The Style Cycle: Equity Factors and Macro Data Diverge

The performance of equity factors such as value, quality and low risk tends to track the economic cycle, and their recent behavior has eased concerns among many investors that the economy is slowing. Yet we believe investors should be cautious.

The value factor, which historically tends to perform well in expansions, has outperformed the more defensive quality and low-risk factors so far this year, after having lagged those factors in the second half of 2018 as recession fears grew.

The sudden reversal in these factors was widely attributed to reasons including oversold conditions, optimism about trade talks between China and the U.S., and a dovish shift in Fed policymakers’ tone.

But the rebound in equity market sentiment indicated by the recent outperformance of the value factor doesn’t match current macroeconomic conditions.

Our December Cyclical Outlook, “Synching Lower,” forecasts a synchronized global slowdown this year, and reliable indicators of the economic cycle, such as global purchasing managers’ indices, suggest that growth is decelerating. The IHS Markit Global Purchasing Managers Index stood at 50.6 in February, below the nine-month average of 51.9.

Furthermore, earnings growth estimates continue to be revised downward, on average and across sectors.