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Credit Suisse Outlines Slower Growth With Sector Upgrades and Downgrades
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Most major firms on Wall Street make adjustments to their asset classes and sector weightings monthly, or at least quarterly. After all, things change and sometimes they change quite fast.
Credit Suisse’s U.S. equity strategy team has made significant changes to its underlying U.S. equity sector weightings. This has not yet been followed by waves of analyst upgrades and downgrades in each impacted sector. That said, Credit Suisse’s adjusted sector recommendations are intended to better align with the firm’s near-term cautious outlook.
At the top of the list is that the S&P 500 returns were flattish over the past month based on escalating trade concerns, as well as an inverted yield curve and a continued deceleration in the economic data. The report showed that leading indicators point to further weakness ahead and cited Bureau of Economic Analysis data showing that the 2.9% gross domestic product growth of 2018 would slow to 2.3% in 2019 and then to 1.8% in 2020, versus 1.3% international growth in 2018 slowing to 1.0% growth in 2019 and then ticking back up to 1.1% in 2020.
As far as the drivers of the sector changes, defensive groups meaningfully outperformed the broad market while energy stocks, as well as small caps and non-U.S. shares, have lagged. Contributing to the decline is the yield curve inversion, wherein the 10-year Treasury yield fell under 1.50% from 3.2% and inverted under most maturities. Credit Suisse’s view of the futures market is that the market is pricing in five rate cuts by the Federal Reserve through the end of 2020, with close to $17 trillion in debt now at negative yields around the globe and trillions more with ultra-low yields all weighing on banks and savers.
While the firm has noted that recessionary indicators have weakened, they do not yet point to a downturn. The longest recovery we have seen is also called the slowest recovery. Here are the formal sector rating changes made:
Additional notes and data included by Credit Suisse:
As far as the recession front is concerned, Credit Suisse noted that a service economy (as in the United States) is less prone to recession than a manufacturing economy. That said, the industrial economy is experiencing another contraction.
Again, this has not translated into a wide swap of ratings on individual stocks moving from Outperform to Neutral and so on. If that is seen, those changes will be addressed in our daily analyst upgrades and downgrades or in individual sector pieces ahead.
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