The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

THE DAILY EDGE: 8 FEBRUARY 2022

Data dependent? Good luck!

(…) The most striking thing about these newly revised numbers is that the labor market appears to have been more or less insensitive to the state of the pandemic last year. Job growth tailed off modestly in September when the delta wave was peaking, but otherwise, it’s basically impossible to spot COVID’s impact with the naked eye.

Why were the initial jobs reports so far off in 2021? It seems to have to do with the adjustment process the Labor Department uses to smooth out the impact of seasonal hiring and layoffs in the data. That process appears to have gone utterly haywire, thanks to the unprecedented job swings of 2020 and 2021, and only with this last round of revisions have the government’s statisticians been able to fix it.

Chart showing month to month job growth in 2021 before and after revisions

Jordan Weissmann/Slate

Still, note the diminishing contributions of employment and hours to aggregate payrolls since September, offset by rising hourly earnings.

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Wages of production and nonsupervisory employees are up 6.9% YoY in January and up at a 7.7% annualized rate in the last 3 months. Their bosses’ wages are up 5.7% YoY an 6.8% a.r. in the last 3 months. Nothing transitory there.

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Goldman Sachs’ composition-adjusted wage tracker has accelerated to a 6% annualized rate over the past 2-3 quarters.

With core PCE inflation running at about a 5% rate over the past 3, 6 and 12 months, this raises the question whether we are already in the middle of a wage-price spiral that will need to be broken by aggressive Fed rate hikes and a large tightening in financial conditions.

So far, we don’t see a spiral where wage and price inflation feed on each other while expectations become unanchored to the high side. Our wage survey leading indicator remains consistent with just under 4% growth, as does a narrower set of business surveys that ask specifically about compensation budgets for 2022.

And while short-term inflation expectations have surged, longer-term forward inflation expectations—whether measured via bond yields, forecaster surveys, or household surveys—remain well anchored. Taken together, these observations suggest that firms, households, and market participants still expect the current wage and price surge to level off as the economy emerges more fully from the pandemic.

But the U.S. second largest employer seems to think differently:

Amazon Is Raising Base Salary Cap to $350,000 From $160,000

(…) “This past year has seen a particularly competitive labor market, and in doing a thorough analysis of various options, weighing the economics of our business and the need to remain competitive for attracting and retaining top talent, we decided to make meaningfully bigger increases to our compensation levels than we do in a typical year,” the company told employees Monday in a memo reviewed by Bloomberg.

Amazon also said it was increasing the compensation ranges of most jobs globally and is changing the timing of stock awards to align with promotions.

Like many big employers, Amazon has struggled to hire and retain workers of late. The company has long relied on stock awards, betting it can entice workers to take positions even if the base pay is low. But the stock languished in 2021, gaining just 2.4% while the S&P 500 jumped 27%, and the strategy began to lose its appeal. Media reports indicate the turnover rate inside Amazon has reached crisis levels, and a record 50 vice presidents departed last year.

The e-commerce giant employed 1.6 million globally as of Dec. 31, including warehouse workers who are paid hourly and office staff who earn annual salaries. (…)

Amazon pays warehouse workers at least $15 an hour and in September said it had raised average wages for these employees to $18 an hour. (…)

And a Bloomberg survey reveals that:

  • About 55% say that they are likely to seek out job offers from other companies to get raises at their current firms, according to a nationally representative survey conducted by The Harris Poll for Bloomberg News.
  • If offered outside roles, nearly two thirds said they would quit their current jobs. Millennials are the most likely to jump ship, followed by Gen Z, Gen X and Boomers. Among workers likely to ask for a raise soon, nearly all say inflation is a factor in their decision and a majority cited the current economic climate. (…)
  • Some 61% say using a job offer from another company for the sole purpose of receiving a pay raise is an ethical practice.

Goldman’s Jan Hatzius goes on in his piece “The Slowdown That We Need”:

With all that said, we do put a significant amount of weight on the wage acceleration. Even if wage growth comes down from 6% to 5%, as we expect, this would imply unit labor cost inflation of at least 3% assuming productivity rises no more than 2%. If it persists, such a pace would be too high for achieving the Fed’s 2% PCE inflation target. This raises the risk that Fed officials would want to see an even bigger slowdown in output and employment growth than we are currently forecasting, to a pace no faster than the long-term trend.

How much additional monetary policy tightening would be needed? (…) Based on our estimated rules of thumb, this would require an incremental 50-100bp of FCI [Financial Conditions Index] tightening, which in turn could be brought about by an incremental 50-100bp of Fed rate hikes. Importantly, the added Fed tightening would need to come on top of the amount that is currently discounted in the yield curve, and thus in our FCI.

All else equal, this suggests that markets will have to revise up their estimate of the terminal funds rate from the current 1.7% to roughly our own 2½-2¾% forecast, or else the Fed may need to deliver more than the five 25bp hikes that are currently priced for 2022 (and included in our own forecast). If it is the latter, we think an even longer series of up to seven 25bp moves this year is more likely than a turn to 50bp moves. (…)

The broadening of wage and price pressures across the advanced economies implies that growth needs to slow and financial conditions need to tighten at an earlier stage of the recovery than previously expected. Consistent with this, our core market views are an increase in riskless yields, a widening of IG and HY credit spreads, and a combination of lower expected returns and bigger potential drawdowns in the major DM equity markets relative to the post-covid recovery so far. At this point, our baseline remains that this will be sufficient to slow growth and bring inflation back toward central bank targets over the next 1-2 years. But the risk of a harder landing will rise if US growth stays significantly above our below-consensus forecast.

But what if growth turns out significantly lower than expected:

Global economy sees inflation pressures persist as growth slows

(…) While the outlook for inflation looks to be tilted toward persistent elevated price pressures, as high wage and energy costs collude with ongoing supply shortages in the coming months, the outlook for economic growth is less certain, especially in the face of increased policy tightening among major central banks.

Just as global economic growth slowed to an 18-month low at the start of 2022 amid rising COVID-19 infection rates, price pressures intensified. The JPMorgan Global PMI™ (compiled by IHS Markit) showed average prices charged for goods and services rising at a rate beaten only once over the comparable PMI survey 12-year history (in October 2021).

Global PMI output and selling pricesunnamed - 2022-02-08T065346.349

Rates of selling price inflation accelerated in both manufacturing and services at a time of output growth faltering to only modest rates in both sectors.

Looking in more detail within the sectors, selling prices rose in all 26 detailed sectors of the global economy covered by the PMI surveys. (…)

Measured globally, the elevated PMI selling price gauge points to persistent high inflation in coming months. However, it is important to note that the drivers of inflation are showing signs of changing. (…)

Global PMI selling prices and inflationunnamed - 2022-02-08T065634.206

The number of PMI survey contributors reporting that energy prices had increased to an all-time high worldwide in January (comparable data extend back to 2004), matched by a record high in the number of service providers reporting that their expenses had been pushed higher by rising staff costs, in turn linked to deteriorating labour availability, exacerbated in January by the Omicron wave.

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The escalation of energy and wage price pressures in coming months therefore adds to risks that the recent elevated rate of inflation in many countries could persist for longer than previously expected, which will in turn add to pressure on central banks to tighten monetary policy.

However, while the odds are clearly pointing to persistent inflation, risks to the outlook for output (and GDP) are more balanced. Growth will likely accelerate again globally once the worst of the Omicron wave passes, but demand forces have waned in recent months amid various headwinds. These include high inflation, squeezed real incomes, ongoing supply constraints and the withdrawal of pandemic-related fiscal stimuli. By tightening monetary policy, how much do central banks further tilt risks towards growth slowing?

Omicron is taking the blame for the recent declines in output. But under the surface:

Inflows of new business slowed globally in January to the weakest since February of last year. The new business index signalled weakening demand growth in both manufacturing and services.

Global new order inflowsunnamed - 2022-02-08T070310.370

Part of the softer demand picture is likely to be temporary, resulting from reduced economic activity arising from the Omicron wave. As containment measures are lifted, demand should revive. However, it is important to note that the number of companies reporting higher orders due to a demand recovery has been on a marked downward trend since peaking early in the pandemic, falling in January to a level below the long-run trend for the first time since April 2020. (…)

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Note that S&P 500 companies revenues are up 10.1% ex-Energy in Q4’21 but growth is currently seen slowing to +8.2% in Q1’22 and to +6.6% in Q4’22. That assumes that the current consensus on GDP is correct.

Ten-year yields are back to their pre-covid level when the S&P 500 was at 3400. It is up 32% since while profits are up 26%. So the P/E rose from 20.6 to 21.6. The big difference is inflation (2.3% vs 5.5%), wage pressures and clearly hawkish central bankers.

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  • Equities saw positive returns during previous periods of rate hikes. But this time, the Fed will be acting “into an overvalued market,” BofA strategists said. The tightening  cycle that started in 1999 is the closest historical precedent, they added. And the outcome of that—the bursting of the tech bubble—certainly left a bad taste behind.

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Inflation Continues Impact on Small Businesses

The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index decreased slightly in January to 97.1, down 1.8 points from December. Inflation remains a problem for small businesses as 22% of owners reported that inflation was their single most important business problem, unchanged from December when it reached the highest level since 1981. The net percent of owners raising average selling prices increased four points to a net 61% (seasonally adjusted), the highest reading since the fourth quarter of 1974.

“More small business owners started the New Year raising prices in an attempt to pass on higher inventory, supplies, and labor costs,” said NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg. “In addition to inflation issues, owners are also raising compensation at record high rates to attract qualified employees to their open positions.” (…)

Price hikes were the most frequent in wholesale (88% higher, 3% lower), manufacturing (71% higher, 1% lower), retail (69% higher, 4% lower), and construction (67% higher, 5% lower). Seasonally adjusted, a net 47% of owners plan price hikes. (…)

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Middle Class Getting Priced Out of Covid Housing Market The surge in home prices and sharp decline in the number of homes for sale have made home buying more difficult, as affordability worsens for many during the pandemic.

(…) At the end of last year, there were about 411,000 fewer homes on the market that were considered affordable for households earning between $75,000 and $100,000 than before the pandemic, the [NAR] study found. At the end of 2019, there was one available listing that was affordable for every 24 households in this income bracket. By December 2021, the figure was one listing for every 65 households. (…)

The study found that housing affordability worsened over the past two years for all but the very wealthiest Americans, and the shrinking number of homes on the market made home buying more difficult in every income bracket. (…)

Households earning between $75,000 and $100,000 could afford to buy 51% of the active housing inventory in December, NAR said, down from 58% in December 2019. That 7-percentage-point drop was the second-biggest decline among all income brackets, behind households earning between $100,000 and $125,000, where affordability slipped 8 percentage points to 63% of the listed homes. (…)

Current homeowners are in good shape: from the Mortgage Monitor:

Tappable equity climbed to a new record over 2021, hitting an aggregate total of $9.9T. That represents an astounding 35% annual growth rate – for an increase of $2.6T in tappable equity in a single year, with $450B (+5%) of that coming in Q4 2021 alone. As a result, the average mortgage holder has $185K in equity available to them before hitting a maximum combined loan-to-value ratio of 80%, a one year increase of $48K.

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Others, not so much:

It now takes 25.8% of the median household income to purchase the average-priced home with 20% down and a 30-year mortgage, up from the 22.4% required at the end of Q3 2021. Interest rate jumps in recent weeks have pushed us – and quite quickly – above the long-term, pre-Great Recession average payment-to-income ratio of 25%, straight to the worst affordability levels since 2008.

While a 20.5% ratio has been the tipping point between market acceleration and deceleration over the past decade, severe inventory shortfalls are keeping home prices running hotter than they might otherwise.unnamed - 2022-02-08T073540.493

BTW: “Condo price growth also continues to outpace that of single-family homes as buy side demand has depleted available condo inventory » According to Collateral Analytics data, the shortage of condo inventory across the country is now worse than that of single-family residences.”

From another WSJ article:

  • First-time buyers made up 34% of all home buyers in 2021, compared with 31% in 2020, according to a National Association of Realtors survey. Nationwide, first-time home buyers paid a median price of $252,000 in 2021, more than 9.5% higher than in 2020, said NAR. (…)
  • The average cost to care for a single-family home rose 9.3% to $4,886 in 2021, compared with the prior year, driven in part by labor and material shortages, according to online-services marketplace Thumbtack Inc.

U.S. Agrees to Lift Trump-Era Tariffs on Japanese Steel The agreement removes a longstanding irritant in the bilateral relations between the two allies and follows a similar agreement with the European Union in October.

EARNINGS WATCH

We now have 281 reports in, a 78% beat rate and a +4.9% surprise factor.

Trailing EPS are now $208.63, forward: $224.98.

Yesterday, 5 companies offered guidance, 2 up, 3 down:

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France says Putin is moving towards de-escalating Ukraine crisis Russia’s president agrees not to undertake new military initiatives in region, according to Paris

THE DAILY EDGE: 12 JANUARY 2022: Happy CPI Day!

Powell Says Economy No Longer Needs Aggressive Stimulus He said he was prepared to begin raising interest rates to cool the economy and was optimistic supply-chain bottlenecks would ease this year to help bring down prices.

(…) But he told lawmakers at his Senate confirmation hearing that if inflation stayed elevated, the Fed would be ready to step on the brakes. “If we have to raise interest rates more over time, we will,” he said. (…)

Mr. Powell said Tuesday that officials had been surprised not only by the intensity of certain price pressures last year but also by a drop in the number of Americans seeking jobs despite a high number of openings. While that isn’t a reason for current elevated inflation, a smaller labor force “can be an issue going forward for inflation, probably more so than these supply-chain issues,” Mr. Powell said. (…)

“To get a long expansion, we are going to need price stability. And so in a way, high inflation is a severe threat to the achievement of maximum employment.” (…)

“What we have now is a mismatch between demand and supply,” said Mr. Powell on Tuesday. The main question for the Fed this year boils down to better aligning supply and demand, he said, which is something the central bank can help achieve by cooling the labor market. (…)

Pretty clear now: inflation is back in the driver’s seat, maximum employment on the back seat.

BTW:

1- U.S. retirements—whether forced or by choice—surged during the pandemic, led by older White women without a college education, according to the St. Louis Fed. Overall, there were 3.3 million, or 7%, more retirees as of October 2021 than in January 2020, a number that exceeds the expected demographic shift of baby boomers leaving the workforce. (Bloomberg)

2- Prices for transportation continue to rise. Trucking prices are going up, and shipping rates from Shanghai to Los Angeles are up over the last month, after a slight dip in 4Q. (Axios)

China Lockdowns Hit Factories, Ports in Latest Knock to Supply Chains Toyota, Samsung and Volkswagen are among companies with production affected as economists warn of more challenging bottlenecks ahead.

(…) The potential consequences are more severe this time, economists warn, because of the highly contagious nature of Omicron, which has been detected in some areas of China. (…)

A week’s delay of essential trade at the Ningbo port, about 685 miles south of Tianjin, could affect trade valued at $4 billion, including the exporting of $236 million in integrated circuit boards and $125 million in clothing, according to a study by the Russell Group, a supply-chain consulting firm. A container terminal at the Ningbo port was shut down for two weeks in August after a single case was detected. (…)

(…) Thirteen of China’s 31 provinces saw income from selling land-use rights drop more than 20% in 2021 from a year earlier, Tianfeng Securities Co. analysts including Sun Binbin wrote in a note Wednesday. (…) Another 10 had falls of 20% or less and only six provinces, including Beijing, Shanghai, and Zhejiang, saw revenue from land sales grow. (…)

More than a quarter of land parcels offered by local governments went unsold in September as no developer submitted bids, the highest rate since at least 2018, according to data compiled by China Real Estate Information Corp., which tracks auctions across 128 Chinese cities. The rate declined to 16% last month, CRIC figures showed, after regulators loosened financing curbs on the property sector.

Instead of selling land to cash-strapped developers, local governments may be forced to rely more on purchases by local government financing vehicles, according to the Tianfeng report – effectively selling to themselves. These LGFVs are companies set up by governments that raise money and pay for various projects, but their finances aren’t included on official balance sheets. Quite a few regions did this last year, the analysts wrote. (…)

This is from China based J Capital:

The chaos has started in smaller cities: We spoke with property agents who are seeing sharp declines in property prices in Tiers 3-5. Tier 2 is weakening but Tier 1 holding up. We find it hard to envisage a soft landing when the key growth markets, Tier 3-5 cities, are in freefall.

Property transactions are still up but are falling fast: New starts are also the lowest since 2017. To us, that means a fall in steel demand in 2022 of at least 5% – about 100 mln tons of iron ore. We expect iron ore to drop in price by around 25%

(…) U.S. growth is expected to slow to 3.7% from 5.6%, according to the forecast, which projects China to slow to 5.1% from 8%. (…) Japan, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam are among countries expected to strengthen in 2022. (…)

RBC’s McKay Calls for ‘Rapid Action’ on Rates to Tame Inflation McKay said he does not think the recent acceleration of inflation was transitory. He sees some signs of a wage-price cycle taking root that has already pushed up costs permanently.

(…) Markets are pricing in at least five Bank of Canada rate hikes this year, beginning as early as Jan. 26, when policy makers will unveil their first rate decision of 2022. Central bank officials have indicated they’re poised to begin raising rates early this year to quell the price pressures after keeping the key policy interest rate at a historic low of 0.25% since March 2020. (…)

As costs soar, some Japanese companies do the unthinkable: raise prices

Years of stagnant prices and wages have made Japan Inc nervous about charging more for fear of alienating shoppers and losing market share. Traditionally, firms have chosen belt-tightening in the face of rising costs.

While the overall rise in prices is still modest, more firms are opting for increases, led by market leaders often with speciality products, as commodities and transport costs soar due to the COVID-19 pandemic and a weakening yen makes fuel and imports costly. (…)

Now may be an “easier time” to raise prices because costs are generally going up for everyone, he said.

“Some of our competitors are doing it as well.”

“Our internal streamlining could no longer address the rise in steel prices,” said Hideki Kubo, a spokesperson. (…)

Goods sold to other businesses are seeing bigger price increases than those sold directly to consumers, according to official data.

Wholesale inflation, which reflects the prices firms charge each other for goods, rose to a record 9% in November, while the core consumer price index ticked up 0.5% from a year earlier, the highest in nearly two years.

Final goods prices rose just 4.6% in November even as raw material costs spiked 74.6%. (…)

U.S. Small Business Optimism Index Edges Up in December The NFIB Uncertainty Index rose to the highest level in three months.

Seasonally adjusted, a net 48 percent reported raising compensation, up 4 points from November and a 48-year record high reading. A net 32 percent plan to raise compensation in the next three months, unchanged from November’s record high reading. (…)

Among owners reporting lower profits, 29 percent blamed the rise in the cost of materials, 22 percent blamed weaker sales, 17 percent cited labor costs, 10 percent cited the usual seasonal change, 8 percent cited lower prices, and 4 percent cited higher taxes or regulatory costs. For owners reporting higher profits, 63 percent credited sales volumes, 11 percent cited usual seasonal change, and 15 percent cited higher prices.

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Apartment Demand Hits a Record in 2021

In the 30 years RealPage has been tracking the U.S. apartment market, demand has never been higher than it was in 2021. The market absorbed more than 673,000 units in the calendar year, blowing away previous records for apartment demand. When compared to the annual demand tallies from the past five years, a stark contrast emerges. The demand figure for calendar 2021 is almost twice as large as the volumes seen in the past five years. Even the five-year absorption peak from 2018 was about half of today’s tally at nearly 345,000 units. In 2020, when the market suffered from the rippling effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, demand eased to 300,000 units before skyrocketing in 2021. Solid absorption in the past year has led to very low vacancy rates and record high rent growth, and developers are scrambling to feed new apartment supply to the market at a rapid pace.

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From Raymond James:

Housing fundamentals never stronger. Housing vacancy rates and inventory availability (both new and resale) will start 2022 at fresh record lows. Household formation remains at multi-decade highs, thanks to booming economic growth, surging household income, and millions of untethered employees embracing a new work-from-home lifestyle. Domestic population migration only continued to accelerate over the course of 2021. The steady flow of people into Sun Belt cities and suburbs is creating deepening housing shortages and even larger growth opportunities for homebuilders.

We’ll need to see how higher interest rates impact demand.

RISK DOWN

In the past week, I have documented the “risk down” trend seeing investors getting out of the riskiest areas of the market. That leaves the largest of the large caps. Using the CPMS/Morningstar database, as of yesterday’s close:

In the S&P 500 Index:

  • 211 (42% in number, 40% in aggregate weight) stocks are down 10% or more. So 40% of the index is in correction mode or worst.
  • 137 (27% in number, 18% in aggregate weight) stocks are down 15%+.
  • 86 (17% in number, 11% in aggregate weight) are in bear market mode, down 20%+.

In the CPMS/Morningstar Universe of 2019 stocks:

  • 1282 (63%) stocks are down 10% or more. So
    40% of the index is in correction mode or worst.
  • 1001 (50%) stocks are down 15%+.
  • 763 (38%) are in bear market mode, down
    20%+.

The top 10 largest weights in the S&P 500 are AAPL, MSFT, GOOG, AMZN, TSLA, FB, NVDA, BRK.B, JPM, JNJ. Together, they account for 32.4% of the index. Let’s look at their fundamental attributes versus the entire S&P 500 Index:

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The top 10 stocks are 10-30% more expensive but currently grow at a slower pace. FYI.

Philips shares slide as shortages and recall hit profits

Philips shares (PHG.AS) plunged more than 11% on Wednesday morning after the Dutch health technology company hiked the cost of its massive recall of ventilators and said earnings would take a big hit from global supply chain shortages.

The supplier of hospital equipment and personal health devices said it expected fourth-quarter core profit to drop almost 40% to about 650 million euros ($739 million), as it continued to scramble for memory chips and other parts. (…)

Van Houten said the supply chain problems had intensified over the fourth quarter, and were not expected to disappear in the first months of 2022. But he maintained guidance that growth would resume over the course of the year. (…)

The adjusted margin on earnings before interest, tax and amortisation (EBITA) is now expected to fall to about 12% from 13.2% in 2020, against a previous forecast for a modest rise. (…)

A NEW WATCH? RECESSION WATCH
Jeffrey Gundlach Sees ‘Recessionary Pressure’ Building With Inflation

Jeffrey Gundlach said “recessionary pressure is building” in the U.S. economy with persistent inflation spurring Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to roll back easy-money policies.

The Fed “seems pretty far behind the curve when you consider wage growth,” the billionaire money manager of the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund said Tuesday during a webcast. “We’re going to be more on recession watch than we have been.”

He added that the central bank may only be able to boost the policy rate to just 1.5% before it inflicts economic pain. It’s currently near zero, with a number of forecasters — including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. — anticipating that hikes will eclipse the 2% mark.

Gundlach, 62, said he was right to predict high inflation, that it might have topped 7% in 2021 and that it could “peak out” in the first half of this year.

Consumer sentiment has worsened and bond yields “are no longer sending a don’t worry, be happy signal,” he said. The market is starting to flash signs of a “weaker economy ahead,” he said, while stopping short of predicting that a recession is imminent.

  • Gains in entry-level wages could push wages higher overall, and he cited JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon’s observation that there is huge pressure on the U.S. labor market
  • Home prices are still “going up a lot” and mortgage financing can still appear cheap, Gundlach said
  • Gundlach expects European markets to outperform if the U.S. market corrects. For value buyers, “the message is clear,” he said

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