.

The world’s so-called fear gauge, the CBOE VIX, climbed to last January’s high of 33 during the month but remains much lower than its peak of 66 when the market experienced its COVID 19-related bear market crash in March 2020.

CBOE VIX index. Source: CNBC.

After a bumpy 2021, stock markets ended the new year’s first month in the red. The NASDAQ index was 15% lower at one point, on a rotation from the growth stocks that form most of the index into value stocks. The S&P 500 ended down 5%, China’s SSE Composite was down by 6% and the Japan Nikkei 225 by 7%. The UK FTSE 100 Index was one of the few developed markets not to end lower but the mid-cap index was down by 7%.

Bond prices also suffered and the price of long-dated indices registered declines of up to 7%. Within the typical portfolio, bond exposure has been reduced and is generally short-dated and/or inflation-linked to minimize interest rate sensitivity, increasing other risk factors to generate returns.

The gold price has remained steady while the index of a broad basket of commodities added a further 9% as the oil price soared.

Rate hikes question

The jury is still out as to how many interests rate rise we can expect from the Fed this year, but the number implied by derivative markets has increased steadily from two last year to three and then four. After the first Fed meeting, investors envisage a scenario in which there are five successive rate hikes, coming at each Fed meeting from March.

At the first meeting of the year, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell was careful to emphasise that there was no preset course for rate hikes this year and that the Fed would respond nimbly, “led by the incoming data and the evolving outlook.”

What is clear is that the Fed doesn’t want a repeat of the 2013 taper tantrum. It is going to tread carefully so as not to derail financial markets or the global economic recovery by moving too fast – the outcome financial markets are most jittery about at the outset of 2022.

Rotation from growth stocks into the COVID laggards

Rising interest rates are seen as favoring stocks that offer value based on their net assets over those exhibiting strong growth. This is because many investors and analysts use net-present-value models to value stocks. The rationale is that growth stocks look less attractive on this measure when interest rates rise because their expected earnings are in the distant future and therefore worth less. In this scenario, higher inflation is positive for value strategies because growth companies may benefit less from price hikes, while value companies that have actual earnings can boost profit margins by raising prices.

However, rising interest rates have not been shown to have a long-term effect on equity prices, arguably because a higher discount rate is counter-balanced by a stronger growth rate in cash flows. There is no historical correlation between rate rises and equity market performance and there have been many periods of buoyant stock markets with rising rates. Investors seem nervous now because many have only ever witnessed low rates and strong returns.

Will value stocks continue to outperform growth stocks in this cycle? Source: YCharts.

Outlook

Interest rates will rise as quickly as expected if inflation remains sticky – a situation that will depend on whether:

  • Demand continues to rise unabated
  • Supply constraints remain an ongoing challenge
  • Labour costs continue increasing, setting in motion a wage-price spiral that poses great risk to inflation expectations

We anticipate further volatility in growth stocks in the short term, but the trends accelerated by COVID remain very much in place and when the dust settles there will certainly be opportunities.

Financial markets and the real economy don’t always move in tandem. It is likely 2022 will continue to produce volatile markets as investors fret about whether central banks will remove stimulus too slowly or too quickly, whether inflation will remain too high or fall quickly towards deflation, and whether China will be able to reach an economic glide path without too much turbulence.

Additionally, we think investors may have underestimated the earnings power of many companies who have responded to COVID and supply disruptions with improved delivery of their products and services. Decent profit growth and undemanding valuations in many areas should enable swathes of the equity market to produce positive total returns. Furthermore, many consumers are sitting on piles of cash from fiscal stimulus and capital expenditure, and this factor may fuel further economic and investment activities in the short and medium term.

The portfolios’ January performance is as followed:

Fund Name Performance
International Balanced -4.67%
International Growth -5.49%
Natural Resources 2.34%
Gold & Precious Metals -1.62%

Regards,

Euro Pacific Advisors Management Team