Shaping a portfolio for 2014 (iii): outside the US

For an equity investor, the two most important geographical areas outside the US are Greater China and the EU.  Japan is arguably a third, although in today’s world it’s more a cautionary tale about the horrible consequences when an aging population, inflexible businesses and dysfunctional government conspire to retard change.

China

An impending once-a-decade leadership change in the Communist Party slowed the Chinese economy this time a year ago.  Business and government both kept a low profile while waiting to see what the new administration in Beijing would bring.

Handing over the reins this time also came at a delicate point in Chinese economic development.  The mainland has reached the limits of its ability to expand based on exporting products made with cheap labor.  To grow in a healthy way, it must shift more toward domestic demand, consumer spending-driven expansion.  This change is notoriously difficult for any developing economy to achieve, both because the forces eager to maintain the status quo are so powerful and, especially in the case of China, the move entails loss of direct control by the elites and the empowerment of individual consumers.  Not fun for the CCP.

For the new leadership, so far so good.

For investors, the thing to focus on in the near term is that growth in the mainland is accelerating–although GDP gains will likely stay at “only” +7% or so real.  It doesn’t hurt, either, that demand from the US and the EU for Chinese exports is rising again.

The mainland stock markets are no longer the dumping grounds for the shares of toxic state-owned enterprises that they were a decade ago.  Nevertheless, I think the two best ways to gain exposure to China are either to buy China-oriented stocks listed in Hong Kong, or to get indirect exposure through US- or EU-based multinationals with a large share of their earnings growth coming from China.  Either way, having a piece of the mainland in an equity portfolio will be a good thing next year.

EU

Taking a long-term view, the EU population is older than that of the US and substantially less mobile.  The economy there grows more slowly.  The lack of a common banking system is one of a number of severe structural flaws in that union which the EU is struggling to overcome. Although the EU was only on the periphery of the US home mortgage debacle that caused the Great Recession, its “austerity” approach to countering the effects of the downturn made the EU’s problems worse–and longer-lasting.

Still, the EU has its moments.  This is one of them, in my view.  The EU economy passed its economic low point a number of months ago.  It will be expanding, although probably slowly, for the next several years.  In a sense, it’s where the US was in, say, 2010.  In addition, the EU will be aided by mutually reinforcing  expansion in China and the US.

So having some EU exposure will be a good thing.

The key issue for investors, I think, is whether the euro will be strong vs. the US dollar or weak.  In the former case, the best stocks will be domestic demand-oriented EU firms and US companies with large EU exposure.  In the latter, the stars will remain the export-oriented multinationals based in the EU that have outperformed over the past several years.  I think the euro will be strong–not overpoweringly so, but enough to tilt portfolio selection toward strong-euro beneficiaries.

Japan

Abenomics will face its acid test in 2014, I think.  If Abenomics is only about currency depreciation and deficit spending without the “third arrow” of structural change, it will end in tears.  That’s my diagnosis.  On the other hand, I’ve been completely wrong so far, missing about the huge extent of the rise of weak-yen beneficiaries over the past year or so.  As I see it, weak yen = great vacation destination, but nothing more.  For the sake of Japanese citizens, I hope I’m wrong again.  For the first time in a long while, I own nothing in Japan.

 

 

Shaping a portfolio for 2014 (ii): the US

more of the same

The economic underpinnings of the US economy appear to be strengthening, not flattening or weakening.

New hiring is rising at a slow, but accelerating, rate.  Consumer confidence is up.  Financing costs remain extremely low.  The result of all this has been a continuing domestic boom in housing and in consumer durables.  On addition, other major world economic zones–the EU, Greater China, and, at least for the moment, Japan–are now all improving together for the first time in five years.

Some simple stock market arithmetic:

US profit gains =50% of the S&P     rising at a 5% annual rate in 2014

EU profit gains = 25% of the S&P   rising at a 2% annual rate in US$ (some combination of currency gain + profit growth)

Pacific Basin  + everything else = 25% of the S&P  growing at a 10% annual rate

Total = 8.5% profit growth for S&P 500 profits in 2014.

just not as much as in 2013

The S&P 500 entered 2013 at 1406, or just under 14x expected earnings for 2013.  If the year ended today, it would be entering 2014 at 16,5x my expectation for earnings in 2014.  In other words, as I mentioned yesterday, the main factor powering the S&P this year has been price earnings multiple expansion.

I don’t think we’ll see similar PE expansion in 2014.  If I’m correct, what will move the market upward will be earnings gains.  If my back of the envelope calculation above is close to the mark, the S&P will be somewhere in the vicinity of 1950 a year from now.

Why not better than that?

Two related reasons:

1.   As liquid investments, stocks and bonds are in many ways substitutes for one another.  Because of this, the price of one has an influence on the price of the other .  The traditional (and correct, in my view) way of comparing the two is to look at the interest yield on government bonds vs. the earnings yield (1/PE) on stocks.  If long-term government bonds would be yielding around 5%-6% in a normal interest rate environment, the PE on the stock market should be 17x – 20x.  That’s very close to where we are now.

In my view, this means there isn’t a lot of room left for PE expansion.  Yes, my guess on long-term government bond rates may be too conservative.  Yes, PE expansion may happen anyway.  I’m just not counting on it.

2.  Financial markets are futures markets.  The reflect in today’s prices expectations about how the future will play out.  And the process of interest rates rising from emergency-low levels has already begun.  Mr. Bernanke put the topic on the table with his discussion of the timetable for “tapering,” or reducing the rate at which the Fed pumps out extra emergency monetary stimulus.  In the past, times like this have typically been bad for bonds, flattish for stocks.

looking for outperformance

1.  My friend Denis the bond guru sent me an email the other day asking:  today do you want to buy/own the asset that’s up by 45% over the past two years (the S&P) or the one that’s down by 10% (the 10-year Treasury)?  HIs answer is the latter.  He also thinks rates are going down.

Personally, I’m sticking with stocks.  But Denis’s note highlights to me how badly bond-like (that is, dividend-oriented) stocks have fared recently.  I think the whole utility, telecom, MLP area is worth a look.

2.  As I wrote recently about MSFT, I don’t think the bar for outperformance is going to be particularly high next year.  So stocks  with strong traditional businesses like MSFT may attract a surprisingly large amount of investor interest.

The MSFT story is kind of flimsy:  a bad board of directors which has tolerated horrible mismanagement of the corporation’s assets over a decade has finally decided to replace the CEO; the new choice can’t possibly be as bad as the current guy.  Still, it’s difficult to imagine the stock going down a lot (unless the new CEO is, say, Carly Fiorina), and +20% doesn’t sound too crazy, given the fact the underlying business has survived the worst that the current cast of characters has done to it.

3.  Despite special situations like MSFT, so-so economies are usually environments where growth stocks outperform their value counterparts.  I think this will be true in 2014.  I also think it’s time to look again for US-based companies with large EU exposure or with substantial China-related interests.  I also expect consumer spending will continue to be highly focused–meaning people don’t have enough money to buy everything the want, so they’ll be very choosy.  I’m looking for stuff Millennials will buy, rather than Baby Boomers.

4.  For what it’s worth, the only people I know who called 2013 correctly are the S&P equity strategists.   They think we’re due (or overdue) for a 5%-10% correction shortly.  If nothing else, that might be further motivation to do yearend portfolio housecleaning.

Shaping a portfolio for 2014 (i): a look back at 2013

my take this time last year 

A few minutes ago I looked back at what I wrote in the “Putting the Pieces Together” section of my Strategy last year.

I was pretty accurate on the macroeconomic front, with my guess about how S&P 500 earnings would turn out being  a tad high.  But that’s typical optimistic me.  The stocks in the index now appear to be earning at around a $102 per share annual rate, which is a mere 5% better than twelve months ago.

From that analysis, I concluded that 2013 would be a good year for stocks–but that gains would probably fall short of +10%.

What I didn’t factor in was multiple expansion–the dissipation of the all-pervasive fear of risk that had gripped Wall Street during the stock meltdown of 2008-09, and the return of a soupçon of greed to the investor psyche.  I assumed (read: hoped and prayed) that this would happen eventually.  But I saw no reason to predict the timing of this sea change.  Better just to remain fully invested and therefore be there when liftoff happened.

Calling what happened in 2013 a pinch less risk aversion is probably an understatement.  A 5% increase in earnings per share–with perhaps another +8% in store for 2014–has yielded just shy of +30% (including dividends) so far in 2013 for the S&P.

the plusses for 2013

The biggest story line by far for 2013 has been the just-mentioned return of the market discounting mechanism to more or less normal after four years of extreme risk aversion.  But it wasn’t the only one.

Others include:

–the continuing resilience of the US economy despite periodic scares from Washington policy,

–the EU economy finally navigating the worst of the Great Recession and beginning to show the first signs of renewed growth,

–the amazing upward surge of the Japanese stock market on the hope that severe currency devaluation would deliver sustained real economic growth for the first time in a quarter-century, and

–the gradual reacceleration of the Chinese economic engine as the new administration has taken a firm hand on the controls.

good news, bad news

All these factors are good news, in that they indicate the world economy is on far firmer footing today than it was a year ago.  The bad news (for investors) about this is that all of these plusses are already in plain sight and already fully (in my view) factored into today’s stock prices.

What’s left, then, to go for in 2014?

…not a similar gain to the +30% that 2013 has produced.  Instead, my best guess is that we’ll have the kind of sedate +7% -+8% advance for the S&P that I envisioned for 2013.

If so, outperformance will hinge critically on good sector and individual stock selection.

More tomorrow.