Should You Trust the Stock Market Bulls?

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“Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”
– Milton Friedman

Large-cap global equities are universally loved. All economic forecasts have the same conclusion: 2021 will be positive for global stocks due to no/low inflation, little risk of higher interest rates, accommodative central banks, strong earnings potential, stable growth, herd immunity, etc. The list goes on.

How does one then make the case for a cautious outlook for stocks?

When any thesis is reliant on one primary variable, its conclusion becomes circular and definitive; all scenarios lead to the same outcome. Interest rates are the variable, though immovable because of no inflation and central bank resolve. This is the right conclusion until it’s not – and we are too close to the “it’s not” to maintain high levels of equity exposure.

Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid wrote in a note to clients on Monday, December 14, 2020 that a key takeaway for the market in 2021 is that a risk-friendly, U.S. equities-heavy approach is “extremely consensus for the next 12 months.”

The consensus felt so extreme that Reid wondered if this bullish case for 2021 S&P forecasts was the “biggest consensus in history.”

“It’s fair to say that in the 25 years I’ve been doing this I can’t remember a time when so few (if any) disputed the central narrative,” Reid wrote. “Is this a warning sign or a reflection that the vaccine news has been uniformly positive and game-changing over the last 5 weeks?”

“Inflation consists of subsidizing expenditures that give no returns with money that does not exist.”
– Jacques Rueff