Sunday Tribune

2019 REVISING FAITH IN THE STOCK MARKET

All eyes are on Trump as investors nurse lurking fears, but still hold on to hope for the future

- New York Times | The

AFTER an unexpected­ly bad year for the stock market, investors are looking for clues about what 2019 will bring.

The hope on Wall Street is that the underlying economy of the US is sound, that the recent selling will burn itself out and that stocks will resume their record-setting climb. But the risk is that the plunge, the worst annual decline in a decade, could be the start of something more sinister.

The forces that pushed the S&P 500 index down 6.2% in 2018 are still in place. The economy is still doing well, but it does not appear to be as strong as it once was. President Donald Trump is lashing out at the Federal Reserve, and the central bank’s interest-rate increases pose a risk to corporate profits and investors’ appetite for stocks. America’s trade war with China continues, and the technology giants that dominate the stock market face heightened scrutiny about their business practices.

As investors try to gauge the seriousnes­s of these risks, stocks could lurch in different directions at each new event. A meeting of the Fed later this month, an earnings report in February or a trade-negotiatio­n deadline in March could all prove to be catalysts for a big rise or fall. But Wall Street’s top stock pickers are still expecting gains, even if they’re not quite as boisterous in their prediction­s as they once were.

“It could get more frightenin­g before it gets better,” said James Paulsen, chief investment strategist at the research firm Leuthold Group.

Last year was a reminder of how unpredicta­ble stock markets can be. In January, with corporate tax cuts in place, the outlook for the market in the US was great. And stocks did hit a record high in September, with Apple and Amazon becoming the first publicly traded American companies to be valued at more than $1 trillion. But 2018 was also turbulent, with markets falling sharply in February and at the end of the year.

Rising interest rates, and expectatio­ns about where those rates are headed, may have weighed on stock prices more than anything else in 2018.

The Fed increased its target rate four times in 2018, pushing up borrowing costs across the economy. The yield on the 10-year treasury note, which is the basis for debt like home mortgages and corporate loans, climbed to its highest level since 2011 before falling back.

When borrowing costs rise too much, they can be restrictiv­e. Companies and consumers pull back, and the economy suffers.

Stocks tumbled as investors became increasing­ly concerned that the Fed, under a new chairman, Jerome Powell, would raise interest rates too far and send a chill through the US economy.

Only more data on the state of the economy will ease the concerns about growth. If investors see the economy growing steadily, jitters over the Fed’s intentions and the recession fears that gripped stocks could fade.

Heading into 2018, in the days after Trump’s tax cuts were enacted, investors were mostly buoyant about his presidency. That bullishnes­s persisted even after it became clear that Trump was serious about imposing restrictio­ns on trading partners as a way of gaining concession­s from them.

But as the trade war continued, unresolved tensions with China started to become a concern, and Trump’s proclamati­ons started to make investors jumpy. When Trump referred to himself on Twitter as “Tariff Man”, the message helped spur a drop of more than 3% in the S&P 500.

When it comes to Trump, investors have a lot to consider. They will have to weigh whether a partial government shutdown will dampen the economy; what a House of Representa­tives controlled by Democrats or staff turnover at the White House could mean; and what might happen if the US and China can’t reach a trade deal by a March 2 deadline.

The trade war’s most evident impact so far has been in large overseas economies, which appear to be taking a turn for the worse.

China, Japan and the EU showed signs of slowing down late in 2018, and indicators of global growth like the price of oil and copper are flashing warnings.

Growth may accelerate if trade agreements are forged in 2019. But the problems could be deeper. China’s methods for pulling its economy out of a rut are probably not as effective as they once were. And the battle between Italy’s populist government and the EU over the country’s spending plans may heat up again.

The European economy could also be hit hard if Britain crashes out of the EU without an agreement that keeps trade flowing freely. That could be avoided if parliament approves a withdrawal deal Prime Minister Theresa May has struck with the union.

But that is no sure thing. May, lacking the necessary support, was forced to delay a vote originally set for last month until mid-january. She has been trying, so far unsuccessf­ully, to extract changes from European officials in hopes of improving the chances of passage when that vote comes.

If parliament rejects May’s proposal, investors will probably remain nervous. And support may grow among lawmakers for a second referendum on whether Britain should leave the EU. If that happens, stocks – including those in the US – may rise on the hope that Britons vote to stay.

The market’s fate also depends on whether investors fall back in love with large technology companies. Last year, companies like Facebook, Apple, Amazon and Netflix helped push key stock bench marks like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq composite to records, and then dragged those indexes down when the companies went into free-fall.

The tech giants’ shares plunged in part because they were deemed to be too expensive. Put another way, investors went from being optimistic that the companies’ future earnings would be terrific, to worried that they wouldn’t.

Some of the large tech firms also face substantia­l problems in their own operations that could take time to resolve. Apple, for example, counts on China as both a market where it sells iphones and a manufactur­ing hub.

Facebook is spending large sums to try to protect its network from interferen­ce. Any sign that its systems have been abused with the goal of swinging an election could subject it to regulation. Facebook is not alone in facing this.

Some analysts say large tech companies are now in a position similar to what big banks confronted after the financial crisis of 2008.

“The tech companies are a heck of a lot better run than the financial companies were in 2007,” said Savita Subramania­n, equity strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, “but their incentives may not be aligned with the best interests of employees and shareholde­rs.”

Quite a few things have to go right for stocks to recover in 2019

The US economy has to grow at a strong enough pace to deliver the corporate earnings that investors are hoping for. But if the economy grows quickly, investors may return to worrying about higher interest rates.

If the Fed can tread a delicate middle ground, the trade war winds down and the economies of Europe and China stabilise, a recovery in stock prices could hold.

“I am not sure the upside for market is higher than where we’ve already been,” Paulsen, the strategist, said, “but 2019 could still be a good year.”

 ??  ?? US PRESIDENT Donald Trump at a round-table conference on the ‘Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernisat­ion Act’ in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington. | AP
US PRESIDENT Donald Trump at a round-table conference on the ‘Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernisat­ion Act’ in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington. | AP

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