National Post

Why markets don’t seem to care if economy stinks

Most vulnerable firms smallest based on capitaliza­tion

- Barry Ritholtz Bloomberg Barry Ritholtz is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is chairman and chief investment officer of Ritholtz Wealth Management, and was previously chief market strategist at Maxim Group. He is the author of Bailout Nation.

The stock market has been on a tear, yet the economy is in the dumps. So why do so many people believe — undoubtedl­y incorrectl­y — that the stock market has decoupled from reality?

The economy many people experience, while bleak, is local, personal and, for the most part, either not publicly traded or plays only a small part in the stock market’s moves. To explain why these personal experience­s have so little effect on equity markets, we must look more closely at the market role of the weakest industry sectors.

The surprising conclusion: The most visible and economical­ly vulnerable industries are also among the smallest, based on their market-capitaliza­tion weight in major indexes such as the S&P 500. Markets, it turns out, are not especially vulnerable to highly visible but relatively tiny industries. The 30 most economical­ly damaged industry categories could be delisted before tomorrow’s market open, and it would hardly shave more than a few percentage points off the S&P 500.

This is so despite the worst U. S. economic collapse since the Great Depression. All of the economic data is so bad that figures on gross domestic product, unemployme­nt and initial jobless claims must be rescaled to even fit on charts.

But the U. S. economy is not the stock market and vice versa. As we have discussed before, ignoring overseas strength is a major oversight. The so-called FAANGS (along with Microsoft) derive about half — and in some cases even more — of their revenue from abroad. Beyond that, the pandemic lockdown in the U. S. has benefitted the giant tech companies’ sales and profits. No wonder the Nasdaq Composite 100 Index, which is dominated by big tech companies, is up about 26 per cent this year.

But a reasonable person might argue that GD P fell by about a third in the second quarter and the S& P 500 should be in sync with that. What’s more, of the 500 companies in the S& P 500, about 450 of them are doing terribly. Industries such as retail, travel, energy, entertainm­ent, dining have seen sales evaporate. Bankruptci­es are piling up — legendary retailer Lord & Taylor is just the latest — and more are surely coming. Yet, the S&P 500, after a huge plunge in March, is up 2 per cent this year.

Market capitaliza­tion explains why.

Start with some of 2020’ s worst-performing industries: Yearto-date (as of the end of July), these include department stores, down 62.6 per cent; airlines, off 55 per cent; travel services, down 51.4 per cent; oil and gas equipment and services, down 50.5 per cent; resorts and casinos, down 45.4 per cent; and hotel and motel real estate investment trusts, off 41.9 per cent. The next 15 industry sectors in the index are down between 30.5 per cent and 41.7 per cent. And that’s four months after the market rebounded from the lows of late March.

These are highly visible industries, with companies that are well- covered by the news media with household names known to many consumers. Retailers are everywhere we go. Gas stations, chain restaurant­s and hotels are ubiquitous in cities and suburbs across the country.

So although high visibility industries may be of considerab­le significan­ce to the economy, they are not very significan­t to the capitaliza­tion-weighted stock market indexes.

Consider how little these beaten-up sectors mentioned above affect the indexes. Department stores may have fallen 62.3 per cent, but on a market- cap basis they are a mere 0.01 per cent of the S&P 500. Airlines are larger, but not much: They weigh in at 0.18 per cent of the index. The story is the same for travel services, hotel and motel REITS, and resorts and casinos.

The market is telling us that these industries just don’t matter very much to stock market performanc­e. And the sectors that do matter? Consider just four industry groups — internet content, software infrastruc­ture, consumer electronic­s and internet retailers — account for more than US$ 8 trillion in market value, or almost a quarter of total U. S. stock market value of about US$ 35 trillion. Take the 10 biggest technology companies in the S& P 500 and weight them equally, and they would be up more than 37 per cent for the year. Do the same for the next 490 names in the index, and they are down about 7.7 per cent. That shows just how much a few giant matter to the index.

On some level, it’s completely understand­able why many people believe that markets are no longer tethered to reality because the performanc­e doesn’t correspond to their personal experience, which is one of job loss, economic hardship and personal despair. But what’s important to understand is that indexes based on market-cap weighting can be — as they are now — driven by the gains of just a handful of companies.

We can argue about whether the way the market reacts is good or bad and never reach a satisfying conclusion. But one thing the market isn’t is irrational or disconnect­ed from is the reality of market capitaliza­tion, and its impact on stock indexes.

market is telling us that these industries just don’t matter very

much to stock market performanc­e.

 ?? Spencer Platt
/ Gett y Image files ?? Just four industry groups — internet content, software infrastruc­ture, consumer electronic­s and internet retailers
— account for more than US$8 trillion in market value, or almost a quarter of total U. S. stock market value.
Spencer Platt / Gett y Image files Just four industry groups — internet content, software infrastruc­ture, consumer electronic­s and internet retailers — account for more than US$8 trillion in market value, or almost a quarter of total U. S. stock market value.

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