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The $10 Trillion Stock Rally Gets a Reality Check From Slow Growth

The global stock rally is showing signs of fragility, and you can blame the economy.

The $10 Trillion Stock Rally Gets a Reality Check From Slow Growth
A trader signals as he works on the floor of the S&P 500 pit at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. (Photographer: Tim Boyle/Bloomberg)

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A $10 trillion global stock rally is showing signs of fragility, and you can blame the economy.

Both the American and European benchmarks posted their biggest weekly losses since the darkest days of December’s sell-off, with the S&P 500 dropping 2.2 percent. While the week ended with the European Central Bank’s dovish turn and President Donald Trump predicting a “very big spike” in U.S. markets once a trade deal with China is reached, stock declines were a sign that after a sharp two-month rally, risk appetite has weakened and the bar for positive surprises has been raised.

The $10 Trillion Stock Rally Gets a Reality Check From Slow Growth

Reality is starting to bite. Riskier stocks are falling back to Earth. Investors are pulling money from equities and pouring it in bonds. And trend-following quantitative funds are cutting their U.S. equity positions.

Blame macro. It’s nothing new to bond traders, but as positive catalysts from a pause in U.S. tightening to trade optimism look increasingly priced in, the deteriorating economic picture has become harder to ignore. U.S. jobs data missed consensus estimates by a wide mark on Friday, plunging to the weakest in more than a year.

“A kind of trade deal will support the market, but once the deal has been announced with all details, market participants will re-focus on PMIs and corporate earnings again,” said Petra Pflaum, co-head of EMEA equities at DWS Group GmbH, which oversees the equivalent of about $744 billion. “Global indicators have been weaker than expected, and that’s raising alarm bells.”

Another ominous signal is flashing in the Dow Jones Transportation Average, which fell for an 11th consecutive session Friday to cap its longest streak of losses in 47 years. Because they form the infrastructure on which commerce is conducted and provide clues about the strength of the economy, weakness among trucking companies, shippers and airlines is often viewed as an early-warning sign for the broader market.

Adding to the fragility of this year’s stock rally is the fact that it has been led by riskier shares at odds with an economic slowdown. But that’s started to change. In Europe, economically sensitive sectors are underperforming again as yields fall. In the U.S., factors associated with strong risk appetites have also started to drop, with both the volatility and leverage styles headed for their worst week since December.

The $10 Trillion Stock Rally Gets a Reality Check From Slow Growth

The reaction to the ECB’s decision on Thursday encapsulates a market that’s glass-half-empty. After the monetary authority said it will hold record-low rates at least through 2019 and grant new loans to banks, stocks initially rose, before sharply sliding to a session low as investors’ focus shifted.

In a nutshell: “It means the macro economy is not able to sustain itself without the support of monetary policy, which is extremely accommodative,” said Sylvain Goyon, a strategist at Oddo & Cie in Paris.

The $10 Trillion Stock Rally Gets a Reality Check From Slow Growth

Of course, a trade deal between the world’s two superpowers could still spur a relief rally, but even that doesn’t have much room for surprise. While an accord may cover agricultural and industrial sectors, it’s still unlikely to encompass thornier issues such as intellectual property and the Made in China 2025 program, Goyon said.

Meanwhile, investors have continued pulling money away from equities and putting it in bonds, further reinforcing concerns that the rally will buckle as inflows reverse. Trend-following quantitative funds -- commodity trading advisers -- are also rapidly cutting their long positions on U.S. equity futures, and such selling pressure is likely to grow, according to estimates by Nomura Holdings Inc.

“Investors that have maintained a bullish stance on U.S. and global equity markets based on fundamentals are likely to have a reality check,” Masanari Takada, a quantitative strategist at Nomura, wrote in a note. “There is a risk that Street expectations will become more pessimistic as a backlash from the risk market rally of the past two months.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Justina Lee in London at jlee1489@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Blaise Robinson at brobinson58@bloomberg.net, Paul Jarvis, Richard Richtmyer

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