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Higher wages, not inflation, is the bigger risk to small stocks right now, BofA says

Apr 13, 2021, 22:35 IST
Business Insider
boonchai wedmakawand/Getty Images
  • Small-cap stocks could perform well against large caps in this environment of rising inflation, said Bank of America on Tuesday.
  • While small-caps could do well with the CPI under 4% a larger risk would come from wage pressures.
  • Small caps remain inexpensive versus large-cap shares, the bank said.
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Wall Street is staying alert over an expected jump in consumer price inflation but a climb in wages would be the bigger risk to small-cap stocks, according to Bank of America.

Inflation is set to pick up over the next few months as the US economy recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic, aided by vaccines and trillions of dollars in fiscal stimulus from the government.

Bank of America in a Tuesday note said its work looking at inflation and equities indicates that small-cap stocks outperformed in the late 1960s, and that its global strategist "sees as a historical analog."

From a valuation perspective, a rise to more than 3% in the US consumer price index this quarter - and sticking close to that level over the next few quarters - "isn't necessarily negative for multiples," as history suggests there's little relationship between inflation and price-to-earnings in environments when inflation is running below 4%.

The CPI rose to 2.6% in March year-over-year, largely pushed up by a 9.1% leap in gasoline prices, the Labor Department said Tuesday. Inflation was running slightly ahead of the 2.5% consensus estimate from Econoday.

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"But a big pick-up in wages would be a risk," as small caps are two times more labor intensive than large caps, said Jill Carey Hall, a US equity strategist at BofA, in the note.

Average hourly earnings at private employers in March was $29.96, up by 4.2% from the same month in 2020, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

An increase in capital expenditures amid higher commodity prices, however, should benefit sales at small-cap companies more than those at large-cap companies, the firm said.

Small caps remain inexpensive compared with large caps across measures that Bank of America said it tracks. They trade at a 12% discount to large caps "when historically they've traded at a 3% average premium," said BofA. It recommended investors "stay cyclical," with small-cap financial and energy shares offering the biggest relative valuation opportunity compared with their large-cap peers.

The Russell 2000 index of small caps has bulked up by nearly 80% over the past 12 months. It's up nearly 13% year-to-date compared with the 10% gain for the broader S&P 500 index.

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