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Posted by Craig Basinger on May 23rd, 2023

Buy the Dip or Sell the Tip?

Looks like we're closer to a deal. Markets are pleased that a debt ceiling appears to be within reach, avoiding all the potentially bad stuff that this politically motivated crisis could have unleashed. Certainly, good news, and this has lifted equities higher – dare we say, without jinxing it, the S&P is peaking above the upper range of the past six months.

S&P 500 is peaking above the top end of its six-month range

So, all smooth sailing from here? We continue to view this as an extended relief rally but certainly acknowledge the resilience of this advance. From the bottom at the end of Q3 ’22, global equities are up +17%, US +16%, EAFE +29%, with Canada lagging at +12%. If you ranked this positive performance, it would be an exact mirror of the poor performance during the sell-off in ’22. Canada fell the least during weakness and is bouncing back the least. Nasdaq fell the most and is bouncing back the most.

Over much of the past decade, the strategy of buy the dip has become the mantra of many. This was obviously not the ideal strategy for the first nine months of 2022 until the October low. Since then, it has been working once again as the market softened in late December to bounce higher, then weakened in March to bounce higher. To be fair, selling the tip has worked, too, from the mini peaks in November, February and perhaps now…

We lean more towards selling the tip – perhaps trimming the tip is more accurate. And we have got valuations on the side. The move higher in the S&P on the back of pretty muted earnings has pushed the forward price-to-earnings ratio up to 18.5. By comparison, it was down to 15 last Fall.   This puts S&P 500 valuations well into the most expensive quartile grouping based on data back to the 1950s. And on average, this bucket is followed by pretty muted market returns for the index.

Valuations - not as simple as P/E ratio

Price to earnings is a very useful valuation metric but life and investing is never that simple. Here are a few other aspects to consider, most of which support our trimming of the tip mindset.

Yields – There is a relationship between equity market valuations and yields available in the bond market. Bonds are a competing asset class, and, everything else being equal, higher yields attract capital. To counter this, equity markets tend to offer lower valuations. Since lower valuations are associated with higher average forward returns, this balances with the higher yield/returns in the bond market.

When yields were below 2%, that was more supportive of higher equity market valuations. Today, with 10-year Treasury yields at 3.7%, we would say this is less supportive of higher equity market valuations. Cash, too, if you can pick up 4-5% with no risk, the expected return in the equity market has to be higher to compensate. Not sure 18.5x for the S&P fits into that framework.

Earnings growth - Price to earnings is a snapshot of valuations, and both the P and E can change. On occasion, when earnings are depressed and/or earnings are expected to grow rapidly, this supports higher valuations. Often the term used is the market will grow into its current valuation. Consensus estimates have the S&P 500 earning about $210 in 2023, which would be a record high. So clearly, earnings are not depressed.

So will earning growth be robust? We are not optimistic. Margins had remained high for many quarters but are now starting to come under pressure. Sales growth is slowing as the economy slows and inflation cools. Meanwhile, costs are still rising from wages to the impact of higher rates. Even if you don’t believe a recession is coming, you probably agree that the economy is set to slow.

Earnings quality - $1 does not equal $1 when it comes to earnings. $1 of earnings from a cyclical company, such as an energy producer or $1 from a levered financial, is not as valuable from the market’s perspective as $1 from a more stable source. Consumer Discretionary earnings are worth less than more stable Consumer Staples. This helps explain the persistent valuation gap between markets such as the TSX and S&P.

On a relative basis, the TSX has a higher weighting in many sectors that simply carry less value per dollar of earnings. And today, a larger portion than average is coming from these same sectors. To show the higher variability of fundamentals, the chart below is the R squared of a number of metrics. If these grew steadily over time, the R squared would be 1, so the further the reading from 1, the more volatile.

TSX has more volatile earnings, sales, and cash flow than S&P 500

Final Thoughts

Even with lower quality of earnings for the TSX and international markets, the valuation gap more than makes up for it compared to the U.S. market. We continue to believe on a relative basis, and we are more comfortable with Canadian dividend-tilted equities or deeper value among international equities such as Europe and Japan.

On a shorter-term basis, maybe we will buy the dip when it comes, but for now, we would rather sell the tip.

— Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments

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Sources: Charts are sourced to Bloomberg L. P.

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Craig Basinger

Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments. With over 25 years of investment experience, Craig combines an educational foundation in economics & psychology with years of experience in both fundamental and quantitative research. A long-term student of the markets, Craig’s thoughts and insights can be seen in his Market Ethos publications and through his regular contributions on BNN.

Craig and his team bring a transparent and cost-efficient approach to investment management. The team provides asset allocation OCIO services and directly manages over $1 billion in assets. The team manages dividend mandates, quantitative risk reduction strategies and asset allocation services.