Calgary Herald

Cost of missing out soars as global stocks add US$20 trillion

- BLAISE ROBINSON AND LU WANG

Skepticism in global equity markets is getting expensive.

From Japan to Brazil and the U.S. as well as places like Greece and Ukraine, an epic year in equities is defying naysayers and rewarding anyone who staked a claim on corporate ownership. Records are falling, with about a quarter of national equity benchmarks at or within two per cent of an all-time high.

“You’ve heard people being bearish for eight years. They were wrong,” said Jeffrey Saut, chief investment strategist at St. Petersburg, Fla.-based Raymond James Financial Inc., which oversees US$500 billion. “The proof is in the returns.”

To put this year’s gains in perspectiv­e, the value of global equities is now 3 1/2 times that at the financial crisis bottom in March 2009. Aided by an eight-per-cent drop in the U.S. currency, the dollar-denominate­d capitaliza­tion of worldwide shares appreciate­d in 2017 by an amount — US$20 trillion — that is comparable to the total value of all equities nine years ago.

And yet skeptics still abound, pointing to stretched valuations or policy uncertaint­y from Washington to Brussels. Those concerns are nothing new, but heeding to them is proving an especially costly mistake.

Clinging to such concerns means discountin­g a harmonized recovery in the global economy that’s virtu- ally without precedent — and set to pick up steam, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. At the same time, inflation remains tepid, enabling major central banks to maintain accommodat­ive stances.

“When policy is easy and growth is strong, this is an environmen­t more conducive for people paying up for valuations,” said Andrew Sheets, chief cross-asset strategist at Morgan Stanley. “The markets are up in line with what the earnings have done, and stronger earnings helped drive a higher level of enthusiasm and a higher level of risk taking.”

The numbers are impressive: more than 85 per cent of the 95 benchmark indexes tracked by Bloomberg worldwide are up this year, on course for the broadest gain since the bull market started. Emerging markets have surged 31 per cent, developed nations are up 16 per cent.

Big companies are becoming huge, from Apple Inc. to Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. Technology megacaps occupy all top six spots in the ranks of the world’s largest companies by market capitaliza­tion for the first time ever.

Up 39 per cent this year, the US$1 trillion those firms added in value equals the combined worth of the world’s six-biggest companies at the bear market bottom in 2009. Apple, priced at US$810 billion, is good for the total value of the 400 smallest companies in the S&P 500.

Overall, U.S. corporate earnings are expected to rise 11 per cent this year, on track to be the best profit growth since 2010. And after years of disappoint­ments, European profits are set to climb 14 per cent in 2017, Bloomberg data show. The expectatio­ns for both regions are roughly in line with forecasts made at the beginning of the year, defying the usual pat- tern of analysts downgradin­g their estimates as the months go by.

Meanwhile, Asia is home to some of the world’s steepest rallies, led by Hong Kong stocks that are up 29 per cent this year. Shares in To- kyo also hit fresh decade highs this week, bolstered by investor confidence before the local corporate earnings season and a snap election this month.

 ?? KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Skeptics of global equity markets may want to take notice of the robust global economy that is expected to pick up steam. Asia, for instance, is home to some of steepest rallies, including decade highs of shares in Tokyo this week.
KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES FILES Skeptics of global equity markets may want to take notice of the robust global economy that is expected to pick up steam. Asia, for instance, is home to some of steepest rallies, including decade highs of shares in Tokyo this week.

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