CMO BofA 02-26-2024 Ada
CMO BofA 02-26-2024 Ada
CMO BofA 02-26-2024 Ada
All data, projections and opinions are as of the date of this report and subject to change.
Markets have responded to recent disappointing inflation news to reflect the growing risk of Joseph P. Quinlan
Managing Director and Head of CIO Market
“higher for longer” interest rates.
Strategy
Market View—That Y2K Feeling is Back, But It’s Political This Time?: Ahead of the
Lauren J. Sanfilippo
U.S. presidential vote, investors are already attuned to the Y2K feel cast on 2024. Director and Senior Investment Strategy
Remember the year-long fear of Armageddon at the turn of the century—a fear stoked by
worriers that computer code designed for two digits (the year 99) would misread the year THOUGHT OF THE WEEK
00 as 1900, triggering cascading dominoes of failing computers around the world? Today,
we see parallels with 1999. In anticipation of the November vote, we see a world Jonathan Kozy
Managing Director and Senior Macro Strategy
rethinking security arrangements with the U.S. and boosting defense spending as a result.
Analyst
We hear of businesses recasting and reexamining their global supply chains given
uncertain trade dynamics. And closer to home, investors are reevaluating their risk MARKETS IN REVIEW
tolerance in their portfolios.
That said, and as the campaign slugfest kicks into high gear in the months ahead, we Data as of 2/26/2024,
suggest that investors keep in mind that, since 1945, and in lieu of many market-moving and subject to change
epic events over the past several decades, total annualized returns for the S&P 500 are in
excess of 11%. That’s a phenomenal performance that speaks to the resiliency of the U.S.
Portfolio Considerations
economy and markets. Another Y2K moment is upon us, and we’ll get through it.
Thought of the Week—The Liquidity Pivot: Arguing about the timing of a Fed rate cut The U.S. economy shows early signs
misses a key point: The Fed’s dovish pivot is last year’s story. The San Francisco Fed’s Proxy of reaccelerating, consumers remain
Funds Rate was designed to consider financial conditions, balance sheet operations and healthy, corporate profits turning
forward guidance, in addition to the headline target rate. By this metric, the Fed pivoted in July higher and monetary policy is pivoting
of last year while the Fed’s aggressive liquidity pivot happened in March. from tightening to easing. We
continue to favor both stocks and
Understanding why the path of the headline federal funds rate alone is insufficient to gauge
bonds overall. This month we made
the Fed’s stance is important for investors and strategists trying to understand the status of
tactical adjustments designed to
the risk-rally and what an eventual cut in the target federal funds rate might mean. Investors
need to watch both rates and liquidity and their interplay as lower rates will also change bank increase our exposure to areas that
liquidity decisions. For now, our best guess is the liquidity tailwind that is supporting risk-assets are more correlated with easier
could slow to a gentle breeze over the next few months, but it could get stormy later in the financial conditions in the coming
year. year by raising Equities to slight
overweight from neutral—funded the
increase in Equities from exposure to
areas of richness in Fixed Income;
increasing small capitalization shares
to slight overweight from neutral with
a tilt toward value in this asset class;
Trust and fiduciary services are provided by Bank of America, N.A., Member FDIC and a wholly owned subsidiary of and, increasing our exposure to
Bank of America Corporation (“BofA Corp.”).
cyclical Equity sectors.
Investment products:
Are Not FDIC Insured Are Not Bank Guaranteed May Lose Value
Please see last page for important disclosure information. 6421764 2/2024
MACRO STRATEGY
Yield Curve Inversions, Now and Then
Robert T. McGee, Managing Director and Head of CIO Macro Strategy
Once again, the U.S. economy has started the year defying the consensus outlook for an
Investment Implications
economic slowdown with rising unemployment. The February issue of the Blue Chip
Economic Indicators Survey of Top Analysists’ Forecasts of the U.S. Economic Outlook for While a reaccelerating economy is
the year ahead shows the consensus forecast for 2024 real gross domestic product (GDP) good for earnings and equity
growth has jumped from 1.3% in December to 2.1% in February. The outlook for the values, it would pull the rug out
unemployment rate has dropped from 4.2% to 4.0%, raising doubts about the need for from under consensus hopes for
aggressive Fed easing this year and helping to explain the backup in long-term Treasury falling yields, causing us to
yields so far in 2024. increasingly favor Equity over
Fixed Income returns.
For more than a year, U.S. economic growth has defied expectations for a slowdown that
was largely predicated on almost two years of declining leading indicators led by rising
interest rates and Fed quantitative tightening (QT). Asked to explain this apparent
contradiction, 95% of respondents to the latest Blue Chip survey answered yes to “Did
accommodative U.S. fiscal policy play a key role in the resilience of the economy in 2023?”
Indeed, the Brookings’ Hutchins Center calculates that the rise in fiscal stimulus boosted
real GDP by three percentage points (pp) between Q4 2022 and Q4 2023 (Exhibit 1), with
the big 2023 swing in fiscal stimulus accounting for most of the growth last year. The
anticipated reduction in stimulus for 2024 is the main reason 88% of the Blue Chip
respondents expect less accommodation this year, although there is high uncertainty
surrounding pending legislation such as the Wyden-Smith tax cuts, the Ukraine/
Israel/Taiwan aid packages, and other measures that could end up stimulating the
economy in an election year.
Source: Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy. Data as of February 20, 2024.
Fiscal dominance over monetary policy has also been evident in the offsets to QT, such as
the Fed’s Bank Term Funding Program, Treasury account swings with the Fed, and
government bond issuance scheduling to take advantage of the reverse repo facility at the
Fed as a source for more bank reserves. Adding it all up, after a big reserve drain in 2022,
these special factors more than offset the Fed’s QT in 2023, leaving banks with more
reserves and the financial markets with more liquidity than the year before. Since last fall,
financial conditions have further eased with the Fed pivot toward an outlook for potentially
lower interest rates.
Given the more supportive thrust of policy over the past year, it’s not surprising that
economists keep boosting their outlook for growth and employment. The higher growth
outlook is also evident in a raised outlook for earnings and interest rates. In January 2022,
when the consensus was calling for just 1.2% GDP growth in 2024, it expected three-
month Treasury bill rates to average 3.5% this year. By February of this year, analysts were
forecasting that Treasury bill rates would average 4.9% in 2024.
The outlook for corporate profits growth, which bottomed near zero last summer, has also
been steadily improving as the economy surprised to the upside, reaching a new survey
Relative Equity performance has mirrored this earnings trajectory. The big Technology
companies have cut costs aggressively since 2022, when their stock prices bottomed.
They had massive scope to cut costs, which has been helped by the boom in artificial
intelligence (AI) investment. Overall, CEOs are more confident about the outlook given the
economy’s resilience in 2023. A better profits outlook reignites cyclical economic forces.
Despite better earnings beats in Q4, S&P 500 quarterly earnings were down from Q3 and
remain below the peak level reached in the first half of 2022. Sales growth has bottomed
and started to pick up, although downward revisions to first half 2024 earnings still exceed
upward revisions. Putting it together, profits expectations remain hopeful for double-digit
gains this year, with the rest of the market other than the “magnificent seven 1” showing
early signs of an earnings recovery. If it pans out, a more widespread earnings acceleration
makes the consensus view for slowing growth unlikely.
Since January 2023, the consensus forecast for the unemployment rate in 2024 has come
down from 4.8% to recent lows around 4%. In addition, the outlook for both auto sales and
housing starts reached new highs in the February survey. These upside surprises to
economic performance since the economy flirted with recession in 2022 raise the
question of whether the economy is reaccelerating or coming in for the soft landing that
has become conventional wisdom.
Asked “Is the economy headed for a ‘soft landing,’ that is, a return of inflation to around
the Fed’s 2% target without the economy experiencing a recession?’ Eighty seven percent
of respondents said yes. So far, the declining inflation rate from its pandemic policy-
induced peak has bolstered confidence that despite solid growth, rising wages, and low
unemployment, inflation will continue toward target without a meaningful growth
slowdown. However, growing signs that the economy may be picking up, not least because
of ongoing strength in both equity values and home prices, which are creating record
household net worth, suggest that declining inflation may be short-lived before prices
start to pick up again, leaving the Fed with a stickier inflation problem after the election.
Recent stalls in the inflation downtrend have heightened these doubts.
The rise in longer-term real interest rates over the past year suggests that the days of
perpetual fiscal stimulus are numbered unless the Fed starts buying more of the Treasurys
debt again. That’s unlikely as long as the economy is chugging along, making the need for
cyclical rate cuts unnecessary.
1
Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, NVDIA, Meta, Microsoft and Tesla.
• Leverge market pullbacks or near-term weakness owing to either political or economic 13%
11.4%
12% Inflation 3.7%
headwinds as opportunities to increase exposure in Equities given the favorable backdrop of 11%
positive earnings momentum, the peak in yields, and the Fed pivot towards lower interest rates 10%
9%
beginning at mid-year. 8%
7% 5.7%
• Lock in stable income streams via bonds and dividend payers. 6% 5.1%
5% 3.8%
4%
• Be mindful and stay invested in the key macro structural themes of today—they are bigger and 3% I
more consequential to portfolio returns than the election cycle. 2%
1%
0%
• Stay close to home—we maintain a bias toward U.S. Equities.
U.S. Equities Corporate Government Cash
Credit Bonds
• Take the long view—see the forest before the trees. We’ve been here before—bouts of
instability and market selloffs are not uncommon and have been followed by decades of rising Sources: Bloomberg, Morningstar, Ibbotson and
market returns. To wit, between 1945 and 2023, U.S. Equities have returned an annualized Barclays Live. Data as of January 2024. U.S. Equities
11.4% (Exhibit 3). are S&P 500 Total Return, Government Bonds are
Intermediate U.S. Treasury, Corporate Credit is U.S.
Then And Now: When The Clock Strikes Midnight long corporate, Cash is 30-day Treasury Bill,
Inflation is U.S. consumer price index. Past
Flash back to New Year’s Eve 1999. As the world held its collective breath and entered the performance is no guarantee of future results.
21st century, nothing happened. The lights stayed on. Planes flew safely. ATMs did not go It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
bonkers. Computers churned. Life went on.
Ditto for today: Life will go on after the November vote. Whatever the outcome, asset prices
will reset, corporations will adapt, the world will adjust and carry on. Seeing the forest before
the trees, since 1945, and in lieu of many market-moving epic events over the past several
decades, annualized returns of the S&P are in excess of 11%. That’s a phenomenal
performance that speaks to the resiliency of the U.S. economy and markets. Another Y2K
moment is upon us, and we’ll get through it.
-2
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
Gray bars represent recessionary periods. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Data as of February 2, 2024.
The liquidity pivot happened even earlier, in March 2023. Bank failures were transmitting
financial stress and arguably the economy was heading for a recession if the Fed didn’t
address systemic financial risk through a massive injection of liquidity, including the BTFP. At
the time, risk-assets were flailing with the S&P 500 trading around 3900. While the
transmission of Fed liquidity to risk-assets is an enigma, a key point is that investors
interpret balance sheet effects as a shift in the stance of monetary policy. And quantitative
models may decipher a relationship between weekly measures of Fed liquidity and Equities.
Since the March 2023 liquidity shift, the S&P 500 is up close to 30%. Notably, the Fed
continued to raise rates in 2023, but the liquidity party swamped incremental rate hikes.
With the BTFP still in high demand, liquidity remains abundant.
So, what is next? Fed rate cuts sound bullish for risk-assets, but the liquidity channel cannot
be ignored, and we will be monitoring liquidity proxies. The BTFP has been a cheap source of
liquidity for banks with very favorable terms. It is set to roll off March 31, but it could be
extended. The level of reverse repurchase agreements help gauge excess liquidity and that
level continues to normalize. Investors need to watch both rates and liquidity and their
interplay as lower rates will also change bank liquidity decisions. For now, our best guess is
the liquidity tailwind slows to a gentle breeze, but it could get stormy later in the year.
2
Haver Analytics/San Francisco Federal Reserve.
Equities
Total Return in USD (%) Economic Forecasts (as of 2/23/2024)
Current WTD MTD YTD Q4 2023A 2023A Q1 2024E Q2 2024E Q3 2024E Q4 2024E 2024E
DJIA 39,131.53 1.3 2.7 4.1 Real global GDP (% y/y annualized) - 3.0* - - - - 2.8
NASDAQ 15,996.82 1.4 5.6 6.7 Real U.S. GDP (% q/q annualized) 3.3 2.5 1.0 1.0 1.5 1.5 2.1
S&P 500 5,088.80 1.7 5.1 6.9
CPI inflation (% y/y) 3.2 4.1 3.1 3.2 2.9 2.7 3.0
S&P 400 Mid Cap 2,858.02 1.1 4.7 2.9
Core CPI inflation (% y/y) 4.0 4.8 3.7 3.4 3.4 3.3 3.5
Russell 2000 2,016.69 -0.8 3.7 -0.4
Unemployment rate (%) 3.8 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.0
MSCI World 3,334.04 1.5 4.1 5.4
Fed funds rate, end period (%) 5.33 5.33 5.38 5.13 4.88 4.63 4.63
MSCI EAFE 2,288.42 1.4 1.9 2.5
MSCI Emerging Markets 1,028.31 1.2 5.5 0.6 The forecasts in the table above are the base line view from BofA Global Research. The Global Wealth & Investment
Management (GWIM) Investment Strategy Committee (ISC) may make adjustments to this view over the course of the
Fixed Income† year and can express upside/downside to these forecasts. Historical data is sourced from Bloomberg, FactSet, and
Total Return in USD (%) Haver Analytics. There can be no assurance that the forecasts will be achieved. Economic or financial forecasts are
Current WTD MTD YTD inherently limited and should not be relied on as indicators of future investment performance.
A = Actual. E/* = Estimate.
Corporate & Government 4.82 0.32 -1.41 -1.64
Sources: BofA Global Research; GWIM ISC as of February 23, 2024.
Agencies 4.82 0.12 -0.84 -0.56
Municipals 3.42 0.15 -0.05 -0.56
U.S. Investment Grade Credit 4.92 0.25 -1.50 -1.77 Asset Class Weightings (as of 2/6/2024) CIO Equity Sector Views
International 5.37 0.41 -1.33 -1.50 CIO View CIO View
High Yield 7.80 0.42 0.27 0.26 Underweight Neutral Overweight
Asset Class Sector Underweight Neutral Overweight
90 Day Yield 5.40 5.37 5.36 5.33 Move d from neutral to slight o verwei ght green
Equities
Move d from full over weight to slight overweight green
2 Year Yield 4.69 4.64 4.21 4.25 Slight over weight green
Energy
U.S. Large-cap
Move d from full over weight to slight overweight green
10 Year Yield 4.25 4.28 3.91 3.88 Slight over weight green
Healthcare
30 Year Yield 4.37 4.44 4.17 4.03 U.S. Mid-cap
Consumer Move d from full underweig ht to slight o verwei ght green
Move d from neutral to slight o verwei ght green
U.S. Small-cap
Slight underweig ht orange
Discretionary
Commodities & Currencies International Developed
Move d from neutral to slight o verwei ght green
Neutral yellow
Industrials
Total Return in USD (%) Emerging Markets
Information Neutral yellow
Move d from neutral to slight under weight orange
Communication
grade Taxable
Neutral yellow
WTI Crude $/Barrel†† 76.49 -3.4 0.8 6.8 neutral yellow Services
Gold Spot $/Ounce†† 2035.4 1.1 -0.2 -1.3 International Neutral yellow
Currencies Current Week End Month End Year End Slight underweig ht orange
Utilities
U.S. High Yield Tax Exempt slight underweig ht orange
Tangible Assets /
Neutral
Commodities
S&P Sector Returns Real Estate
Neutral
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