Stock rally at risk in worst-case China trade war scenarios

As the U.S. and China head toward a showdown on trade, here are some guesses as to how that could play out in the markets.

  • May 10, 2019

  • By Bloomberg News

A painful but orderly retreat in U.S. stocks will morph into something worse should an all-out trade war erupt between the U.S. and China, potentially threatening the entire 2019 recovery. So say certain worst-case Wall Street forecasts.

Wall Street is coming to terms with the prospect of higher tariffs being imposed. Equities that rallied as much as 17.5% this year were headed for the worst week of 2019 at midday Friday. Damage estimates are swirling.

Obviously, forecasting the pain in percentages is way more art than science — it’s impossible to estimate the near-future of markets with precision. But as the U.S. and China careen toward a showdown, here are the best guesses of the people paid to predict.

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Rally of 2019 ‘quickly’ goes away

For Anthony Saglimbene, a global market strategist at Ameriprise Financial, the S&P 500 at 2,900 is fair based on the current state of earnings and the economy. The flare-up has already sent it below 2,850 and with the threat of more tariffs, that level could drift lower.

“If we have this global flare up in trade tensions and we actually see more tariffs put on, then I think markets could very quickly give back 5 to 10% very easily,” he said. “If we get to a point in the escalation where we’re actually slapping tariffs on all Chinese imports and you have China coming back and retaliating through various measures, then I think as quickly as we’ve seen the last four months be positive, we could quickly see that go away. However, the U.S. economy is fairly isolated, it’s a closed economy. We should continue to do OK, but it’s just not a great environment. And really it comes down to profits — profit margins, sales trends, those could all be more serious.”

Calculating the profit hit

UBS Group estimates that with higher tariffs and a breakdown in talks, profits for U.S. companies could contract by 5%. With analysts currently forecasting earnings growth of 4.6% for the year, that number would be wiped out. In turn, equities could fall as much as 15%, said Mark Haefele, UBS Global Wealth Management’s chief investment officer.

With a 25% tariff rate instead of the current 10% level, gross margins for S&P 500 companies could shrink by 23 basis points, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. If the U.S. administration slaps the tax on all goods from China, the hit to margins could be an even larger 50 basis points.

“China trade risks have largely been priced out of U.S. equities this year, suggesting any tariff-policy shift is likely to trouble stocks’ bullish trend, in our view,” wrote Bloomberg Intelligence’s Gina Martin Adams and Michael Casper. “Share values of the median S&P 500 companies with China exposure have rallied twice as much as the index this year. While valuations imply investor awareness of complications of selling into China — perhaps a result of slower growth in the region in the past year — trade tension should pressure stocks of companies exposed to higher input costs.”

Downside not ‘fully’ priced in

Bank of America estimates that the S&P 500 should end the year around 2,900 and has the potential to rally as high as 3,000 throughout the course of the year. If a deal is reached and some of the existing tariffs are dropped, that could provide a positive catalyst, says Jill Carey Hall, a U.S. equity strategist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch. But if we don’t get a deal, volatility could move higher.

“Bottom line is this is a market where we’ve been expecting higher volatility this year given geopolitics, given the trade backdrop, given the flattening of the yield curve cutting into this year that typically precedes a higher VIX,” she said. “There’s certainly been a healthy amount of optimism priced in around a trade deal, so if we don’t get a deal, we do expect that the market could pull back. We’ve written that we could see a 5% to 10% pullback if trade tensions do escalate into an all-out war and the tariffs rise or if we see tariffs on the remaining goods and China retaliates. There’s certainly downside risk that the market may not be fully pricing in.”

Technical hints

Miller Tabak & Co.’s Matt Maley is keeping his eyes glued on the technical levels. If one breaks, then the S&P 500 could be headed even lower to the next stop. The result? A minimum of a 7% pullback.

“The odds I suppose are still good that they’ll get some sort of a deal eventually, but the problem is that the market had been pricing in that they would get one signed certainly by June, if not by this week,” he said. “Since we’re not going to get that, the market was a little bit priced for perfection, I think it’s got more to pull back. If we get through this week and the tariffs do get placed on, the minimum I think is down — everybody’s been talking about the 50-day moving average on the S&P, which it looks like we’ll be testing this morning — I think it could take us down to at least the 200-day moving average, which is at 2,740-ish. That would be down about 7% from the highs. I think that’s the minimum we’d see.”

Economic vs. equity impact

A common refrain is, “The stock market is not the economy.” Investors should acknowledge that when contemplating the impact an all-out trade war could have on equity multiples. JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s chief U.S. economist, Michael Feroli, estimates a higher tariff rate of 25% could reduce 2019 GDP growth by about two-tenths of a percentage point. While that may seem muted, it could be worse for stocks.

“Most economists agree that the trade war is likely to have limited impact on global economic growth, but a large impact on company earnings,” said Dennis Debusschere, head of portfolio strategy at Evercore ISI. “We wouldn’t take comfort in the idea that a limited impact on economic growth would also limit the downside risk to equities. If tariffs are increased … the decline in risk assets is likely to intensify and we would not take comfort that it would take two weeks for tariffs to have an impact. The signal of continued escalation is what’s important.”

(More: U.S. investors giving up on international stocks

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