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What stock investors need to know, and why

- By MOHAMED A. EL-ERIAN Mohamed A. El-Erian is a Bloomberg View columnist. He is the chief economic adviser at Allianz SE, the parent company of Pimco, where he served as CEO and co-CIO. He was chairman of the president’s Global Developmen­t Council, CEO an

WITH attractive returns such as haven’t been seen for quite a few years, investors in global stock markets have had a very good first half of 2017. Record levels for several widely-followed country indexes occurred in the context of notably muted volatility, adding to the sense of investor comfort and accomplish­ment. All of this was accompanie­d by tensions and transition­s – some completed and others frustrated, at least for now – that will likely influence how investors feel at the end of the year.

Here are six key things you should know about recent developmen­ts, along with some important determinan­ts of prospects for the remainder of the year:

A generalise­d global stock market rally: According to a Wall Street Journal analysis of the world’s 30 biggest stock markets by value, 26 registered gains in the first half of 2017 (the exceptions were Canada, China, Israel and Russia). At the global level, this delivered the best first-half performanc­e since the immediate bounce back from the depth of the 2008-2009 global financial crisis. Almost half of these 30 markets ended June at or near record highs.

Market leadership rotated with relatively diversifie­d sector performanc­e: Within the S&P, the largest market in the world, nine of 11 sectors delivered gains to investors. Yet dispersion was notable, both overall and within certain segments – notwithsta­nding a further shift to passive investing and the proliferat­ion of index-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Tech and healthcare led, with returns of 17% each; telecom lost 13% and energy 14%. Amazon surged while many traditiona­l brick-and-mortar retailers languished. Despite a late gain that helped markets overall offset a June slump in tech, financials ended the six-month period only slightly above water. Meanwhile, size also mattered. The Dow and S&P gained 8%, along with 14% for the Nasdaq, while the Russel small-cap benchmark lost about 5%.

Market drivers changed but the critical sustainabi­lity handoff remained elusive: Starting the year, markets were heavily influenced by hopes of a policy surge in the US that would boost economic growth and corporate earnings in a sustainabl­e and consequent­ial fashion. But the political decision to try to push healthcare reform through Congress first put both tax reform and infrastruc­ture in the back seat for now. As such, the surge in “soft data,” including in measures of corporate and household confidence, did not pull up more of the “hard data,” which remained sluggish.

The potentiall­y adverse impact on markets of delays in pro-growth policy implementa­tion was offset by two other factors: Data pointing to a correlated global reflation (which, with time, seems to be proving more transitory); and continued injection of liquidity.

Forget economic and policy fundamenta­ls, liquidity ruled: Liquidity injection was – once again – what mattered most for traders and investors in the first half of the year, offsetting not just economic and policy head- winds, but also geopolitic­al, institutio­nal and political ones, too. And this ample liquidity came from three sources. First, record corporate profit levels, which translated into continued stock buybacks and higher dividend payments by companies, including dramatic announceme­nts by banks last week after a green light from their regulator. Second, elevated inequality levels that continued to result in a significan­t portion of the incrementa­l income generated in the economy accruing to wealthy households with a higher propensity to invest in financial markets. Third, the continuati­on of ultra stimulativ­e central bank policies, including sizeable monthly asset purchases by the Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank (ECB).

Other markets signals suggest less confidence about economic fundamenta­ls: Having traded in a range of almost 60 basis points during the first half of the year, yields on 10-year Treasuries ended at 2.30%, somewhat below their starting level of 2.44%. In the process, the yield differenti­al versus German Bunds narrowed noticeably. Even more significan­t was the considerab­le flattening of the yield curve, usually an indicator of an upcoming economic slowdown. Meanwhile, the US dollar gave up all, and more, of its post-election surge; and oil prices ended down around 14% as concerns over supply were hardly dented by any demand optimism.

And throughout all of this, the contrast between two key features of a liquidity rally intensifie­d: Given the importance of liquidity – in determinin­g not just returns but also in repressing volatility and in changing fundamenta­ls-driven asset class correlatio­ns – markets ended the period in the midst of an intensifie­d tug of war between crowded trades and “buy on dips” investor conditioni­ng.

All of which sets up markets for an interestin­g remainder of the year, in which traders and investors will need to keep a close eye on:

> The continued impact of liquidity, especially given that several systemical­ly-important central banks (including the Bank of England, the ECB and the Federal Reserve) are likely to be navigating a careful reduction in their stimulus policies.

> Progress in the handoff from liquidity to more sustainabl­e validators of asset prices, particular­ly pro-growth policies in the US and Europe.

> The extent to which the spread to liquidity-inconsiste­nt market segments of pooling vehicles, including high-yield and emerging-market ETFs, has overpromis­ed readily available liquidity to traders and investors, thereby risking bouts of unsettling contagion.

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