Look at the sectors and asset classes that have outperformed the S&P 500 over the past month or so - utilities, consumer staples, healthcare, value, quality, dividends. Plus, there’s developed market & emerging market equities, long-term Treasuries, gold. All of these things are beating the broader market. The magnificent 7 is actually one of the worst performing groups thus far in 2025. Don’t let the fact that the S&P 500 was hitting new all-time highs as recently as last week fool you. The market started pivoting defensive more than a month ago and the shift has only gotten more decisive since then.
And the data is backing up the slowing economy narrative. Composite PMI in the U.S. plunged for the second straight month to its lowest level since September 2023. The services PMI actually slipped into contraction for the first time in two years. January retail sales dropped by a much larger than expected 0.9%, the biggest single month decline in nearly two years. The University of Michigan consumer sentiment reading for January hit its lowest level since late 2023. Consumer confidence just registered its largest monthly decline since August 2021. Inflation expectations soared to their highest level since late 2023.
Despite concerns about inflation or credit conditions looming in the background, the markets always took solace in the idea that the U.S. economy was healthy and the labor market was tight. Those assumptions may no longer apply. The latest data suggests the economy is slowing down and the DOGE layoffs are certainly giving the impression that jobs are at risk (recent layoff announcements at Starbucks, Chevron, Workday and Salesforce won’t help). The actual number of those affected probably won’t be known for months and if we see a reversal in net job creation and a rise in the unemployment rate, a broad risk-off environment may be imminent.
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