It’s all in the name.
There have been several monikers used to describe the current state of economic malaise, the most common of which is “credit crisis”. Others have referred to a “housing” or “sub-prime mortgage” crisis. And some refer to a “liquidity” crisis.
Add to the list “commodities inflation” crisis or more specifically “agricultural harvest” crisis, as current events focus the spotlight on crop shortages and world hunger. As I identified last week, I began writing about the potential for these phenomena over five years ago in a quarterly missive entitled “Below the Fertile Fields” in which I posited the scenario of commodities (including food) inflation, while the discussion then was still on rescuing the ill-fated dot.com debacle.
After an invisible period of transition, we now see the outcome of those early phases during which low interest rates and rampant consumerism sowed the seeds of gluttony and greed for tangible assets (housing, energy, agriculture, basic materials). All of this taking place right under the noses of our “New Paradigm” techie brethren who single-mindedly took their eye off the macro-picture to focus instead on gimmicks, wizardry, and bottom-up methodology.
The equity markets have made a full transition in the last half-decade. While tech stocks have “matured” into a more traditional P and L evaluation, surging inflation has nearly eradicated the productivity boom and surplus of the last decade.
Current forecasts indicate that equity expansion might be below historical levels and shaky into the foreseeable future.
It’s all in the earnings.
However, as with all measurable data, there are leaders and laggards within any market cycle, irrespective of its direction and magnitude. Today those leaders are in equities (sectors) with pricing-power and the ability either to match production with demand, or to raise prices in the face of falling unit volume growth, and to do so responsibly and morally.
While Fed policy has made a mockery out of the dollar, the falling
In fact, productivity and profit have rekindled a spark in agriculture companies and created a new leading market sector in
Global spending on agriculture is relatively constant, showing a resilience that most industries would envy. Retail, wholesale, and international spending on food offers a long term buffer versus other sectors whose profitability is more cyclical and higher in volatility. It is important to see all quantifiable data as macro and global in order to reduce the effect of politics, currency, or cycle.
That same macro-resilience is still present in energy stocks. Exploration, development, and alternative sourcing are windows into the kind of capital gains boomlet that our dot.com friends thought might develop from their sector.
Despite recent cyclical strength in these sectors, I believe there is more to go as long as the secular trends remain intact.