This strategist warned investors not to chase momentum at the top. Now he says it’s time to be a contrarian.

Estimated read time 4 min read


Michael Darda, chief economist and market strategist at MKM Partners, was no fan of the stock market when it was registering record highs. “Blinded by liquidity and false expectations of the proverbial Fed put, we fear that some investors are chasing momentum into the graveyard,” he warned in early December, when the Nasdaq Composite
COMP
was some 28% higher.

So it’s worth noting that Darda is far more optimistic now. He points out market-based indicators of inflation risk have rolled over hard. Industrial metals are down more than 25% from their highs, energy is on the edge of a bear market, and the dollar
DXY
has risen by double-digits year-to-date. The gap between the 10-year Treasury yield and the 3-month Treasury bill rate has compressed to just under 90 basis points. “This is a sign that a previously behind-the-curve Fed is catching up. Yet, the focus seems to have suddenly shifted from open-ended inflationary overshooting to hard landing/recession,” he says.

A monetarist model is also suggesting tighter monetary conditions, he says, noting the growth in broad money has essentially flat lined, and commercial bank deposits are meandering in a sideways trajectory.

The stock market, he adds, has essentially priced in more than two-thirds of a recessionary/bear market outcome already, with the S&P 500 down as much as 24% from its highs, and the forward multiple down nearly five points over a six-month span. When the multiple has contracted by four points or more over a six-month span, the S&P 500 climbed by double digits in the next 12 to 24 months.

”Our point here is that markets have already priced in a significant risk of recession/earnings declines and there may not be a recession this year. Even if there is a recession, markets move first and investors are highly unlikely to be able to time the bottom,” he says. So even though markets could fall further, a downturn is now the consensus call, so “why not be a bit of contrarian here.”

The buzz

Initial jobless claims rose to a six-month high of 235,000, the Labor Department reported

Merck
MRK
is in advanced talks to buy cancer biotech Seagen
SGEN
for roughly $40 billion, or above $200 per share, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Meme stock GameStop
GME
rallied 7% in premarket trade after it announced a 4-for-1 stock split.

Tesla
TSLA
CEO and Twitter
TWTR
suitor Elon Musk fathered twins with a top executive at Neurolink, one of his many companies, Business Insider reported, citing a court document.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is resigning, finally bowing to the demands of scores of ministers who resigned over his handling of a sexual assault case.

The market

Looks like a higher start is in store as U.S. stock futures
ES00

NQ00
rose, after the third straight gain on Wednesday for the S&P 500.
SPX

Oil futures
CL
were trading over $99 per barrel, while the 10-year Treasury yield
BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
was at 2.96%.

The chart

Johnson’s resignation put an end to the mass exodus from his cabinet. The U.K. Institute for Government found that the number of ministerial resignations, outside of reshuffles, was the most since at least 1979.

Top tickers

Here were the most active stock-market tickers at 6 a.m. Eastern.

Random reads

Former FBI Director James Comey and deputy director Andrew McCabe were selected for ostensibly random intensive tax audits.

An Airbus
FR:AIR
jet flew for 14 hours with a hole in its side.

A mysterious granite monument in Georgia, target of conspiracy theorists, has been blown up.

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