lunes, 29 de abril de 2019

lunes, abril 29, 2019
America’s Stock Market Exceptionalism Can’t Continue Forever

Relative to the size of the economy, U.S. corporate earnings are at steep levels

By Mike Bird




The S&P 500 is back at a new record high, while stocks in most of the rest of the world are yet to return to 2018’s peaks. But the rampant outperformance of U.S. equities can’t last forever.

Low interest rates and eye-watering valuations have been credited with driving the U.S. bull market, but financial conditions haven’t been so different elsewhere. The big reason why U.S. stocks have beaten those in almost every other country during the past decade—and why the trend has limits—is more basic: profits.

Since the beginning of 2008, earnings per share for U.S. equities have risen by 80%, according to FactSet data. Over the same period, Japanese earnings have risen by half as much in dollar terms, emerging-market earnings are flat and European companies are yet to see profits recover to their level before the financial crisis.




The postcrash economic expansions in Europe and Japan have been weak relative to the U.S. recovery, which has been helped by the global success of Silicon Valley. China’s slowdown has pinched emerging markets.

This divergence could continue, but other parts of the picture look harder to replicate. Above all, U.S. corporate profits have surged relative to the size of the economy. For the second half of the 20th century, corporate profits after tax typically ran to around 6% of output, and almost never rose above 8%. Now, the figure runs to 10%, helped by last year’s tax cuts. It would have to rise to unprecedented levels, double its precrisis average, to repeat the trend of the past decade.

Low interest rates and eye-watering valuations have been credited with driving the U.S. bull market. Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images


Japanese corporate profits have also grown as a share of the economy, largely due to a wholesale shift in corporate governance, which unlike a tax cut may fuel sustained earnings growth. In many European countries, meanwhile, the profit share of GDP has yet to return to precrisis levels.

Shifting guidance on interest rates has contributed to the recent rally, too. But since the Federal Reserve is now expected to hold fire on further increases for two more years, it’s difficult to see how it can boost stocks further without actually cutting rates.

Those factors don’t mean equities elsewhere are about to start steaming ahead of U.S. stocks. Equities in the rest of the world have their own problems.

But they do suggest that investors can’t expect such dramatic outperformance in future. After an amazing run, those with significant exposure to U.S. stocks would do well to take a trip overseas.

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