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Sectors

The previous Insight showed that broad macro conditions point to a reduction in managed care risk premiums. This outlook brightens further when considering recent cost inflation trends. The latest inflation reports showed that the cost of physician services is growing at a slower rate, and the relentless advance in pharmaceutical price inflation is also finally cooling. With health insurance pricing power likely to stay on the upswing (third panel), given that premiums are set on a trailing cost basis, there is a window for the group to show more robust profit margins. As a result, industry return on equity (ROE) should continue to handily outpace overall ROE, arguing for a better-than-market valuation multiple. Stay overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, AET, ANTM, CI, HUM, CNC.
Health insurance equities are on the cusp of breaking out to new all-time highs relative to the broad market, despite the headwinds facing any net creditor, namely low running yields. The macro tide is turning decisively in favor of this non-cyclical group. The S&P managed care index outperforms when overall relative consumer spending on health care decelerates and/or contracts, as it implies that insurance claims will decelerate, reducing costs to managed care providers. When this occurs, the risk premium associated with the group diminishes. The opposite is also true. Thus, the decisive downturn in health care spending growth opens the door to a re-rating, particularly given that cost inflation appears to be ebbing, please see the next Insight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, AET, ANTM, CI, HUM, CNC.

Three strategies that could win whatever the outcome of Britain's referendum on EU membership. And what to look out for in the final days before the vote.

The overall retailing sector is still struggling with aggressive price discounting, as the retail price deflator hit its lowest level since the 1990s. Consumers have a high propensity to save, which is making it difficult for traditional retailers to manage and budget. The contraction in intermodal railcar shipments and rising retail inventory-to-sales ratios reinforce that conditions remain extremely difficult. However, there are some bright spots. Yesterday's retail sales report showed that pharmacies are enjoying a boom in top-line growth, while hypermarkets are finally regaining traction. On the flipside, restaurants continue to lose sales momentum, which bodes particularly ill for profitability given that labor costs are running at a high-single digit inflation rate (please see Monday's Weekly Report for more details). We are negative on retailers, with the exception of hypermarkets and retail drug stores, both of which warrant above benchmark status.
Airline stocks have been walloped of late, as the downside of an industry with high operating leverage is beginning to rear its head. The past few years of low oil prices and decent demand encouraged a large investment in capacity, which is now leaving the industry with an inability to fill planes at an attractive profit margin price point. Indeed, revenue per passenger mile is contracting and our proxy for global CPI airfares has plunged. We doubt that improvement is imminent, given that fuel prices are back on the upswing, and leading business cycle indicators continue to warn that retrenchment in travel budgets is a higher probability than expansion. Against this backdrop, airfare price concessions are likely to remain intact, or even intensify, to the detriment of airline revenue and profitability. We are sticking with a high-conviction underweight stance. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRL - DAL, LUV, AAL, UAL, ALK.
Special Report

The exponential rise in banks' non-standard credit assets has occurred in spite of the government's efforts to contain and regulate it. The government does not have full control over shadow banking and non-large banks. These have become a large part of the credit system. Hence, the assumption that the central government in Beijing can sustain any rate of credit growth it desires is overly simplistic. Short small bank stocks in China.

Media stocks have been through a choppy consolidation phase in recent years, as investors digest competitive threats and changing consumption habits. However, evidence is materializing that media companies are through the worst. Specifically, value has been restored to the S&P movies & entertainment (ME) index. Consumers continue to demonstrate a healthy appetite for content consumption: personal spending on recreation and electronics has reaccelerated as a share of total outlays. While, cord cutting, skinny pay TV packages and OTT threats have cast a dark cloud over both content creators and cable companies, evidence suggests that gloom has been excessive. Personal spending on cable services is hitting new highs in level terms, even excluding price increases, and is soaring in growth rate terms. Importantly, other elements of the industry are strong. Recreation spending is growing at a mid-single digit rate, in real terms, underscoring that both movie and theme park admission traffic is healthy. That is facilitating aggressive price hikes, as evidenced by the surge in the CPI for entertainment. Against this solid revenue backdrop, wages are barely growing, a recipe for profit margin resilience. We recommend using price weakness and near-term volatility to augment positions to overweight, which brings our overall consumer discretionary sector weighting up to neutral.

At current levels, Treasury yields are consistent with our assessment of fair value. Further, the Fed's Labor Market Conditions Index does not suggest an imminent recession. Expect payrolls to stabilize above levels consistent with further progress on wage growth and inflation, allowing the Fed to hike rates later this year.

For now, maintain a benchmark duration stance leading into the June 23 U.K. Brexit vote, favoring Treasuries and (especially) Gilts over Bunds and JGBs.