Khaleej Times

Value-hunting in consumer sector stocks

- WALL STREET

new york — Expectatio­ns that spending on items ranging from hotels to clothing will continue to rise have helped make consumer discretion­ary stocks the most expensive sector in the S&P 500.

Now fund managers are looking for ways to profit without getting burned, if a pullback comes on the back of worries about the coronaviru­s and other factors.

The consumer discretion­ary sector now trades at a forward price to earnings ratio of 24.2, well ahead of the 23.7 forward valuation of the technology sector, according to Refinitiv data.

Higher prices for consumer discretion­ary stocks come at a time when the broad S&P 500 trades at a forward P/E of 18.9, its most expensive valuation since 2002, according to Bank of America Global Research.

High expectatio­ns will be tested in the coming week as companies ranging from Macy’s to Marriott Internatio­nal to Caesar’s Entertainm­ent report fourth-quarter earnings, giving investors a broad look at where consumers are choosing to spend their money and if there are any signs of a slowdown due to the coronaviru­s.

Sellers on Amazon.com, which constitute­s about 26 per cent of the sector, are already bracing for product shortages due to the spread of the virus among Chinese workers.

“We are now a consumerfo­cused economy and anything that affects the consumer will spread out to touch other sectors as well,” said Moustapha Mounah, a research associate at James Investment Research. —

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