by Craig Basinger, Chief Market Strategist, Purpose Investments Inc.
Much of this divergence can be explained by two factors: economic sensitivity to interest rates and global trade. Countries that are more sensitive to rates and global trade are doing worse; those less exposed are doing better.
As we all know, rates/yields have moved substantially higher over the past couple of years, yet that impacts different parts of the economy differently. Based on different economic compositions from one country to the next, rate changes can hurt more or less. The U.S., for instance, is less sensitive to rates given the structure of their mortgage market. Dominated by 30-year fixed mortgages, changes in rates donât impact consumersâ mortgage payments as much. It is estimated the U.S. has less than 10% of mortgages set to variable rates, compared to 30% in Canada. Furthermore, fixed mortgages in Canada max out at 5 years, meaning the resetting of higher payments is increasingly being felt as mortgages are renewed.
GDP = C + I + G + (X -M). C is for Consumer spending, I is for investment, G is government spending and (X-M) are exports minus imports or trade. Different countries have different weights in these categories. For instance, Consumer spending is by far the biggest piece of the U.S. economy, while trade is relatively small. Compare that to Germany or Japan, both of which have much larger economic weightings in trade. Same with Canada.
The big question is whether or not U.S. economic exceptionalism can endure long enough to wait for negative economic momentum elsewhere to turn the corner. After all, even if an economy is less sensitive to higher rates or slowing global trade, it still has an impact. There is some encouraging news on the global trade front. While still early, Purchasing Manager surveys that provide a proxy for manufacturing activity have started to improve. Half of the 16 biggest manufacturing countries had a PMI reading in January above 50.
While encouraged, our view on manufacturing is tempered. Manufacturing activity exploded during the pandemic as we all wanted more goods. As the pandemic diminished, consumers returned to more normal spending patterns. So, that spike in 2021/22 was followed by a dearth in 2023. Global spending growth appears to be slowing, likely due to higher rates.
Wait for it, but we could be getting close to a period when good economic news stops being suitable for markets. This incredible run over the past three months has seen the S&P 500 rise 14 of the past 15 weeks ÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂâ a feat not repeated since the early 1970s. The initial rise was from an oversold market that started celebrating more evidence that inflation was coming down, opening the door for rate cuts this year. This traversed from inflation optimism to optimism about U.S. economic strength. Unfortunately, strong economic growth does not jive with rate cuts nor with inflation making a speedy decline down to the magic 2% realm.
Final Thoughts
The U.S. is the biggest economy in the world, and its equity market now carries about a 70% weight in the MSCI World Index. Yes, if you buy a passive cap-weighted global equity ETF, it's really just the S&P 500 plus some odds and sods. The U.S. economy could certainly remain immune to slowing growth elsewhere. Maybe the stock market can keep climbing with earnings growth slowing. However, the biggest constant for both markets and economies is often reversion to the mean. And both are well above their means at the moment.
â 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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