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What will September bring to equities?

Equities 5 minutes to read
Picture of Peter Garnry
Peter Garnry

Chief Investment Strategist

Summary:  In today's equity update we focus on equities in September and what might be coming. We remain negative and believe the rate cuts that are coming will be interpreted as signs of weakness and a potential recession is coming. In equity futures the DAX futures look interesting today with an attempt for the second day to push through the 11,850 resistance level. But in all fairness how much risk is traders willing to take going into a potential volatile Trump tweeting weekend?


Global equities are down 2.5% in August as volatility picked up and US-China trade war worsened with the prospects of more tariffs both ways. In addition, macro fundamentals continued to worsen, and the US yield curve inverted on the 2-10Y spread highlighting that a recession is brewing if the bond market is right. Yesterday’s rally in equities is not something we buy into as the flurry of events dictate a more defensive approach. We expect equities to come under pressure in September as central banks will deliver more easing, but it will eventually be viewed as weakness compared to initial positive reaction.

Our main point is simply that it’s the US-China trade war which is the catalyst in the macro fundamentals and that it cannot be modelled. Dynamics change from recession to recession. This means that when the Fed’s models are picking up enough weakness to warrant rate cuts it could already be too late. That’s why rate cuts typically precede recessions because the Fed is behind the curve in the last stage of the cycle.

DAX opens above resistance level

Investors are buying into the trade war optimism theme although if one looks through the Chinese press little optimism around US trade war is evident. But DAX futures (FDXc1) are a high beta to the global economy and trade war. The 11,850 level in the DAX index is a major resistance level and DAX futures pushed through it yesterday but ended the session below it. However, this morning it opened above it in a signal of strength. If DAX futures cannot push above this level before the weekend it’s a strong sign that investors are nervous and don’t want to put too much risk on the books heading into the weekend.

Source: Saxo Bank

Watch software and media

As we alluded to yesterday in our equity update S&P 500 profit growth is holding up well at around 5% y/y. Diving below the surface we see the source for strength. The two largest segments in terms of market capitalization are Software & Services and Media & Entertainment. These two industry groups alone are 21% of S&P 500. As the chart shows, profit growth in those two industry groups has not suffered yet from the trade war and thus holding up US equity indices. We urge investors to closely watch companies such as Microsoft (MSFT:xnas) , Facebook (FB:xnas)and Alphabet (GOOGL:xnas) for clues of where this market is going.

Stocks to watch

Very little action in individual stocks as we head into the weekend. The most positive news sentiment is around Dell Technologies (DELL:xnys) that raised its FY profit forecast after strong quarterly result. The new strategy at Dell seems to be paying off as the results look very strong compared to competitors such as HP Enterprise and NetApp. One of the key drivers of performance was the upgrade cycle in Windows 10 driving demand for hardware upgrades by customers. The company’s recent acquisition of VMware also helped on top line growth. Sell-side analysts are extremely positive on the stock with a consensus price target of $63 per share compared to yesterday’s close of $46.77. According to our 13-F scanner Dell Technologies is not a crowded trade with very few hedge funds owning the shares.

Source: Saxo Bank (five-year chart of DAX future)

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