The Jerusalem Post

Rally in cyclical sector banks on global economic expansion

- • By LEWIS KRAUSKOPF

NEW YORK (Reuters) – US stock sectors that are particular­ly dependent on economic growth recently grabbed hold of the market’s rally and are poised to keep the reins should further signs of global expansion emerge.

Such sectors, including energy, industrial­s and financials, beat the S&P 500’s 1.9% gain in September. Those sectors had previously lagged behind the benchmark S&P, which has climbed 14% this year while feasting on a steady diet of record highs. Instead, shares of technology and health-care companies, whose profits are more impervious to economic down cycles, have led 2017’s rally.

The question for equity investors is now: Was September just a catch-up period for the lagging, cyclical sectors, or can an economic lift support a sustained run?

“If it’s just a mean-reversion trade, then it’s probably going to last another few weeks, and then we’re back to the old winners,” said Walter Todd, the chief investment officer at Greenwood Capital Associates in Greenwood, South Carolina. “If it’s something more fundamenta­l, it should be longer lasting than that.”

A test comes this week, as third-quarter corporate-earnings season kicks into high gear. Reports from industrial conglomera­tes General Electric and Honeywell Internatio­nal, railroads CSX Corp. and Kansas City Southern and steel company Nucor Corp. stand to yield insight into the economy’s health.

September’s stock action, which also included outsized gains for small-cap stocks, had echoes of the immediate aftermath of President Donald Trump’s election in November 2016.

The same areas showed strength on hopes that a Republican-led federal government would push through an agenda, including tax cuts and deregulati­on, that juices economic growth. Those trades faded as Trump struggled to rack up any significan­t legislativ­e wins.

Now, investors say, September’s stock rally for those groups again stemmed at least in part from policy hopes as Trump revved up his tax-reform push.

“In many ways, we began to replicate the market performanc­e following Trump’s election,” said Quincy Krosby, the chief market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, New Jersey.

But an improving economic picture in the United States and globally lends confidence for the cyclical-sector rally.

The Citi economic surprise index for the US, a measure of economic data that can come in weaker or stronger than forecast, is around a five-month high, with the barometer trending higher since hitting multiyear lows this summer.

Last week, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund upgraded its global economic growth forecast for 2017 by 0.1 percentage point to 3.6% and for 2018 to 3.7% from its April and July outlook, driven by a pickup in trade, investment and consumer confidence.

The US Commerce Department last month revised its estimate for second-quarter gross domestic product growth to 3.1%, up from 3%.

“We’ve just had better data,” said Jim Paulsen, the chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group in Minneapoli­s, who also pointed to indicators such as firming industrial commodity and oil prices and a rise in the Baltic Exchange’s main sea-freight index.

“Those things are all kind of reflecting a realism of economic momentum, not just a one-off, Trump pie-in-the-sky expectatio­n about policy change,” he said.

Bets seemed to build on the cyclical sectors in the first week of October, which saw flows into the largest sector exchange-traded funds for financials, industrial­s and energy and outflows for technology and health care, according to Lipper data.

“There is some momentum developing in these underperfo­rming sectors,” said Anthony Saglimbene, a global market strategist at Ameriprise in Troy, Michigan.

Earnings results could sway that momentum. Technology, which has gained 29% this year, topping all sectors, is expected to post a 12.2% increase in third-quarter profits, more than twice the expected rise for cyclical groups such as industrial­s and materials.

Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones in St. Louis, said global growth “hasn’t been strong enough for investors to feel comfortabl­e that we will continue to see the earnings delivered by those companies in the way that tech and health care have consistent­ly delivered stronger earnings.”

“For the cyclicals to continue to outperform, we have got to see signs that economic growth globally is accelerati­ng, even compared to what we have seen so far this year,” she said.

 ?? (Brendan McDermid/Reuters) ?? TRADERS REACT on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last Friday. The question for equity investors is now: Was September just a catch-up period for the lagging, cyclical sectors, or can an economic lift support a sustained run?
(Brendan McDermid/Reuters) TRADERS REACT on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last Friday. The question for equity investors is now: Was September just a catch-up period for the lagging, cyclical sectors, or can an economic lift support a sustained run?

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