VIEW ONLINE GOLDMAN SACHS: The stock market's turbulent first quarter created a bonanza for 2 groups of companies - Volatility made a dramatic comeback to the stock market in the first quarter.
- As a result, trading volumes and portfolio turnover increased.
- This should benefit the first-quarter earnings of trust banks and stock exchanges, according to analysts at Goldman Sachs.
While some investors count their losses from the first quarter, Goldman Sachs is betting that renewed volatility was a boon for a small group of companies.
Stock market volatility made a dramatic comeback in Q1, with no shortage of news to spook investors, from an impending trade war to inflation scares.
Though such trading swings are historically typical for stocks, they have become rare in recent years. In Q1, the S&P 500 ended a streak of nine consecutive quarterly gains, and the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, which tracks traders' expectations for moves in the stock market, saw its largest one-day spike.
All this meant that trading volumes increased last quarter. Exchanges and trust banks — institutions that shelter the assets of large institutional investors like mutual funds — benefitted from the rocky quarter as they raked in services and management fees coming from those higher volumes, Goldman's Alex Blostein and his team said in a note on Monday.
"We expect a solid quarter from the trust banks amid a constructive macro backdrop for rates, securities lending, and FX trading," Blostein said.
He added: "Exchanges saw a boost in 1Q volumes, which could persist (after a sharp spike in Feb., March volumes are still up 10% y/y across various asset classes). With volatility still generally below long-term avgs, growth in non-transaction revenues and well-managed costs, we think EPS tailwinds outweigh premium valuations for most."
Intercontinental Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange's parent company, is Goldman's top pick among exchanges, while Northern Trust is preferred among trust banks.
Goldman's outlook for traditional asset managers is not as rosy in the wake of the choppy first quarter. For this group, Blostein said, market volatility puts their forward earnings per share at "considerable risk" as spending rises and organic growth falls. Further, flows into active and passive fixed-income funds have softened, worsening the outlook for managers of those funds.
While Blostein is bullish on BlackRock and T. Rowe Price, he's staying away from the rest of the sector as its members report their first-quarter earnings.
Ahead of earnings season, there's evidence that financial-services companies are broadly benefitting from higher volatility. In the year through March, consumer spending on financial services increased by 5%, according to the personal consumption expenditures index that tracks securities commissions.
Neil Dutta, the head of US economics at Renaissance Macro, noted that financial services now equal 5.4% of total household consumption, the highest share since the late 1990s.
"Too much market volatility is bad, but a little goes a long way for the industry," Dutta said in a note on Thursday.
He added: "The recent back-up in volatility has been good news. Investors appear to be turning over their portfolios more often, and securities commissions have jumped sharply as a result."
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