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Europe, China woes add to bullish case for US stocks
2023-09-10 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       London: Europe’s stagflation crisis and a property downturn in China are flashing a familiar message: for equity investors, there is no real alternative to the US stock market.

       With four months left of 2023, returns on the S&P 500 boast about an eight percentage-point lead over the Stoxx Europe 600. The index is on course for its eighth year of outperformance in the past decade, as the artificial intelligence (AI) buzz overshadows economic recession fears and pricey valuations.

       What’s more, the US Federal Reserve’s policy-tightening has cooled inflation while managing to keep the economy growing at just over 2%. Data last Friday reinforced that soft-landing picture, showing a pick up in labour hiring and a slight slowdown in wage growth.

       “US stocks are the place to be,” said Max Kettner, chief multi-asset strategist at HSBC Holdings Plc, who recommends using any S&P 500 pullback to buy.

       “It’s the economic resilience, the tailwinds from the weaker US dollar, still fairly downbeat expectations on earnings. All of that plays in favour of the United States,” Kettner added, in a reference to the view that US dollar strength has finally topped out.

       In contrast, higher interest rates threaten to tip Europe into 1970s-style stagflation, with the economy sinking into a downturn and inflation running above 5%.

       In China, it remains unclear whether drip-feed stimulus can revive an economy in deflation. That accelerated an investor exodus from both regions.

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       Investors have fled European equity funds for 25 weeks straight, Bank of America Corp said, citing EPFR Global data, while Germany’s DAX, home to the region’s manufacturing stalwarts, has just posted its worst monthly performance since December.

       Europe does have an edge on share valuations – on a price-to-earnings measure, the Stoxx 600 trades near a record low to the S&P 500. For some strategists such as David Groman at Citigroup Inc, that shows Europe is already pricing the bad news.

       Citi turned “overweight” on Europe in July and cut the United States to “neutral”.

       Yet, in markets gripped by stagflation fears, the cheapness argument is finding fewer takers. In such an environment, shares in autos, capital goods, retail, chemicals, banks, semiconductors and leisure – essentially cyclical sectors – are most at risk, the JPMorgan Chase & Co team led by Mislav Matejka wrote.

       Europe loses out on another front. Dominated by so-called old economy stocks, it’s also missing out on 2023’s favourite trade: AI.

       The impact of this is underscored by a single statistic – the market value of the entire 600-member Stoxx benchmark has grown this year by about US$810bil, less than what the poster child of AI, Nvidia Corp, has added.

       Tech should benefit even more next year as US Treasury yields slide, reckoned Nicolas Domont, a fund manager at Optigestion in Paris, and his quest for mega-cap stocks has yielded little outside of Wall Street.

       “I was talking with my team about what to buy in Europe as we are predominantly looking for growth and our conclusion was that there really wasn’t much indeed,” Domont added.

       Luxury has been Europe’s answer to America’s high-growth, highly valued technology stocks – companies such as LVMH and Hermes International have accounted for a substantial chunk of equity returns this year.

       But for such names, China’s slowdown poses a hurdle, given it is estimated to contribute up to a fifth of their annual sales. — Bloomberg

       


标签:综合
关键词: Kettner     Stoxx     Domont     economy     stocks    
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