Q4 2023 Investment Commentary

 
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There were many reasons the fourth quarter of 2023 could have been weak. After two years of revenge spending of pent-up household COVID savings, the consumer seemed like they could have run out of steam, but the Christmas spending season was strong, and consumer confidence grew. The strength in the labor market has slowed down, and jobs are being added at a slower pace, but unemployment is creeping down and not up. While much of the population is still enjoying their low mortgage or auto loan rates that have been locked in, those forced to move into a new home or buy new automobiles are feeling the crunch of higher interest rates. Student loan debt became payable again just ahead of the holiday season while all insurance premiums are on the rise.

Despite all these reasons, we saw one of the strongest fourth quarters on record regarding returns. While returns were narrow early in the year, driven by AI-related hype, the second half of the year has been about inflation coming under control and, thus, a halt in interest rate increases for the last quarter. A typical 60% Stock/40% Bond diversified portfolio ended the year up around 15%, led by the strong growth of U.S. large stocks with some of the best returns of any major asset class at +26% for the year (Example 60/40 portfolio represented by 40% Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond TR, 30% S&P 500 TR, 15% MSCI EAFE NR, 10% Russell 2000 TR, and 5% MSCI EM NR). International stocks underperformed the U.S. but also had a strong year, up around 18%, and U.S. aggregate bonds finished the year positively at 5.5%, thanks to falling yields and tighter spreads.

Recession?

A year ago, the media was full of recession buzz. The S&P 500 experienced a peak-to-trough drawdown during 2022 of 24%, which usually signals a mild recession (stock market reaction usually happens ahead of an economic recession). But just because we didn’t experience a traditional recession, defined as two-quarters of negative Gross Domestic Product Growth in a row, doesn’t mean various sectors didn’t have periods of contraction. Capital Group shared an interesting perspective recently that the economy experienced recessions within multiple industries; they just didn’t align simultaneously. No doubt another hangover anomaly from the COVID shutdown and subsequent highs from the government infusion of cash. The common thread over the past couple of years was the resiliency of the jobs market. As long as people are as employed as they want, money continues to flow into their pockets for spending. Consumer spending is the largest component of our economy, and a strong job market means the economy should continue to grow and avoid recession.

U.S. Dollar

The U.S. Dollar weakened somewhat versus a basket of other currencies from the beginning of the year. This has served as a tailwind for international investing. Some of the weakening came late in the fourth quarter after the Federal Reserve indicated their desire to start cutting rates in the U.S. before other developed market economies would start. The differential between interest rates in the U.S. versus other economies worldwide is a driver of the strength or weakness of the dollar. If the rate differential narrows, meaning rates in the U.S. start to come down while rates stay higher in other areas of the world, making the yields similar, whether here or abroad, would weaken the U.S. dollar. This coupled with slowing inflation will likely continue to impact the dollar strength.

Source: JP Morgan Guide to the markets 11/30/23

Inflation and Interest Rates

Speaking of inflation…It appears that inflation is back down to long-term averages and continuing to drift downward. The chart below shows headline inflation (blue) and core CPI, the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure, as it strips out volatile items like food and energy in the short term. Shelter and services are the two areas of the economy that are still driving inflation. If inflation remains under control, this gives the Federal Reserve more leeway in cutting interest rates next year. 

Government Fiscal Situation

While we, as consumers, have applauded higher yields for over a year, interest outlay on the national debt is rising. Doubling from just a few years ago, interest payments now total approximately 14-15% of tax revenues. The 1990s is the last time we saw levels like this. Likely, this has yet to peak as debt continues to mature and be re-issued at higher interest rates. The level of debt continues to increase at what seems to be an unsustainable pace, too. The amount of debt per capita is nearly $100,000 for the first time. That means the government is $100,000 in debt per person in the United States. There are several ways to reduce or slow the growth: strong GDP growth, increasing immigration, spending cuts, and increased taxes (fiscal policy).

At the December Federal Reserve meeting, the FED confirmed that they are intending on rate cuts in 2024 rather than any more rate increases. The data is supporting this move. Rate reductions should help to slow the stress on interest payments for the government. This has certainly impacted consumer mortgage rates as they are falling from their peak.

You might have heard that there is an election in 2024. Some major topics of debate will make headlines in the coming months, including international policy, the impact of inflation, the growing national debt, and many key social issues.  

While it is nearly a year away, you may be anxious about how it will impact investments. A volatile campaign season and close vote can create uncertainty for markets. But, historically, election years have favored patient investors even though they may be volatile. For long-term investors, the political party holding the White House has had little impact on returns. Check out the chart below. You can see that returns for the S&P 500 have, on average, been similar regardless of who holds this office.

No doubt 2024 will be interesting. Not only are we facing a major election, but 40 national elections are happening worldwide (Russia, India, the U.K., South Africa, and Taiwan, to name a few)! That is more than 40% of the world’s population. Since a year can be a lifetime in politics, in addition to our February investment update, we will be doing a special election update in the fall to shed light on the progression of this process and how it may be impacting investments in the short run.

Portfolio Construction: Thinking Differently for the Coming Year

We are coming off two years that were full of surprises. Nobody saw the fastest rate hike cycle in history coming in 2022, leading to one of the worst stock and bond years. To follow that up, nobody predicted that the U.S. stock market would be positive over 25% in 2023. While your core investment philosophy should not change from year to year, the market is constantly changing and may provide short-term opportunities to keep on your radar. Lately, it feels as though those market changes are happening faster than ever. A few things that we are keeping on our radar that might drive opportunities for tweaks in portfolios are:

Inflation: Is high inflation behind us? How will the Fed react?

  • Think about shifting in or out of real assets, commodities, and TIPS.

Interest Rates: Are we leaving a rising rate environment and entering a falling rate environment?

  • Think about targeting certain maturities in bond portfolios.

Elections: Are there key policy shifts that may drive market trends for years? 

  • Think about an overweight or underweight to certain sectors in both stocks and bonds and use election volatility as a rebalancing opportunity throughout the year.

Valuations: Have international, small-cap stocks, or the value style become cheap enough to expect outperformance?

  • Think about shifting from the more expensive asset class to the discounted one. 

Dollar Strength: The dollar was in a bull market for almost 15 years, but are we in the early innings of a turnaround?

  • Don’t give up on international investing. Think about underweighting U.S. dollar assets and adding to international.  

While these themes, and surely many others, will play out through the next year and potentially provide opportunities to take advantage of – our underlying philosophy will not change. We will focus on fundamentals and stick to our process. Headlines might cause investors to overreact one way or the other, but rather than get swept up in the news cycles, we will use those opportunities to rebalance and stick to our long-term investment goals.

Lastly, there is one additional change coming in May of 2024. The SEC is shortening the standard trade settlement cycle from two business days after the trade date to one business day after the trade date. This reduces the time between when a sale of a security occurs and when the proceeds are cleared for withdrawal. Remember years ago when settlement took three days? Will there ever be a zero-day settlement? Only time will tell. As technology improves and processes can be completed more efficiently, we see benefits like this!

Stay tuned for the invitation to our annual economic and investment update coming soon! There will be both an in-person event and a webinar!

Angela Palacios, CFP®, AIF®, is a partner and Director of Investments at Center for Financial Planning, Inc.® She chairs The Center Investment Committee and pens a quarterly Investment Commentary.

Example 60/40 portfolio represented by 40% Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond TR, 30% S&P 500 TR, 15% MSCI EAFE NR, 10% Russell 2000 TR, and 5% MSCI EM NR.

Any opinions are those of the Angela Palacios, CFP®, AIF® and not necessarily those of Raymond James. The information contained in this report does not purport to be a complete description of the securities, markets, or developments referred to in this material. There is no assurance any of the trends mentioned will continue or forecasts will occur. The information has been obtained from sources considered to be reliable, but Raymond James does not guarantee that the foregoing material is accurate or complete. Any information is not a complete summary or statement of all available data necessary for making an investment decision and does not constitute a recommendation. Investing involves risk and you may incur a profit or loss regardless of strategy selected. The S&P 500 is an unmanaged index of 500 widely held stocks that is generally considered representative of the U.S. stock market. The MSCI EAFE (Europe, Australasia, and Far East) is a free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure developed market equity performance, excluding the United States & Canada. The EAFE consists of the country indices of 22 developed nations. The Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index is a broad-based flagship benchmark that measures the investment grade, US dollar-denominated, fixed-rate taxable bond market. Keep in mind that individuals cannot invest directly in any index, and index performance does not include transaction costs or other fees, which will affect actual investment performance. Individual investor's results will vary. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Diversification and asset allocation do not ensure a profit or protect against a loss. Investing involves risk and you may incur a profit or loss regardless of strategy selected. Past performance is not a guarantee or a predictor of future results. Raymond James and its advisors do not offer tax or legal advice. You should discuss any tax or legal matters with the appropriate professional.