NEW YORK, May 23 (Reuters) - The typical summer slowdown
in U.S. stock markets may be more pronounced this year with
inflation jitters and an early presidential debate that have the
potential to weigh on a rally that has pushed the S&P 500 near
record highs in recent months.
The S&P 500 is up nearly 12% this year on strong
earnings and signs inflation may be falling enough for the
Federal Reserve to cut benchmark interest rates, but that rally
is unlikely to continue in the months ahead, investors said.
Summer has historically been the slowest season for U.S.
stocks. The benchmark S&P 500 has risen 56% of the time between
June through August, according to data from CFRA Research dating
back to 1945. Traders on vacation and investors waiting for fall
corporate earnings before committing to next year's asset
allocations are often cited as reasons for the summer doldrums.
This summer brings extra headwinds, though, with ongoing
uncertainty over the timing of rate cuts and the unknowns of the
U.S. presidential election expected to drive some choppiness.
"Markets are pretty richly valued at this point, and
everything has to go right between now and July for the Fed to
deliver any interest rate cuts," said Sameer Samana, senior
global market strategist at the Wells Fargo Investment
Institute.
"We don't see a lot of potential catalysts for more gains,
so there's a good chance that the seasonal slowdown we typically
see will be turbocharged this year."
Inflation data will be the key driver of the market for the
rest of the year, determining the path of Treasury bond yields
and their relative attractiveness compared with stocks.
The S&P 500 is currently trading at a forward
price-to-earnings ratio of 21.6 compared with roughly 17.5 in
October when 10-year Treasury yields hit near two-decade highs.
Hotter-than-expected inflation data early this year dampened
expectations for Fed rate cuts in 2024, pushing yields broadly
higher. Then a dip in the rate of price increases in April was
widely seen as giving the Fed cover to ease, with the market now
pricing in a 35 basis point cut by the end of December.
But another hot reading in June or July could dash those
hopes. The next personal consumption expenditures report is
expected on Friday, while the next consumer price index report
is expected on June 12.
"The real challenge will be on the relative side. If yields
were to spike and if it looks like the Fed isn't going to cut,
then investors will move into bonds and cash," said Ed Clissold,
chief U.S. strategist at Ned Davis Research.
At the same time, global fund managers have their highest
stock allocation since January 2022, according to BofA Global
Research. "When everybody is long, there's nobody left to buy,"
said Giuseppe Sette, president of market-research firm Toggle.
TIGHT RACE
This year's election race between President Joe Biden, a
Democrat, and Republican former President Donald Trump is
another unknown.
The S&P 500 has advanced between Memorial Day and Labor Day
75% of the time when a first-term president is running for
reelection, said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at
CFRA Research. But this year's race is extremely tight with
Biden largely tied with Trump in national opinion polls.
The pair have also agreed to a June 27 debate. That would
mark the earliest-ever general election debate in a presidential
race, focusing investor attention on the potential outcome and
policy implications of the race much earlier than usual.
"This looks like it will be a fairly tight presidential
election, so getting some kind of pullback as investors move to
the sidelines is quite possible," said Clissold.