The Long and Winding Road That Leads to ‘Normal’

In our Q3 market commentary, we described the primary economic fears behind a lackluster and trendless market. Importantly, we said those fears would dissipate in the months ahead and push equities higher into the new year. Our forecast initially proved prescient, as concerns about the Federal Reserve and the delta variant waned. Then midway through the quarter, the omicron variant gained a foothold. The Fed, on the back of stubbornly high inflation, corrected course by increasing its pace of tapering and forecasting interest rate hikes in 2022.

A sharp sell-off ensued from mid-November to December, especially in cyclical and economically sensitive sectors and value stocks. After starting the quarter with a nearly 10 percent advance, the S&P 600 index (U.S. Small Caps) fell nearly 11 percent from their mid-November highs. Even more “virus” and “recession-proof” areas of the market, such as U.S. Large Cap growth stocks, experienced a pull-back — though it was a milder 4 percent decline. As we pushed through the holidays and the market digested news of omicron and the Fed’s policy pivot against a still-strong economy, cyclical and economically sensitive asset classes helped lead markets higher once again.

Earnings growth will moderate but prove to be enough for the stock market to climb higher.

Shifting leadership wasn’t a single-quarter storyline. The market experienced multiple twists and turns in sector leadership, as a recovering economy and easy money pulled one way while inflation and COVID-19 concerns pulled in another. Cyclical and economically sensitive sectors and value stocks took the lead when COVID-19 cases were on the decline and the “reopening trade” was in full swing but ceded leadership to “virus”-resistant sectors when COVID and inflationary fears reignited.

We think investors should expect to travel a similarly winding road in 2022. Despite current omicron health challenges, it’s likely this wave, like others, will peak and subside, probably sometime in Q1. Economic growth will remain strong, and fears about inflation and the Fed will once again cool from a boil to a simmer. Supply chains and the labor market are going to catch up, and that will essentially kill two birds with one stone (inflation and concern about the Fed moving too swiftly to fight it). Taken together, that’s a recipe for a market that will be pulled higher through the first half of 2022.