Up until last Friday, the US market has been all IT, all the time. Year to date, the IT sector is +16.9%, with the market ex IT at +3.1%. Semiconductors have been a stunning +42%. For the past twelve months, the figures are +43.6% for IT and +15.1% for everything else. So, at some point the losing team was bound to get a turn at bat–purely on relative valuation.
As I see it. the administration’s economic plan is taken right out of the emerging markets handbook written by post-WWII Japan:
–depress the currency
–use tariffs to discourage imports of foreign goods
–keep interest rates low
–develop export-oriented manufacturing as the main source of economic growth.
Yes, the current generation will have miserable lives …but children and grandchildren will enjoy the benefits of being in the advanced industrial economy built on the ruins remaining after the destruction of WWII.
One other thing, foreigners (creatures that emerge from the darkness) not particularly welcome.
The administration has added two twists to this program:
–reducing the domestic workforce by using ICE to imprison and deport foreign-born workers
–seizing forcing oil reserves and shutting down alternative energy projects, effectively a huge bet that climate change isn’t really happening, and being made for reasons best known to the administration.
All in all, this is a recipe for economic stagnation, in my view. This has also become the consensus belief, I think, that has been expressed in the massive portfolio shift away from stocks dependent on the US economy and to IT. Initially, the focus was mostly on software, especially AI-related. Recently, it has shifted to the components needed to build AI centers. This is partly the way that rotation within an industry generally works. In this case, the stock market has also come to believe that AI will force down the prices of many software services.
Then came Friday’s jobs report, which showed that the economy gained +172,000 jobs, vs. expectations of +80,000. The prior two months’ numbers were revised up by a total of +93,000. This apparently sparked two worries:
–that the domestic economy is in better shape than the consensus is expecting, and
–that interest rates may need to rise to cool down economic growth.
This would have two implications for equity portfolio positioning:
–the left for dead domestic economy might actually have some life in it. I don’t see much evidence other than this report. But jobs are a leading indicator. And if so, a heavy bet against the general economy that the current market is expressing might not be the slam dunk the consensus believes
–rising rates would mean PE multiple contraction, as fixed income becomes a more attractive alternative to stocks
The counterargument would presumably be that the job additions are positions that were previously held by undocumented workers who have been imprisoned or deported.
\The most important thing for you and me today, I think, is to observe what is rebounding and, just as important, what is either not going up or moving up at a much sharper/slower pace than the decline last Friday.