Published on Sep 20, 2016
Forget
all the talk of a rebound in the financial and energy sectors, the odds
say that defensive stocks are still an investors best bet, said Denise
Chisholm, sector strategist at Fidelity. According to Chisholm, the
highest probability is that the market continues to see a defensive
rotation toward sectors with stable earnings growth like consumer
staples, healthcare and utilities and away from more economically
sensitive sectors like energy, financials and materials. "One of the key
themes in the market has been profitability problems. Only half the
time are profit contractions related to recessions, so this does not
necessarily forecast a decline in GDP - this is a stock thing, not an
economic thing," said Chisholm. "Earnings growth has been contracting,
with more than just the energy and materials sectors driving it."
According to Chisholm, any upturn in earnings growth has been weak and
the probability that it can recover off these lows is a "push." "It is
possible, but certainly not a fat pitch, for strong earnings growth in
the third quarter," said Chisholm. Her favorite sector is consumer
staples because it continues to show relative earnings growth and
improving margins over the last four years. In her view, the sector is
"lean and mean." Year-to-date the consumer staples sector in the S&P
500 has returned 4.3%. The utilities and energy sectors in the S&P
500 are up 15% and 12% respectively, leading the way. On the flip side,
the financial sector is down 19% year-to-date, suffering from the
low-interest environment. "Financials need loan growth, which is
accelerating, but credit is starting to deteriorate in certain spots.
It's not sharp, but it is bad for the odds of the sector outperforming,"
said Chisholm.
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