Friday

Friday is expected to be the most significant day of this investment week with the release of May’s personal income, personal expenditures, and most importantly, the Fed’s favorite inflation benchmark, the personal consumption expenditure (PCE) deflator. Economists are looking for the PCE to show no change in the headline index and a 0.1% increase in core. If so, the PCE deflator would ease a smidge to 2.6% YOY from April’s 2.7% and core would be lower by 0.2% to 2.6% YOY. Anything showing stronger inflation is apt to be a disappointment for investors, particularly after the hawkish comments heard this week from Federal Reserve Governors Lisa Cook and Michelle Bowman, both voting FOMC members.

Flying under the radar, but also important, is the fact that Friday will mark the final reconstitution of the FTSE Russell benchmark indexes. The Russell Reconstitution is an annual multi-step process of FTSE Russell to update its indexes and it typically results in one of the busiest trading days of the year. The reconstitution, which becomes official after the closing bell on Friday, motivates fund managers to adjust their portfolios to reflect the new weightings and components. And the changes are significant this year. The Russell 1000 growth index is expected to have roughly two-thirds of its components in just technology and communication services stocks. Analysts expect about 45 companies will leave the growth index, reducing the index to just over 390 names, as compared to approximately 870 in the Russell counterpart value index. This is another example of how the recent outperformance of AI-related stocks is having a major impact on the weightings of market indices. Last week we discussed the impact Nvidia Corp. (NVDA – $126.09) was having on ETFs. The end result is that it becomes ever more difficult for a portfolio manager to outperform, or even perform in line with, the indices without having a significant concentration in the top ten largest stocks. And again, we see how momentum begets momentum.

Going For a Swim

The Census Bureau and National Association of Realtors (NAR) released a range of housing-related data last week — most of it showing weakness. But it was this week’s announcement from Pool Corp. (POOL – $310.74), a wholesale distributor of swimming pool supplies, equipment, and related leisure products, which rocked the housing market. The company lowered earnings guidance from the previous $13.19 to $14.19 per diluted share to $11.04 to $11.44 per share, indicating year-to-date net sales were down 6.5%. The stock fell 8% Tuesday and carried many consumer and housing-related stocks with it. Commentators were divided on whether this was a warning sign about the consumer or a buying opportunity. It was, nevertheless, another indication of how investment expectations and forecasts pivot depending upon when, or if the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates later this year.

Housing Data

Residential building permits and starts have been declining for three consecutive months and new home permits are now down 9.5% YOY. However, single-family housing permits are up 3.4% YOY. Total housing starts fell 19.3% YOY in May and single-family housing starts were down 1.7% YOY. Not surprisingly, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) single-family housing index fell 2 points to 43 in June. Sales fell 3 points to 48; 6-month sales expectations fell 4 to 47, and traffic of potential buyers was down 2 points to 28. See page 3.

New and existing home sales remain well below their 2020 peaks, which is not surprising given the rise in both prices and interest rates in the interim. In April, new home sales were 634,000 units, down 4.7% month-over-month and down 7.7% YOY. The major market is for existing homes where sales were 4.11 million, down 0.7% month-over-month and down 2.8% YOY. See page 4.

Inventory of both total existing homes and single-family homes has been rising for the last five months, and this lifted single-family home inventory from 860,000 units to 1.12 million units in May. Months of supply has risen to 3.5 months from its low of 1.6 in December 2022; nevertheless, inventory remains at historically low levels. It is this lack of inventory that continues to support home prices. The median existing single-family home price reached a record-breaking $424,500 in May, up 5.7% YOY. The median home price for a new single-family home was $433,500 in April, down 5.8% from its October 2022 peak, but up 0.2% over the last 3 months, and up 3.9% YOY. See page 5.

Along with low inventory, inflation is supporting home prices. Similarly, inflation boosts nominal retail sales and there has been a long-standing correlation between retail sales growth and existing home prices. Total retail and service sales grew 4.0% YOY in April, similar to the rise seen in home prices in the same period. However, once inflation is removed, retail sales fell 0.3% YOY in real terms. In an inflationary environment, if income growth does not exceed inflation, purchasing power decreases. Both real disposable income and real retail sales have been decelerating this year and these trends could be precursors of a weaker housing market ahead. See page 6.

Earlier this month the University of Michigan consumer sentiment indices showed multi-point declines in the overall, present conditions, and expectations indices for June. This week the Conference Board consumer confidence index indicated that the June index fell from a downwardly revised 101.3 (May) to 100.4. The expectations index fell from a downwardly revised 74.9 (May) to 73.0, but present conditions rose from 140.6 (May) to 141.5. Not surprisingly, consumer sentiment indices have been declining in recent months. See page 7.

Valuation and Technical Updates

The S&P 500 trailing 4-quarter operating multiple is now 24.9 times and well above all its long- and short-term averages. The 12-month forward PE multiple is 21.1 times and when added to inflation of 3.3% sums to 24.4, which is also above the top of the normal range of 23.8. By all measures, the equity market is at valuations seen only during the 1997-2000 bubble, the financial crisis of 2008, or the post-COVID-19 earnings slump.

The Nasdaq Composite index and the S&P 500, led by big-cap technology stocks, made new record highs last week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, despite a rebound this week, is 2.2% below its record high of May 17, 2024 and the Russell 2000 index remains 17.2% below its high of 2442.74 made on November 8, 2021. The Russell is trading below its 50-day and 100-day moving averages this week and the DJIA is trading slightly above its two moving averages. See page 9. It continues to be a stock market of haves and have-nots, much like previous bubbles. The 25-day up/down volume oscillator is at negative 1.75, still in neutral territory, but threatening to break the bullish uptrend in place in this oscillator since the October 2022 low. The indicator was last in overbought territory for four consecutive trading days between May 17 and May 22, but since a minimum of five consecutive trading days in overbought is required to confirm a new high, this indicator has not yet confirmed any of the new highs made in the S&P 500 index and Dow Jones Industrial Average since January. See page 11.

Gail Dudack

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