New York, June 17, 2020 – Record upside surprises in U.S. economic data are bolstering the case for a āVā shaped recovery from the COVID-19 recession and boosting investor confidence in a stock rally that has already delivered hefty gains in recent months.
Citigroupās Economic Surprise Index, which tracks economic data relative to economistsā expectations, hit a record high this month, reflecting recent turnarounds in key areas such as unemployment that have helped extend the S&P 500ās gain to 40% since late March. The stock index jumped 1.9% on Tuesday, helped by a record surge in May retail sales.
The improving data, along with signals that the Federal Reserve remains ready to backstop the U.S. economy, have eased concerns that the stocks rally has ignored the economic devastation wrought by the pandemic and resulting lockdowns.
āThe safety-net (Fed Chair Jerome) Powell has put in place is not going away any time soon,ā said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA. āWhile we will see the economy struggle, you wonāt likely see a sustained pullback in equities because of all the stimulus that has been thrown at the market.ā
Many investors doubt the marketās rebound can run much further. A recent surge of COVID-19 cases in some U.S. states and a new cluster of cases in China have raised concerns over a coronavirus resurgence, while subdued demand for commodities such as oil signal a potentially slow comeback in global growth.
Influential U.S. investors, including David Tepper and Stanley Druckenmiller, in May described markets as over-valued and with terrible risk-reward, with Druckenmiller dismissing V-recovery hopes as āa fantasy.ā
Still, the ranks of doubters have thinned lately, while bullish sentiment has grown. The percentage of fund managers who believe the bounce is a bear market rally that will eventually reverse fell to just over half in June, from more than two-thirds last month, a survey from BofA Global Research showed.
āPositive sentiment begets positive sentiment,ā said Torsten Slok, chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities. āPeople are starting to think that this is not a bear market rally, that this is more permanent.ā
The marketās gains also appear to be attracting inflows of cash from the sidelines. Cash levels among fund managers in BofAās survey registered their biggest drop in more than a decade in June, and net equity exposure among hedge funds soared to 52% from 34% in May.
Investors poured a net $20.4 billion into equity-focused mutual funds in the week ending June 10, the largest one-week inflow since 2007, Lipper data showed.
The rally has exacerbated some investor concerns, including those over stock valuations. The S&P 500ās forward price/earnings ratio, a closely followed valuation metric, now stands at 22, a level that was last seen 20 years ago, during the dot-com boom.
For many investors, āitās still love/hate,ā said Joe Saluzzi, co-manager of trading at Themis Trading. āIf youāre a fund manager, you have to be in the market because you have to beat your benchmark, so a lot of managers have to get in there and performance chase.ā
At the same time, gains in the prices of oil and some other commodities have slowed in recent weeks, raising concerns that weak demand for raw materials may indicate a lackluster worldwide recovery.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast the global economy could contract by 7.6% if the world sees a second wave of the coronavirus outbreak.
Still, there are signs that investors remain bullish despite the marketās recent gains. The proportion of investors buying S&P 500 bullish call options versus bearish put options rose sharply last week, suggesting some traders are betting the market will continue rising. – Reuters