BusinessMirror

Wall Street strategist­s say 2023 equity recovery won’t be easy

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INVESTORS ready to turn the page on the worst year for equities since the global financial crisis should brace for more pain heading into 2023.

That’s the blunt message from top strategist­s at Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and others, who are warning that stocks face fresh declines in the first half as corporate earnings succumb to weaker economic growth and still sky-high inflation, and central banks remain staunchly hawkish.

The second half will mark a recovery once the Federal Reserve stops hiking rates, they say — but it’s likely to be a muted rebound that will still leave stocks only moderately higher than at the end of 2022.

“The risks that stock markets grappled with this year aren’t over and that makes me nervous about the outlook, particular­ly in the first half,” Mislav Matejka, global equity strategist at Jpmorgan Chase & Co., said in an interview.

The average target of 22 strategist­s canvassed by Bloomberg has the S&P 500 ending next year at 4,078 points—about 7 percent higher than current levels. The most optimistic forecast is for a 24 percent increase, while the bearish view sees it slumping 11 percent. In europe, a similar survey of 14 strategist­s projected average gains of about 5 percent for the Stoxx 600.

The cautious central case reflects the mountain of challenges from monetary tightening to the war in Ukraine and europe’s energy crisis. The first of those has already helped quench a recent stock rally.

even the better news on inflation has come with a big caveat because it hasn’t swayed central banks from their focus on getting it under control. hawkish tones from both the Fed and the european Central Bank last week sparked sharp equity declines, and reminded investors that timing the long-awaited policy shift won’t be simple.

If that message wasn’t getting through already, the Bank of Japan hammered it home on Tuesday with a shock tweak to its bondyield policy.

Jpmorgan’s team expects the S&P 500 to fall back toward the lows seen in 2022 before a pivot by the Fed fuels a second-half rebound that will leave it about 10 percent higher than current levels. At its worst point this year, in October, the index had slumped 25 percent to 3,577 points.

Top money managers are also predicting a rocky start to 2023, with gains to be skewed to the latter half, according to a Bloomberg News survey published this month.

For those taking an optimistic view, they can point to the resilience of the US economy, a slower pace of interest-rate increases and China’s reopening from strict Covid lockdowns.

But despite all that, one of the main consensus views among strategist­s is that stock markets aren’t yet reflecting a generally downbeat economic outlook.

Christian Mueller-Glissmann and Cecilia Mariotti at Goldman Sachs said late last month that their model implies a 39 percent probabilit­y of a US growth slowdown in the next 12 months, but risk assets were only pricing in an 11 percent chance.

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