Motley Fool Money - Earnings Watch & Market Valuation w/ Liz Ann Sonders
Episode Date: January 15, 2023"Guidance becomes even more important in this environment." Liz Ann Sonders, Chief Investment Strategist at Charles Schwab, returns to offer her perspective on what investors should be watching this ...earnings season, as well as: - The unlikely start to her career in investing - Key macroeconomic data she and her team at Schwab are focused on - Her question about crypto - One idea to improve the odds of financial independence Host: Chris Hill Guest: Liz Ann Sonders Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Tim Sparks, Heather Horton Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So I think the actual reports for Q4 will be important as they always are, but I think the forward guidance becomes even more important in this environment.
And not just whatever guidance they might provide on earnings per share so we can get a sense of whether the bar is still too high for 2020.
It hasn't come down enough, maybe has been cut enough, but specifically profit margins and to your point, the layoff situation.
I'm Chris Hill and that's Lizanne Saunders, the chief investment.
strategist at Charles Schwab, weighing in with her thoughts on what investors should be watching
during the earnings season that just kicked off.
I caught up with her last week to get her thoughts on the market, valuation, risk tolerance,
crypto, financial independence, and a lot more.
But I began the conversation by asking about her career path.
There are people who know early in life exactly what they want to do for a living.
But Liz Ann Saunders went to the University of Delaware and studied international relations.
exactly what you would expect to be the field of study for someone who ended up being one of the most
influential market strategists in America. So my first question was, back when you were in college,
what was the plan? I didn't have a plan. And when you said there are people who know very early on in
life exactly what they want to do and do it, I was decidedly not one of those people. I really
didn't know what I wanted to do. The international relations degree really was a double major
in political science and economics. That was the program of
study my first, I think, two and a half years until they developed the IR program. And I knew that
when setting up the double major because that represented the prerequisite. So in more practical terms,
that was the backdrop. And I felt that that was just broad enough that it kept lots of different
avenues open given I didn't know what I wanted to do. The only thing I really knew I wanted to do was
live and work in New York City. So when I got out of undergrad, my grandfather was still living in the
city and I essentially just pounded the pavement, got connected with an entry-level headhunter and
interviewed at numerous different firms across many industries and just happened to really connect
with the people at Zweig Avatar and something spoke to me. And so I took that job and went to
graduate school at night starting a year later. And while I worked full time, they paid for it. So that
made the decision easy. And so I was there for 13 years and I've essentially been at Schwab since then.
So basically two companies in 37 years, which is not common on Wall Street.
Absolutely not common in general and particularly on Wall Street.
What was it in those early days that really turned the investing light on for you and made you think,
oh, not only is this interesting to me, I think this is what I want to do?
So what's interesting about the answer to that question is, you know, in advance of the first interview I had was Swig Avatar and then in between the first and second interviews, I did research on the company, on the founding partners, one of whom was the late great Marty's Weig, which, of course, this was in 1986.
So doing research then was going to the library on MicroFiche, you know, literally scrolling the wheel through newspaper clipping.
There was no Google, there was no internet.
So it was a bit more of an arduous task at the time.
But I was fascinated by Marty.
He was, for lack of a better word, he was very much a guru at that time, was incredibly
well-known, had started one of the earliest ever, if not earliest hedge funds, which is
still ongoing, even though he passed away a number of years ago.
That's why he met a partnership, and there was mutual funds.
He had the best-selling investment newsletter at the time.
and the avatar side was the institutional money management side, and that's the side I started on.
But I was always fascinated by Marty's top-down work. He created the Pocall ratio. He coined the phrase,
don't fight the Fed. He coined the phrase, The Trend is Your Friend. He developed numerous breadth-type models.
There's this wide breadth thrust that technicians follow. So even though I was ultimately managing money on the
avatar side, I was always much more interested in the top-down big picture 30,000 feet. And when I
left in 99 to join U.S. Trust, which only several months later was acquired by Schwab, I was then
quickly adopted by the parent company, as I like to say. And one of the things they wanted to do
was create this position of chief investment strategists that had not existed at Schwab before. And
they asked if I was interested. And that was my foray from essentially the world of bottom-up stock
picking to top-down macro economic and market analysis. And that was 23 years ago.
It's great that you were able to figure out pretty quickly what area of investing you were
most interested in. And I want to stick with the Schwab part of this for just a second because I found
this quote of yours from an interview you did a few years ago, where you said most strategists
make short-term predictions about the market, but that's not what we do. We think,
investors need to figure out where they are on the risk spectrum, and then we help them customize
their allocations from there. We try to foster the notion of long-term discipline so that our
clients aren't constantly changing their investments based on the short-term market prediction.
And, you know, obviously love the focus on the long-term discipline and not basing things
on short-term market moves. I am curious, though, how much of a challenge is that in terms
of helping people figure out their risk tolerance. Because in my experience, which is not nearly
as extensive as yours, but in my limited experience, the majority of people tend to, out of the gate,
overestimate their risk tolerance. There are some people who maybe underestimated and they're
too conservative for their own good. And it's really a minority of people who can nail what
their risk tolerance actually is. You're right. And keep in mind that,
I don't work directly with clients one-on-one.
So the work that I and our team do as well as on the fixed-income side of our world
and the international side of our world is very big picture.
But it's a great question.
And the way I often frame it and the way I talk in broad terms to large groups of clients about it is,
ideally you figure this out before the market helps you figure it out,
is, is there a narrow or wide gap between your financial risk tolerance and your emotional
risk tolerance? You know, the financial risk tolerance is the arguably the easy part of the
process where you figure out, you know, time horizon and age and maybe past experiences,
tax bracket, are you looking to just appreciate the portfolio or do you need to live in part
on the income generating from it, et cetera, et cetera? So those questions are generally easy
to answer and you can come up with your financial risk tolerance and then what a structural
portfolio might look like. It's the emotional risk tolerance. And sometimes you don't realize
if there's a yawning gap between the two, it tends to come because of a tough market
environment that then has your emotions kick in and override your financial risk tolerance.
And that often leads to mistakes. Perhaps in both directions, too much aggressiveness when things are
going well and then panic and fear and then missing.
out on the eventual recovery. So that I think is, you're right, it's the toughest part, but I think
framing it in an emotional versus financial risk tolerance. I think sometimes investors, even without
maybe a long experience of dealing with market volatility, is maybe think about other aspects of their
life that might bring in the same concept where you can get a sense of, you know, does the heart
act differently than the head in other important areas of your life?
Over the past year, let's call it, investors, and I'm certainly one of them, have probably
paid more attention than previously to data points related to inflation, the consumer price
index, the producer price index. There's so much more in the mainstream narrative now than they
were really in the years prior. I'm curious how important you think they are in terms of
everyday investors. And because of all that oxygen going
to inflation over the past year. Rightfully so, what is an under the radar data point that doesn't get
as much attention that you think investors might want to start paying attention to?
Sure. So, you know, the inflation data that we're barraged with these days is not terribly
different data than has been the case in decades past. It's just it matters more because it's
much higher. And the reaction function of the Fed is having.
a significant impact on the market.
You know, as it relates to, you know, how does it matter to investors?
Why does it matter to investors?
Well, at the market end of things, it's, we're in a don't fight the Fed kind of environment.
We're in a unique period of time, actually, where to some degree the market is fighting
the Fed, or maybe put more precisely, the bond market is fighting the Fed.
and the structure of the bond market now with the big drop in longer term yields is essentially
sending a message that either the Fed is going to be able to kind of pause and ease policy
sooner than what they're telling us they're likely to do or the hit to the economy is more
significant than what's built into expectations. And that's why you have such a, you know,
inverted yield curve. So maybe it's the stock market is keying more off what the bond market is saying
than it is off of what the Fed is saying. That said, if the reason why the bond market is fighting
the Fed is because growth is going to slow more significantly, I don't think that that's priced
into the market. I think, you know, we're in a bare market. At the worst, the S&P was down 35%. So it's clearly
not the case that the market has been whistling past the graveyard of all the stuff we're dealing
with. It's just a question of does it get worse from here? The inflation data, you know, we have seen
better and better readings pretty consistently since the peak in June, not anywhere near yet to
the Fed's target, which is somewhat arbitrary, but it is what it is. That is the target. And for now,
that's what they're saying. From a consumer's perspective, inflation is kind of a funny thing,
because everybody's inflation rate is different,
depending on, especially in this environment,
where the rent component of a metric like CPI
is still going through the roof.
Now, it's an imputed rent component,
and it doesn't really track the real economy rent indexes,
things like Zillow and Redfin and RealPage,
all of which have rolled over,
but it takes a while for it to finally work its way
into that CPI data.
But if you are,
if you're not renting, you own a home, but you're not paying a mortgage on it, an adjustable
mortgage. I think, you know, an example like my parents, my parents are elderly, 85 and 92,
and they don't own a home anymore. They live in assisted living. It's a controlled increase.
They're getting a big COLA adjustment with their Social Security. They're not grocery shopping.
The meals are paid for. So they don't experience. They don't drive anymore. The kind of inflation that
somebody who is renting or has a variable mortgage rate or is driving an hour to work and has to
pay for gas and has to heat their home. So the reality is everybody's inflation rate is different.
We just have these standard metrics that we use to measure it. I know you and your team at Schwab
focus on macroeconomic data. I am curious, however, just in this month, we've heard layoff
announcements from businesses like Amazon, Goldman Sachs, Salesforce. When that news comes across your desk,
what do you and your team do with it? Well, here's one thing we've done with it that I think,
and it kind of goes back to the second part of question, which I didn't, last question, which I didn't
directly get to, which is, you know, what might people be missing or what are you looking at that's
maybe not quite on the radar screen? So just thinking about the most recent jobs report, one of the
specific metrics that comes out every month with the report that went down was wage growth.
And that was what the stock market anyway seemed to key on. Okay, wage growth is coming down.
That maybe not imminently gives the Fed the green light to start moving toward a pause or easing
policy, but at least that's not continuing to accelerate. The problem with looking at that as a
measure of wages is it's an average. And what's been happening very recently, to your point,
a lot of the big layoffs are of people up the wage spectrum. The two segments within the Bureau of
Labor Statistics break down by industry of the payroll data they give us an aggregate every month.
The two in the negative column are professional business services and technology. So what happens when you
take a larger swath of bigger numbers out of wage data. It brings the average down, somewhat artificially
suggesting less wage pressure. Conversely, if you go back to, you know, the April month of 2020,
when we were deep in the worst part of the pandemic, everything was fully locked down, you know,
20 million jobs lost on a monthly basis, wage growth showed that average hourly earning, and
was up more than 8%. No one in their right mind thought we were in a wage boom in that
environment. It's just the numbers that were coming out of the average on mass were the lower
numbers because it was down the wage spectrum. It was retail and leisure and hospitality and,
you know, younger workers. And so that artificially biased the wage number up. You had the opposite
effect. When things started opening back up, you saw massive plunge to incredibly low level of wage
growth because a lot of lower numbers were coming into the average. So I would say that with all of this
data, inflation data, wage data, jobs data, you've got to peel at least one at layer of the onion
back. In addition, wage growth is still healthy, although down a little bit, but hours worked are
being cut quite significantly. So your wage times your hours work equals your weekly pay.
weekly pay has kind of been sinking like a stone.
And it may be reflective of the unique environment we're in,
where companies, especially those that really fought hard to bring in skilled workers
and they may be more hesitant to let them go,
but they are cutting hours.
And that's indicative of maybe a little more weakness being reflected broadly
via labor market statistics than if you just simply looked at a payroll number.
And then last thing I'd say is the payroll statistics is part of the establishment survey.
You can't calculate the unemployment rate from that.
There's the separate household survey that's done.
That's where you calculate the unemployment rate.
That had a huge jump of more than 700,000 new jobs.
They were all part-time.
Multiple job holders are going through the roof.
That is not indicative of a strong economy.
And so what can happen is if you or I fall on hard times and we have to take on a second job,
If we were part of the household survey, we say, I might say, yes, I, you know, I'm now working part-time at Target.
That additional job that me, the one person has, could get picked up in the payroll survey as a new job,
even though it's just a second job for economic reasons that someone with an existing job had to take on.
So another example of looking at the details of the data, especially in an environment like this.
I want to get your thoughts on the earnings season that's just about to keep.
kickoff. But before that, we've been around long enough to remember not only the dot-com
implosion, but also the fact that there were businesses at the time that really were just
kind of ahead of their time. You know, I think about a business like Webvan where it's like,
well, yeah, it didn't work in 99, 2000, but, you know, internet-based food delivery is all over
the place now. I'm curious, are there things that you see right now that you have, you
have a similar thought where you think, this isn't working right now. And it can be, you know,
sort of an investment device like a SPAC or it can be a trend like cryptocurrency just to pick
a particularly hot topic of late. Are there things do you think? I think both of those are good
examples. I think, you know, what SPACs allowed companies to do at a time when they were more
popular and there was more interest is make forward statements. And that only is important.
for a company that essentially has no current profits, has no prospects of current profits,
but they can generate some hype by making forward statements, promises, whatever you want to
call them, which is very different than a company going through the traditional IPO channel,
which is much more regulatory scrutiny. It has to be fact-based, basically historical analysis of things.
And I think in conjunction with interest rates going up as dramatically as they have and the
unleashing of price discovery, the return of the risk-free rate, I think that contributed to,
to some degree, the demise of SPACs.
Price discovery also has kicked in with regard to things like crypto.
And I've always been a skeptic.
I've been a not a loud vociferous skeptic.
I'm not enough of an expert, but, you know, known as a crypto skeptic.
And what I've always said, and I've always wanted to avail myself of people who have much
greater knowledge than I do.
This is not a dogmatic, you know, dig my heels in and say, this is nonsense.
I'm not even going to listen to the other side.
But throughout the years that it was so hyped, the question I never, I would always ask,
yet I would never get a cogent answer to or even a consistent answer to was what problem is this
solving for? More people, I think, are asking that question now in hindsight or what's the use case.
That doesn't mean there isn't something brewing in terms of whether it's blockchain or more broadly
digital currencies, trying to bring the world of the unbanked into the world of being banked
in some form or another. All of those are really important. But crypto became fueled by the unique
characteristics of the COVID environment and being in lockdown and, you know, free trading and
bells and whistles and get rich quick and FOMO and possibly some degree of fraud.
Gee, I don't know. I hadn't heard anything about fraud in that space. I'll have to maybe do a Google search
and see what you're talking about. Yeah, and some fraud. In terms of the earnings season, we're obviously
going to get details on how holiday retail went, possibly more talk of layoffs or certainly
questions on analyst calls of layoffs. What are you and your team going to be watching to give you
an indication of where things are going over the next few months and possibly through the rest of the
year? So I think the actual reports for Q4 will be important as they always are, but I think the forward
guidance becomes even more important in this environment and not just whatever guidance they might
provide on earnings per share so we can get a sense of whether the bar is still too high for
23 hasn't come down enough, maybe has been cut enough, but specifically profit margins and to your
point, the layoff situation. There have been so many high profile layoffs either announced or
started in the case of Goldman Sachs. And given that the financials are first out of the blocks,
listening to see whether they talk about whether or affirm or suggests that Goldman is more of a one-off
situation and this is not industry specific more broadly. But many of these big financial companies
obviously are really tapped into the consumer and can give a very good perspective on the consumer,
the use of revolving credit, you know, balances, savings rates and consumption trends that they
can pick up from what they're seeing on the consumer side of their business. So certainly in the
early part of the season, that's what I'm going to be watching for. But it is the case that right
now, the expectation is that Q4, for the overall S&P, inclusive of the energy sector, will be in
negative territory year over year. And I think right now, 2023, as a year, calendar year, still has a
positive expectation relative to 2022, I think that's unlikely. I think we end up in 2023,
or at least the first half of the year. So I think if Q4 is negative, I think at least a couple
quarters thereafter are also negative in year-over-year terms before we could possibly start to
see some stabilization. So I think the path of least resistance for forward estimates is still
down. I'm going to close by giving you a magic wand. And you get to wave it.
With this power in mind, you get to wave a magic wand to do one thing that improves the odds for the general
public's path towards financial independence. It could be financial literacy in schools. It could be
mandating that retirement plans all have to be opt out instead of opt in. What are you doing with your
magic wand to improve the financial picture for the average person out there? Well, I don't know that I
would have answered it this way if you hadn't touched on it. The fact that we do not teach
financial literacy, even at the high school level, let alone earlier than that, I think is such a
travesty. I remember in, I think my daughter was, she's my youngest. She's 23 now, but it was
freshman or sophomore year in high school, and she spent four hours one night, kind of drawing and
detailing a map of ancient Mesopotamia. And I knew at the time, she had no idea. And when I say
financial literacy. I made myself a total pest with the principal of my kids high school about this.
And she consistently would come back and say, Lizanne, we've got, you know, this stock picking club
and this, and that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about how a credit card works,
how taxes are taken out of your paycheck, compound interest, what's an IRA, what's a 401k,
the basics that we just don't teach. And they couldn't be more important. I'm not suggesting.
get rid of arts or history or English or, but come on. That should absolutely be a key part of the
curriculum so that it's just embedded at a younger age and you don't get like my daughter. Wait,
I don't understand all the stuff that was taken out of, you know, her first real paycheck.
Boy, the ancient cartographers association is going to be coming after you, Liz Dan.
I'm sorry. Sorry. Let's do both. Okay. I'm not saying let's not. Let's not.
ever draw Mesopotamia again, but let's do both. And I said, even let's call it life economics.
You know, there was home economics when I was in high school and other trade programs. It's called
life economics. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about,
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks
based solely on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. Remember, the market is
closed on Monday for the MLK holiday, so we'll see you on Tuesday.
