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Posted by Craig Basinger on Mar 14th, 2022

This Is Chess, Not Checkers

When big news happens, markets move. And this year there has been no shortage of big news from the pandemic loosening its hold, yields rising, inflation spiking, central banks pivoting and, the biggest news, Russian invading Ukraine.

This terrible senseless conflict has the West and Russia one step removed from direct conflict. The sanctions imposed on Russia are unprecedented in the level and never before has this level of sanctions been imposed on such a globally integrated nation. Markets have reacted to this, pushing global equities into the first correction (down 10%) since the onset of the pandemic. Commodities prices have exploded higher from oil to wheat. Markets most near or integrated with the conflict region have been hit the hardest while markets with lots of resources and greater distance to the conflict zone, like the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX), have risen. It may be lost on many, but the TSX is +4% while European markets are down -4% since the invasion started.

We say best of luck to anyone attempting to forecast the path of this conflict. Even more challenging is how markets will react to the ebb and flow of news in the short term. When the markets are more vulnerable, they tend to overreact to both good and bad news. This overreaction creates opportunity, especially if you can get your head out of the prevailing news headlines, reflect on current prices and the more probably outcomings over the coming months or quarters. Thinking two or three moves ahead, beyond the short-term market reactions, deserve consideration from a portfolio construction/exposure perspective.

Markets get over geopolitical events a lot faster than the events resolve

For instance, most have probably come across one of those graphs that shows markets leading up to and following several key conflict events over the past decades (ours is above). This ranges from Crimea, Iraq, Gulf War, 911, etc. The typical path for markets is weakness up to and including the event, but six months later markets are most often higher or back to normal. This doesn’t mean the conflict ended—more often the market just became comfortable with the added uncertainty. Let’s go past knee-jerk reactions.

The spike in commodity prices has been a tailwind of Santa-Ana-magnitude for the TSX. This is clearly a good news story but what about three, six or 12 months from now. We don’t know where oil prices will be sitting. Obviously sanctions and other factors have thrown a monkey wrench into how oil flows around the world, which has resulted in prices rising 20% to 40% from previous levels. Great for the TSX, bad for global economy.

Will oil prices find a new home in the $110-120 range? Will they keep rising to $150 or $200? Or will the oil find its way to markets causing prices to come back down? Nobody knows, but the longer oil stays up here, the greater the risk of a recession.

All recessions are not caused by spiking oil prices, but spikes to this degree have always preceded a recession

It is safe to say not all recessions are necessarily caused by a spike in oil prices but every time we have seen a spike of the current magnitude, there has been a recession that follows. One could argue this time is different given the strong economic momentum. The global economy is expanding at a very healthy pace today, implying a recession is far from the minds of most forecasters. Energy prices are a tax on consumers and the longer oil prices remains at these elevated levels there is a risk that the economy will slow faster than forecast.

And what does the conflict, sanctions, high commodity prices and uncertainty mean for corporate earnings? While the TSX has benefitted in aggregate, the dispersion of performance is very high. Some companies—those in the commodity space—are up considerably. Many others are down considerably. The next earnings season is going to be challenging. You can be sure global companies with operations in or near Russia will be taking charges. Meanwhile, cost inflation is likely going to rise, putting pressure on margins.

The good news is the size of the earnings impairments will likely be small on a global scale. Global economic growth, forecast at 4.0% for 2022, is unlikely to be materially impaired by sanctions and the resulting sudden recession in Russia. That nation has less than a 2% weight in the global economy, which brings us to a positive aspect, given valuations have come in considerably.

This is starting to look interesting

The U.S. equity market is still expensive by historical standards, but not nearly as much as a few months ago. Meanwhile, the TSX now enjoys valuations below its 20-year median. But if you are a value-oriented investor, you have to be interested in global equities. Europe at 12.7x consensus earnings for the next year is cheap. Even if those earnings are reduced a bit in the coming months, there is a heightened level of safety thanks to falling prices. Asia too.

Europe, Asia, EM back down to or below long term valuations

Investment Implications

How does the market chessboard look in three or six months?  The conflict could very well be resolved, one way or another, or the market may not care as much. Will the spike in commodity prices, driven by supply-side disruptions persist?  A commodity super cycle usually requires a persistent rise in demand, which doesn’t jive with slowing economic growth. Hopefully you had a decent resource weighting heading into this. If so, taking some profits and redeploying to areas such as European or Asian equities given sizeable valuation discounts may be prudent.

— Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments

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Sources: Charts are sourced to Bloomberg L.P.

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Craig Basinger

Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments. With over 25 years of investment experience, Craig combines an educational foundation in economics & psychology with years of experience in both fundamental and quantitative research. A long-term student of the markets, Craig’s thoughts and insights can be seen in his Market Ethos publications and through his regular contributions on BNN.