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Pulling Off the Band-Aid, Going Overweight Small Cap
Episode 525th July 2022 • RBC's Markets in Motion • RBC Capital Markets
00:00:00 00:07:42

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This week in the podcast, we update our outlook for the S&P 500 and several key positioning trades. The big things you need to know: First, we’ve made another cut to our YE 2022 S&P 500 price target to 4,200 from 4,700 and have lowered our S&P 500 EPS forecasts to $214 for 2022 and $212 for 2023. Second, looking into the back half of the year, the midterm election could be a positive catalyst for stocks and help stocks find a bottom, if one hasn’t been established already. (3) In terms of positioning, we continue to prefer US equities over non-US equities and Growth over Value. Meanwhile, our conviction level on Small Caps has strengthened and we are now going overweight Small Cap.

If you’d like to hear more, here’s another six minutes. While you’re waiting, a quick reminder that you can subscribe to this podcast on Apple, Spotify, and other third party platforms.

Now, let’s jump into the details.

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target and EPS forecasts for:

• Our price target – which we think of as a number the index will trade at on December 31st -- has gone to 4,200 from 4,700, and our 2022 EPS forecast has gone from $223 to $214 – below the bottom up consensus of $230. Our 2023 EPS forecast has gone from $243 to $212 – below the bottom up consensus of $248.

• Our new 4,200 price target is the average of 10 different backtests based on performance in past crisis years, valuations, earnings revisions, sentiment, and cross asset analysis on stocks vs. bonds.

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• Our:

• We’ve also prepared a 2nd version of our earnings model that bakes in a clear recession, with outright contraction in real GDP growth in several quarters in late 2022 and early 2023 on a yr/yr basis. This version of our model argues that S&P 500 EPS should come in at $200 for 2022 and $195 for 2023 and calls for even more significant deterioration in margins than our base case.

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that’s concentrated in late:

o There are a lot of reasons why we think stocks may have bottomed or are close to one – stocks tend to bottom 4-5 months before a recession ends, and the 24% decline in the S&P 500 as of mid June was very close to the median recession drawdown of 27%.

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e the market bottomed in late:

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o Additionally, the trailing P/E for the S&P 500 has already fallen as much as it did during the Tech bubble, the downward earnings revisions has finally started,

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o As we’ve discussed on the podcast before, we’ve also seen deeply bearish sentiment and positioning among retail investors where net bulls on the AAII survey are back to historical lows.

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ties finally back to all time/:

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tions to completely reset for:

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Moving on to Takeaway #2: Looking into the back half of the year, the midterm election could be a positive catalyst for stocks and helps stocks find a bottom, if one hasn’t been established already.

• Typically, mid-term election years are weak for stocks, but the S&P 500 tends to bottom in early October about one month before the event, before rallying back around 7% through year end.

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• While a good outcome for Republicans seems unlikely to surprise investors, it could help stabilize consumer sentiment as Republicans have been feeling much worse than Democrats in the University of Michigan survey.

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• A good showing for Republicans in the midterms could also generate excitement about the political backdrop for stocks longer-term especially. Year 3 of the Presidential Cycle tends to be the best for stocks,…

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• as does the combination of a Democratic President and split or Republican led Congress.

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s want a different nominee in:

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Wrapping up with takeaway #3: In terms of positioning, we prefer US equities over non-US equities, Growth over Value, and Small Cap over Large Cap.

• We’ll dig more into our US/non-US and Growth/Value calls another time – for now, suffice it to say Growth has been outperforming Value since late May and this tends to be accompanied by US leadership relative to ROW.

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• Looking more closely at Small Cap, we’ve been telling investors for a while to get back to neutral on Small vs. Large and pull off Small Cap underweights. Small Cap has been trading sideways relative to Large Cap. But our conviction level on Small Cap has continued to grow and so we are going overweight.

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o The key thing to remember is that historically, recessions are buying opportunities for Small Cap – they lag on the way down and outperform after the market finds its mid recession bottom.

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o Small Cap valuations have also been near historical lows in both absolute terms

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o and relative to Large Cap.

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anager positioning in Russell:

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o We’ve also seen a clear shift in earnings revisions trends back in Small Cap favor. They experienced downward revisions earlier than Large Cap and are holding up better now.

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o And most importantly, Small Caps are already baking in the deterioration that’s starting to show up in economic data. Small Cap performance over the past year has been consistent with ISM manufacturing levels already at typical troughs,

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o and a sharp spike in jobless claims. It’s also worth remembering that historically Small Caps have tended to start outperforming Large Caps when the unemployment rate starts to move up – they price in the bad news on the labor market ahead of time.

Close with Industries in Motion banner

That’s all for now. Thanks for listening. And be sure to check out our sister podcast RBC’s Industries in Motion, for thoughts on additional sectors from RBC’s team of industry analysts.

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