U.S. Equities: Calm on the Surface, Turbulent Within

Despite the ups and downs of the past two months, U.S. equity markets remain near all-time highs and have experienced surprisingly few bouts of broad market volatility this year, especially considering the very significant moves in other non-equity markets, a shift in central bank policy, and the rising probability of a U.S. recession. However, significant sector rotation and style dispersion have generated meaningful internal volatility in the equity markets. In the past few weeks, U.S. equity momentum and value factors have had their sharpest moves in more than 15 years based on our calculations.

While we believe this internal volatility warrants some caution and defensive equity positioning overall, we think it also presents opportunities for investors. In an environment of slowing profit growth, we believe investors should maintain a defensive high quality bias, and the recent factor volatility offers investors the opportunity to add to that position, in our view.

Why is factor volatility rising?

The rising dispersion and volatility of factor returnsi can be explained by the lengthy period of slowing economic activity globally, particularly in the manufacturing and trade sectors, which has been met with central bank policy changes. Essentially, investors are responding to these developments by navigating to “winners” and insulating themselves from “losers,” depending on their assumptions on the causes of the economic weakness. This resulted in strong outperformance of the momentum factor and underperformance of value.