FidelityConnects: Denise Chisholm: Sector watch – June 25, 2026

Denise Chisholm, Director of Quantitative Market Strategy, brings her unique insights and perspectives on the sectors to watch in global markets.

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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects. I'm Pamela Ritchie.

 

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The inflation squeeze is real but it may be setting the stage for a stronger

 

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equity backdrop. Despite sticky prices weak real

 

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income growth is capping demand making a sustained inflation

 

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reacceleration pretty unlikely and quietly extending the bull

 

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market cycle. Why hasn't inflation spiralled like in

 

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the 1970s and could today's hit to purchasing power actually improve

 

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forward equity returns?

 

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Joining us here today to unpack this counterintuitive setup for

 

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another edition of Sector Watch is Fidelity Director of Quantitative Market

 

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Strategy, Denise Chisholm.

 

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A warm welcome to you, Denise. How are you today?

 

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Thank you. I'm very well. How are you?

 

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Very well, thank you. Delighted to have you here and we are seeing things like

 

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inflation discussions swirl, certainly. It is an era of new talks about inflation.

 

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I wonder if we can ask you just about the moving parts of inflation

 

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right now as you see it from your view.

 

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There do seem to be some re-evaluations of what inflation is right

 

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now, for instance.

 

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As it relates to the US consumer there's no differential in terms of

 

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what core inflation is versus what energy inflation is.

 

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It's all the same experience of higher prices.

 

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As it relates to the Federal Reserve, they can't control a lot of those prices.

 

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If there's a supply shock in energy they don't want to necessarily

 

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raise interest rates to quell any demand

 

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that's really the result of a supply shock.

 

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That's why I think that they struggle with exactly how to measure inflation.

 

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I think one of the interesting parts of this cycle is that we know that supply

 

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shocks can happen. We're just seeing it in energy, they've certainly happened

 

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in food, historically speaking.

 

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There's actually an argument to be that one's happening in shelter right now.

 

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If you had mortgage rates go up a lot a lot of people can't move homes so you

 

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have much less turnover than you've ever had historically in housing.

 

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That makes it very difficult to have an accurate pricing discussion over what

 

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rents really are and what they might be at some point in the future.

 

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When you look at inflation, the CPI is a great measure, we can talk about the

 

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PTE that just came out, when you look at it ex-housing, core inflation

 

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ex-housing, you're really in the low twos.

 

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Which is not to say that it's at target but you've been between 2.3

 

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and, let's call it, 2.6 for the better part of the last year.

 

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Remember, the sweet spot for the equity market is actually between 3 and 4

 

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so you don't need to get to target for the equity market not to have a problem

 

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with inflation. That doesn't necessarily mean any of this is comfortable for

 

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the US consumer because they consume all of inflation.

 

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That oil price shock that just went up, that we just saw,

 

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actually led to just the second time in history that you cited real

 

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incomes being negative without people losing their job.

 

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That's what's unique this cycle. The '70s and '80s literally had a

 

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wage price spiral. To the extent that you kept your job more

 

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or less you kept pace with inflation.

 

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The way you sort of see the chart is that real income certainly declined in the

 

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1970s but that's really a function of about 15% of the population

 

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actually lost their jobs up into that peak unemployment rate.

 

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This is a very unique setup in the sense that everybody is keeping their

 

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jobs, meaning the unemployment rate is low and not really advancing very much,

 

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and all of US consumers, really for the first time, are

 

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losing purchasing power.

 

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I mean, that is fascinating. As you say, in a, for instance, a recessionary

 

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environment you would expect that pricing power to go and people

 

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to close up their purses and make sure that they're not in their wallets and

 

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make sure they're not spending. But this is not a recession.

 

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You just take one look at the stock market and know that we're in wild times in

 

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certain areas and yet the wages sit where they

 

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sit and are a bit static.

 

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Yes, which is exactly why consumer sentiment is the lowest that it's ever been.

 

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The US consumer did what they're supposed to do, which is show up for work

 

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every day, and for the first time, really, in history they lost purchasing

 

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power. This leads to a very kind of counterintuitive view on inflation.

 

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It's very difficult, because of this difference it's very difficult

 

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for inflation to be sustainable.

 

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If you want to see the chart, you can go to my charts of the week on LinkedIn,

 

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there is a very clear relationship.

 

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The worse real incomes are the lower the odds that inflation

 

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in any measure can accelerate, such that when you're in the

 

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bottom decile, which is exactly where we sit right now, you only have 15%

 

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odds of inflation, either core or headline, actually

 

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accelerating over the next year.

 

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Even in that 15%, which I would say statistically you probably shouldn't

 

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bet on, is really a de minimis acceleration.

 

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It shows you that at the end of the day, I think there's lots of ways to define

 

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it, but really it is too much money chasing too few goods.

 

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To the extent that you don't have too much money, which is exactly the

 

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situation we're in, we just don't have enough money for the US consumer, it's

 

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very difficult for any supply shock to be either a), passed

 

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through or b), any kind of pricing power to end

 

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up being sticky enough to increase the odds that it's

 

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a runaway trajectory of inflation.

 

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That's the part that I always push back on, which is not to say that like ...

 

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I'm just looking at the market-based PCE, core PCE Chain Price

 

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Index, it's 3.3 on an annualized

 

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basis over the last three months. You would say, okay, that's higher than

 

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target. They certainly want it lower, that's true, but again, we're back to

 

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that sweet spot for the equity market, at least historically.

 

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You have to be above 4 1/2% and rising to be

 

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truly problematic.

 

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Yes, inflation is at a run rate higher than it has been historically.

 

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That's certainly an issue for the US consumer but that also

 

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makes the whole thing very self-limiting.

 

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I think that that upside concern, that I do think still plagues

 

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the market, I think is just a much lower probability than

 

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investors expect.

 

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Add to the discussion of the consumer and wages holding

 

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back inflation getting out of control because it just can't spend into it

 

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for all those reasons you just stated.

 

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You had mentioned, I can't remember how many months ago, oil was up, you

 

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sort of said maybe don't chase it if you're already there, fine, but it will

 

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drop like a rock. There are commentators today saying that they're looking for

 

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potentially $40 oil over the course of the next little while.

 

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I mean, that's kind of shocking.

 

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Could that possibly be the case?

 

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Oh, sure.

 

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When I look at the math, we talked through the math before, I think people look

 

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at inventories as a predictor of price, kind of like they want to look at the

 

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unemployment rate as a predictor of wages, but statistically it doesn't really

 

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work. Partly because prices are based on the market and the

 

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market is kind of smarter than the actual inventory level right now.

 

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I think that the inventory math went something like, look, even if you solve

 

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the Straits it's going to take them time to get through all of what piled

 

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up, some places are shut in and it's gonna take them a little while to get

 

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through into full production that you had been prior.

 

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Inventories are gonna stay lower, that means prices are gonna be higher.

 

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If you look statistically inventories don't predict price half the time.

 

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What predicts it better? Excess capacity.

 

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The more excess capacity it is, like OPEC has been

 

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cutting for the better part of the last four years, there was already

 

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too much supply. The shales were much more productive into a

 

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strong demand environment. There's no problem with demand.

 

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There's just a lot of supply.

 

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I think one of the reasons why oil wasn't anything above 120 is

 

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because there was already a lot of supply on the water stored in tankers.

 

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Maybe it shows you, look, off of the biggest supply shock in history

 

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maybe it tells you oil was a triple off what should have been the price of 40.

 

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If we actually sort of let those barrels actually come

 

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to market.

 

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I think what the market is telling you is we're already in an excessive supply

 

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situation before we got into this mess and right now if the mess is

 

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resolved, ooh, what if it resolves with more supply in a different way?

 

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What if they're building pipelines to make sure that the Strait isn't

 

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restrictive in terms of the capacity?

 

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We're already seeing it from the UAE.

 

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They already said that we thought it was going to be 2027 but it looks like

 

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it's going to later this year. There's going to be a wealth of options to

 

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get production, to get oil to the market.

 

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So no, I don't think it would be a surprise to see oil be lower for

 

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longer despite the shock.

 

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Take us back to consumer, their wages are what they are but they no longer

 

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potentially have what they are struggling with at the pumps, can

 

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other parts of the inflationary story then take off and then

 

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be an issue?

 

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There are some areas of the market that have pricing power.

 

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Technology is a great example of being able to price its product.

 

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There are some areas of the market that have absolutely no pricing power, which

 

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I would say anything consumer-based, consumer discretionary, consumer staples.

 

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Very difficult to pass through, very little marginal propensity

 

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to consume, very high sensitivity to price.

 

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You even saw that with the tariffs. I think that there were a lot of companies

 

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in the packaged goods area that tried to pass through pricing and just said,

 

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well, I think the US consumer can take it, it's a strong economy.

 

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The US consumers said, nope, I'm going to go to another competitor, there's

 

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either too much on the market, or I'm just gonna buy less.

 

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I'm still gonna buy my iPhone but I'm gonna still buy less of whatever it is

 

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that you produce. We saw a whole bunch of companies in the consumer space roll

 

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back their price increases because quantity demand ticked too much.

 

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The margins were under pressure anyway, and they actually resolved it by

 

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cutting price and the US consumer actually came back.

 

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It's just an example of how in a lot of areas that you cannot pass

 

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through price.

 

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The interesting thing is at the aggregate level ...

 

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the income limits everything so there is gonna be winners and losers beside

 

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that and it's just a matter of what is the marginal propensity for the

 

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US consumer to consume more in technology, less in consumer staples and any

 

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sort of goods, I would say goods area, more in services, less in goods.

 

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In response to those winners and losers, at the aggregate level, ultimately,

 

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if you don't have more money it doesn't really matter.

 

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You're going to spend more in this area but you're going to spend equally less

 

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in this area. I think that's the unique part.

 

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Yes, there will be winners and losers but at the aggregated level

 

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I think it's going to be tough to see inflation sustained anywhere above

 

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3 1/2%.

 

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There's the beauty of the market, the way it sorts these things out.

 

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It is incredible. Let's come back to the discussion of housing

 

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and where its role in the discussion.

 

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Really, we're going back to The Fed and the discussion there, their various

 

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task force. You brought to our attention some time ago now that

 

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if housing is really the big issue or one of the big, big issues,

 

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and The Fed can't really fix that with rates that it

 

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becomes more of a fiscal discussion, which leads to kind of a broader

 

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discussion of the fiscal and the Fed and how they're gonna work together.

 

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When you get numbers like this, PCE in, taking a look at where housing

 

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could come out, what does that bring you back to in the discussion of fiscal

 

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and the Fed on housing?

 

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I think that there's a lot to be debated still about housing when you think

 

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about who's the ultimate mortgage buyer.

 

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I do think that the balance sheet of the Fed that, obviously, Chair Warsh is

 

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trying to tackle at some point distorted the mortgage market.

 

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You still do have much higher mortgage spreads than you

 

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should have at any point where we are in the cycle.

 

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Even if you say it's been a poor cycle mortgage spreads have never really been

 

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this elevated for this long and it's in part because of what the Federal

 

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Reserve purchased during the pandemic.

 

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That's a little bit of a problem overall the affordability.

 

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It's not just the overall rate, it is the balance

 

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sheet in terms of what you own and the QT that you have done relative to that

 

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mortgage-backed portfolio.

 

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I think that there's something to be said to think about a natural buyer of

 

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that. That's the Fannie and Freddie discussion.

 

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That provides an ability at least, I mean, we'll see how it all plays out,

 

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there's some people to take the other side of this argument, that provide the

 

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ability at least to actually quell mortgage spreads and bring something more

 

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normalized to a mortgage rate relative to the 10-year Treasury overall.

 

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If you could end up in a situation where the Fed might not have to do much from

 

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a policy perspective, from a policy rate perspective, but do more from a

 

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balance sheet perspective to solve that housing market.

 

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I think that the whole thing is very interesting when you step back and say,

 

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okay, we're talking about inflation and we're debating whether

 

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or not that they should hike or cut, part of the debate is around the level

 

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that they're already at. Maybe if the Fed was at zero

 

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and inflation was at 4 or 3 1/2 you would say, well, clearly they

 

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need to raise rates. If the fed was at 5 and inflation

 

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was at 3, well, you would say that the Fed clearly needs to lower rates, which

 

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is where we've been at different points of the cycle.

 

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We're sort of in that muddy middle.

 

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That gets to a very key discussion of what people call R-star, meaning

 

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that there should be some relationship between their normalized interest

 

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rates and the real level of growth.

 

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If the economy is growing at 3 then that's okay.

 

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If the economy's growing at 2 maybe it's too tight.

 

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Now, the interesting thing when you debate that measure of R- star, and there's

 

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a lot of debate about it, what I think that the Federal Reserve controls is all

 

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the interest rate sensitive areas of the market.

 

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Does growth filter in in terms of earnings growth in the AI trade and CapEx?

 

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Yes, but that's less control by the Fed when you think about restriction and

 

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accommodation and monetary policy.

 

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The interesting part to me is when people say, oh, no, they're too

 

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accommodative right now, look at the areas they can control.

 

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Residential investment is recessionary, it's in contracting.

 

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There's decent argument to

 

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say that you're more restrictive than you think on the things that you can

 

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control like housing.

 

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I think that you could definitely make different arguments at this

 

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point. I don't think that the data is so clear.

 

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Things that you can control, that is sort of the debate about how

 

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the Fed, as you say, not the experience of others experiencing inflation but

 

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how the Fed calculates it based on what they can do

 

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about it, if they can do something with rates one way or the other or their

 

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blunt instruments.

 

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There could actually be a redefinition, we think, of how they calculate it.

 

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No, they're definitely good. Of the five committees that I think that Chair

 

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Warsh put out, one of them is Inflation committee and that's about how

 

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to calculate inflation. There are market-based measures, there's PCE, there's

 

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CPI, there's market-based measures, and then there's what is the

 

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parts that we can control. Shelter

 

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component, especially when you think about the way that they calculate

 

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shelter, rent overall, it hasn't really changed in the last 20

 

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years. Maybe it needs to be more price sensitive relative to other

 

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market-based measures that we look at, like Zillow rents or something else,

 

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that actually more marks to market quickly.

 

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The whole definition of inflation I think could change in the

 

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appropriate way. It's not to say that, oh, we're going to magically redefine

 

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inflation and then there is none.

 

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The US consumer will obviously experience all the inflation.

 

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You can see it all in the real income numbers.

 

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Are there ways for the Federal Reserve to recalculate inflation such that they

 

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understand what measures they can control?

 

15:45.444 --> 15:48.781

In a weird situation I've heard a really strong argument.

 

15:48.781 --> 15:51.283

I haven't really done the numbers and we don't know how these things will play

 

15:51.283 --> 15:55.321

out but I'm always open minded. I think that to the extent that the

 

15:55.321 --> 15:59.425

housing issue is more supply driven than demand driven,

 

15:59.425 --> 16:02.962

meaning that there's very little supply. You can look at housing starts.

 

16:02.962 --> 16:06.298

They're de minimis. I think that you might be able to make the argument that

 

16:06.298 --> 16:10.602

you could solve supply a little by dropping the policy rate to allow

 

16:10.602 --> 16:14.540

homebuilders to actually have lower interest construction loans to

 

16:14.540 --> 16:16.742

be able to build.

 

16:16.742 --> 16:19.878

Which is not a hike, which is not a hike.

 

16:19.878 --> 16:23.816

Right. I mean, there's the irony of monetary policy in terms of

 

16:23.816 --> 16:26.752

what it can and can't do.

 

16:26.752 --> 16:30.823

Even within the concept of the dual mandate I think there's a lot

 

16:30.823 --> 16:34.360

to struggle with in terms of how you define it and how you define it in terms

 

16:34.360 --> 16:35.361

of data.

 

16:35.661 --> 16:39.798

That's fascinating. We'll come back to the sectors in a second.

 

16:39.798 --> 16:43.469

We were speaking to one of your colleagues in Europe a little while ago and

 

16:43.469 --> 16:47.039

mentioning a bit about the AI trade, how it's filtering through to companies,

 

16:47.039 --> 16:51.176

and ultimately that its power and

 

16:51.176 --> 16:55.214

its productivity and sort of utility may be more of a

 

16:55.214 --> 16:59.218

business-to-business story rather than a business-to-consumer

 

16:59.218 --> 17:03.422

story, which, arguably, tech over the last 10 years has been

 

17:03.422 --> 17:07.326

quite consumer focused, if you take it from social media, the hardware and so

 

17:07.326 --> 17:11.363

on, that this might be much more impacting a company because they can use and

 

17:11.363 --> 17:15.734

deploy AI to help them produce and do what they do.

 

17:15.734 --> 17:19.905

I'm just curious how inflation might be a little bit different there, how it

 

17:19.905 --> 17:24.243

might be important to calculate it a little differently there if you're

 

17:24.243 --> 17:28.714

looking at an industrial revolution that may not

 

17:28.714 --> 17:31.417

impact the consumer quite as directly.

 

17:31.417 --> 17:35.554

I don't know what you think about that but does it change how inflation is

 

17:35.554 --> 17:39.124

looked at, for instance?

 

17:39.124 --> 17:41.693

Well, it wouldn't change how inflation is looked at but it will change how

 

17:41.693 --> 17:45.964

productivity is. We can grow faster with the same

 

17:45.964 --> 17:49.034

amount of workers, essentially.

 

17:49.034 --> 17:53.005

I think from that perspective

 

17:53.005 --> 17:57.543

you can grow faster at the same level of inflation,

 

17:57.543 --> 18:01.814

that's sort of the important math as it relates to the Federal Reserve.

 

18:01.814 --> 18:05.551

The interesting part is that is also self-limiting.

 

18:05.551 --> 18:08.487

The one thing that I will say, when you think about the cost structures,

 

18:08.487 --> 18:12.691

especially B2B, you're already seeing this pushback in terms

 

18:12.691 --> 18:16.862

of tokens and token costs. Trees don't grow to the sky and

 

18:16.895 --> 18:20.866

the US businesses are saying, well, my budget is not unlimited

 

18:20.866 --> 18:25.003

as it relates to AI. The good news about technology, what

 

18:25.003 --> 18:28.740

it does is make something that's very expensive and rare and it makes it

 

18:28.740 --> 18:30.542

abundant and cheap.

 

18:30.576 --> 18:33.579

Moore's Law will continue along the spectrum.

 

18:33.579 --> 18:37.583

I would just always caution people not to use anything static in terms of

 

18:37.583 --> 18:41.587

what the cost is, what the CapEx is, what the utility cost is.

 

18:41.587 --> 18:46.125

All of those things, if history is a guide, are likely to go down, which

 

18:46.125 --> 18:50.295

will make it more accessible over time for businesses to

 

18:50.295 --> 18:53.098

use, which will add to productivity.

 

18:53.098 --> 18:57.136

I do think that this is going to be a very, very slow process that happens

 

18:57.136 --> 19:01.140

over 10 to 20 years, not that happens over the next 1

 

19:01.140 --> 19:04.076

to 2 years.

 

19:04.076 --> 19:07.045

In which case inflation is something potentially to be fought for a while in

 

19:07.045 --> 19:08.080

there by the fact--

 

19:08.113 --> 19:08.447

Correct.

 

19:08.447 --> 19:11.049

--they'll have to make some ...

 

19:11.049 --> 19:14.686

it's not a one-year hold, hold there, we'll wait it out.

 

19:14.686 --> 19:18.290

There's some work to be done, potentially anyway.

 

19:18.290 --> 19:20.626

I think. That's Denise Chisholm's opinion anyway.

 

19:20.626 --> 19:24.796

Do we know where, do you know, not we, do you know where we are in the cycle?

 

19:24.796 --> 19:28.133

Seems to be hard to read these days.

 

19:28.133 --> 19:32.137

I think we're early. I say that because median earnings just finally got

 

19:32.137 --> 19:34.273

past their prior peaks.

 

19:34.273 --> 19:37.643

Median earnings peaked in 2019, 2018, 2019.

 

19:37.643 --> 19:39.645

It was actually before the pandemic.

 

19:39.645 --> 19:42.881

We, obviously, saw profits contract for everybody, median and cap-weighted

 

19:42.881 --> 19:46.952

alike. The recovery in terms of median earnings never got past

 

19:46.952 --> 19:51.156

the prior peak. That just shows you how poor the recovery

 

19:51.156 --> 19:54.393

has been. There's only been two other instances where it was that long, I think

 

19:54.426 --> 19:58.497

1967 and 1973, and then during the financial crisis

 

19:58.497 --> 20:01.800

where the average company, or the median company, not income-weighted, not

 

20:01.800 --> 20:06.238

cap-weighted, not tech-heavy, just your average US business actually

 

20:06.238 --> 20:09.408

took that long to get back to prior peaks.

 

20:09.408 --> 20:13.879

Once you did the rest of the cycle lasted four years on average,

 

20:13.879 --> 20:19.151

with some sort of diffusion around like three to six as well.

 

20:19.151 --> 20:23.121

For the most part I think that we are, for the average company,

 

20:23.121 --> 20:27.125

very early in part because it's just been a terrible

 

20:27.125 --> 20:29.494

cycle in a non-terrible way.

 

20:29.494 --> 20:33.932

What I mean by that is 2022 could have been a lot worse.

 

20:33.932 --> 20:34.499

It could have been a true disaster.

 

20:34.499 --> 20:37.402

It was pretty bad, actually, but...

 

20:37.402 --> 20:39.605

But the unemployment rate did not go up.

 

20:39.605 --> 20:42.674

That's what I'm sort of ... when you look through history, yes, it was bad.

 

20:42.674 --> 20:45.110

Everybody lost real income.

 

20:45.110 --> 20:47.879

The S&P went down 30% peak to trough.

 

20:47.879 --> 20:50.849

Profits actually contracted by about 7% which was a lot.

 

20:50.849 --> 20:52.684

Inflation was, obviously, 9%.

 

20:52.684 --> 20:56.355

Things were bad. When you look through a history and what bad means, at least

 

20:56.355 --> 21:00.359

to me statistically, somewhere between 8% and 15%

 

21:00.359 --> 21:03.128

of the American population loses their jobs.

 

21:03.128 --> 21:05.864

That's what bad has been historically.

 

21:05.864 --> 21:06.865

That didn't happen.

 

21:07.766 --> 21:12.070

It wasn't that bad relative to what could have been.

 

21:12.070 --> 21:14.006

Corporate America kept us all employed.

 

21:14.006 --> 21:18.110

Now, again, we all shared the real income loss for the first

 

21:18.110 --> 21:22.314

time in history as well but that has made this recovery terrible

 

21:22.314 --> 21:25.317

because there wasn't anything to recover off of.

 

21:25.317 --> 21:29.288

Usually recoveries are defined by unemployment going from 11% to something

 

21:29.288 --> 21:31.490

like 6%.

 

21:31.490 --> 21:35.627

It doesn't feel great to have 6% unemployed versus our 4% but

 

21:35.627 --> 21:39.331

that 11 to 6 is usually pretty good for the US economy.

 

21:39.331 --> 21:41.800

We're not experiencing that either.

 

21:41.800 --> 21:45.804

For me, what this does statistically, again, back to the data and what it

 

21:45.804 --> 21:48.140

usually means, there's symmetry.

 

21:48.140 --> 21:52.110

The longer the contraction or the stagnation in profits

 

21:52.110 --> 21:54.413

the longer potentially recovery.

 

21:54.413 --> 21:58.383

The reason behind that is just because of what you know as investors, the

 

21:58.383 --> 22:02.454

real problem for both the economy and the stock market is euphoria,

 

22:02.454 --> 22:05.123

is excess, is boom times.

 

22:05.123 --> 22:08.393

Sure, could you pick out some parts that are boom times?

 

22:08.393 --> 22:12.497

Yeah, absolutely. There are some four baggers in terms of stocks

 

22:12.497 --> 22:16.568

over the last four years but it's very hard to find that on a systematic

 

22:16.568 --> 22:20.772

basis. I just saw a chart, interesting, I didn't confirm the chart but it was

 

22:20.772 --> 22:24.910

the number of stocks that had gone up by fourfold in the last,

 

22:24.910 --> 22:29.047

let's call it six months, you can see that we're nowhere relative to

 

22:29.047 --> 22:34.019

prior bubbles, even in the '90s and the '00s and even in 2022.

 

22:34.019 --> 22:38.190

It's really interesting. Yes, you could point to individual issues

 

22:38.190 --> 22:42.361

but back to like, geez, wouldn't it be odd to be in a really strong recovery

 

22:42.361 --> 22:44.296

with housing actually contracting?

 

22:44.296 --> 22:48.233

There's not this whole undercurrent of

 

22:48.233 --> 22:52.237

growth. There is some growth but there's also a whole lot of areas that

 

22:52.237 --> 22:55.474

haven't contracted a lot, that haven't grown a lot either.

 

22:55.474 --> 22:59.611

From that perspective it's just difficult to build up the excesses that usually

 

22:59.611 --> 23:03.815

determine the end of both an economic and secular bull market cycle.

 

23:03.815 --> 23:07.953

If we're at the beginning and starting and early how are you looking

 

23:07.953 --> 23:11.890

at sectors? I think tech is always and still at the top but tell us a bit more

 

23:11.890 --> 23:15.560

about how else you're ordering the sectors.

 

23:15.560 --> 23:18.029

It is. I mean, technology is still interesting to me.

 

23:18.029 --> 23:22.401

The debate now is not really on valuation because the stocks are actually cheap

 

23:22.401 --> 23:25.670

because earnings growth is too strong, is strong.

 

23:25.670 --> 23:28.573

The debate is about is it an earnings bubble.

 

23:28.573 --> 23:32.511

Right now, based on what I see in the data, again, it sort of looks

 

23:32.511 --> 23:35.213

very durable from a leading indicator perspective.

 

23:35.213 --> 23:37.849

I think semiconductors are the real way to think about the cycle.

 

23:37.849 --> 23:41.052

Semiconductors are cheap. Well, Denise, they're supposed to be cheap because

 

23:41.052 --> 23:42.821

it's got to be the top of the cycle.

 

23:42.821 --> 23:45.624

What if you're wrong? What if it is different this time?

 

23:45.624 --> 23:48.894

I can say you can measure it differently because 2-year earnings have never

 

23:48.894 --> 23:50.896

stacked this good relative to history.

 

23:50.896 --> 23:55.133

What if the cycle lasts three years longer than you think it does and then

 

23:55.133 --> 23:59.337

that valuation leads to 77% odds of outperformance.

 

23:59.337 --> 24:03.775

Semiconductors, it's been one of the most volatile areas of technology.

 

24:03.775 --> 24:06.344

What happens over the next three months, who knows?

 

24:06.344 --> 24:08.113

I will not take a bet on that.

 

24:08.113 --> 24:11.383

When you look at what has gone on in terms of earnings, your starting point on

 

24:11.383 --> 24:15.420

valuation, and then just overall what even price momentum that we've seen

 

24:15.420 --> 24:20.025

actually predicts on a 1-year basis, it all looks like leadership to me.

 

24:20.025 --> 24:24.563

Uncomfortable, very volatile leadership but still looks like to me.

 

24:24.563 --> 24:26.998

I don't really have any problems with technology.

 

24:26.998 --> 24:30.068

I do think that there's other things that you can own, and that's been true at

 

24:30.068 --> 24:33.572

some points and not true at other points. I think industrials are a great

 

24:33.572 --> 24:37.709

example. I think the housing area of industrials and both consumer

 

24:37.709 --> 24:41.580

discretionary is a great example. I think that there are pockets of materials

 

24:41.580 --> 24:45.250

that are great examples of things that you can own because that's almost like

 

24:45.250 --> 24:47.052

opposite what technology is.

 

24:47.052 --> 24:51.223

Technology's got a lot of CapEx and less free cash flow than it's

 

24:51.223 --> 24:55.260

had. Steel is in the exact opposite position where they've already rammed

 

24:55.260 --> 24:59.364

CapEx, are now cutting CapEx and free cash flow is increasing off of what have

 

24:59.364 --> 25:01.233

been historically trough margins.

 

25:01.233 --> 25:03.502

That's usually actually a good setup.

 

25:03.535 --> 25:07.005

There are different setups in the market that I do find interesting but from a

 

25:07.005 --> 25:11.109

rank order perspective I'd say technology, it's run a lot so I think from the

 

25:11.109 --> 25:13.979

trough to the peak it was up 35%.

 

25:13.979 --> 25:17.516

I don't know what happens over the next three to six months but technology,

 

25:17.516 --> 25:21.019

industrials, materials, and the housing portion of industrials and consumer

 

25:21.019 --> 25:25.090

discretionary all look interesting to me.

 

25:25.090 --> 25:29.060

This is fascinating. If we watch what the the Fed needs

 

25:29.060 --> 25:32.731

to do over the next little while, they're gonna study, they're going to not

 

25:32.731 --> 25:37.102

move too, too quickly, what are the indicators

 

25:37.102 --> 25:40.672

that you get a sense of that they do need to watch quite carefully, or, in

 

25:40.672 --> 25:43.041

fact, could they just go on hold?

 

25:43.041 --> 25:47.279

I mean, the market is pricing in some hikes but do you see it closer to

 

25:47.279 --> 25:51.082

potentially being a hold?

 

25:51.082 --> 25:53.585

I do, actually, if I was a betting person.

 

25:53.585 --> 25:54.686

I know, I'm sorry, I'm not supposed to ask that.

 

25:54.686 --> 25:57.422

I would say that they don't hike. I should bet my boss again.

 

25:57.422 --> 26:02.260

I had that one bet with him as well, what was that, two years ago?

 

26:02.260 --> 26:05.263

I would say the same thing. I don't think that they're gonna hike in part

 

26:05.263 --> 26:08.633

because I don't think that inflation is going to be durable, mainly because of

 

26:08.633 --> 26:12.804

what I laid out. I also think the labour market is

 

26:12.804 --> 26:15.840

much weaker than I think that they give it credit for in the Phillips curve

 

26:15.840 --> 26:19.878

analysis, meaning that I think there's definitely some people on

 

26:19.878 --> 26:24.082

the FOMC, and maybe the majority of people on the FOMC, the low unemployment

 

26:24.082 --> 26:27.552

rate means that labour market inflation might be sticky and that wages are

 

26:27.586 --> 26:29.821

going to go higher. But wages haven't gone higher.

 

26:29.821 --> 26:33.158

I think there's more supply in the labour market than people think.

 

26:33.158 --> 26:37.128

Again, back to this doesn't look like boom times for me, if you're looking at

 

26:37.128 --> 26:40.699

college-educated workforce, I think it's the Kansas City Fed that does the

 

26:40.699 --> 26:43.935

specific unemployment for them, that's actually at the highest levels that

 

26:43.935 --> 26:48.373

you've ever seen historically kind of in a non-recessionary period.

 

26:48.373 --> 26:51.476

The labour market is not firing on all cylinders.

 

26:51.476 --> 26:55.513

I think when you think about what they will be looking at, I think that

 

26:55.513 --> 26:59.618

it might be redefining, or redefining how they interpret it as

 

26:59.618 --> 27:03.555

it relates to R-star and in terms of where the policy

 

27:03.555 --> 27:06.291

rate should be relative to all that.

 

27:06.291 --> 27:09.961

I think that when you net it out for me I think it creates a lower likelihood

 

27:09.961 --> 27:12.063

that they will likely hike this year.

 

27:12.063 --> 27:13.898

That is fascinating. We'll leave it there.

 

27:13.898 --> 27:15.700

Denise Chisholm, it is such a pleasure to speak with you.

 

27:15.700 --> 27:18.436

Thank you so much for your time. Have a good rest of your day.

 

27:18.436 --> 27:21.072

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