Recession Fears: U.S. Equity Market

4 hours ago


Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I’m Mike Wilson, Morgan Stanley’s CIO and Chief U.S. Equity  Strategist. Today, I will discuss what it will take for the US equity market to break out of the 5000-5500 range

It’s Monday, April 21st at 11:30am in New York.

So, let’s get after it.

Last week, we focused on our view that the S&P 500 was likely to remain in a 5000-5500 range  in the near term given the constraints on both the upside and the downside. First, on the upside,  we think it will be challenging for the index to break through prior support of 5500 given the recent acceleration lower in earnings revisions, uncertainty on how tariff negotiations will progress and the notion that the Fed appears to be on hold until it has more clarity on the inflationary and growth impacts of tariffs and other factors. At the same time, we also believe the equity market has been contemplating all of these challenges for much longer than the consensus acknowledges. Nowhere is this evidence clearer than in the ratio of Cyclical versus Defensive stocks as discussed on this podcast many times. In fact, the ratio peaked a year ago and is now down more than 40 per cent.

Coming into the year, we had a more skeptical view on growth than the consensus for the first  half due to expectations that appeared too rosy in the context of policy sequencing that was  likely to be mostly growth negative to start. Things like immigration enforcement, DOGE, and  tariffs. Based on our industry analysts’ forecasts, we were also expecting AI Capex growth to  decelerate, particularly in the first half of the year when growth rate comparisons are most  challenging. Recall the Deep Seek announcement in January that further heightened investor concerns on this factor. And given the importance  of AI Capex to the overall growth expectations of the economy, this dynamic remains a major consideration for investors. 

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A key point of today’s episode is that just as many were overly optimistic on growth coming into  the year, they may be getting too pessimistic now, especially at the stock level. As the  breakdown in cyclical stocks indicate, this correction is well advanced both in price and time,  having started nearly a year ago. Now, with the S&P 500 closing last week very close to the  middle of our range, the index appears to be struggling with the uncertainty of how this will all  play out. Equities trade in the future as they try to discount what will be happening in six months, not today. Predicting the future path is very difficult in any environment and that is arguably more difficult today than usual, which explains the high volatility in equity prices. The good news is that stocks have discounted quite a bit of slowing at this point. It’s worth remembering the factors that many were optimistic about four-to-give months ago—things like de-regulation, lower interest rates, AI productivity and a more efficient government—are still on the table as potential future positive catalysts. And markets have a way of discounting them before it’s obvious.

However, there is also a greater risk of a recession now, which is a different kind of slowdown  that has not been fully priced at the index level, in our view. So as long as that risk remains  elevated, we need to remain balanced with our short-term views even if we believe the odds of  a positive outcome for growth and equities are more likely than consensus does over the  intermediate term. Hence, we will continue to range trade.

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Further clouding the picture is the fact that companies face more uncertainty than they have since the early days of the pandemic. As a result, earnings revisions breadth is now at levels rarely witnessed and approaching downside extremes assuming we avoid a recession. Keep in mind that these revisions peaked almost a year ago, well before the S&P 500 topped, further supporting our view that this correction is much more advanced than acknowledged by the consensus. This is why we are  now more interested in looking at stocks and sectors that may have already discounted a mild recession even if the broader index has not. 

Bottom line, if a recession is averted, markets likely made their lows two weeks ago. If not, the  S&P 500 will likely take those lows out. There are other factors that could take us below 4800 in  a bear case outcome, too. For example, the Fed decides to raise rates due to tariff-driven  inflation; or the term premium blows out, taking 10-year Treasury yields above 5 per cent without any  growth improvement. Nevertheless, we think recession probability is the wildcard now that markets are wrestling with. In S&P terms, we think 5000-5500 is the appropriate range until this risk is either confirmed or refuted by the hard data – with labor being the most important. In the meantime, stay up the quality curve with your equity portfolio.

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